Kirby Lee-Imagn Images/Paramount Pictures
NFL media personality Kay Adams took a massive shot at not one but two iconic and largely beloved pieces of 2010s pop culture: Christopher Nolan’s Interstellar and the acclaimed ABC series LOST.
According to Kay Adams, most people actually don’t understand Interstellar nor LOST (specifically the divisive series finale) but pretend they do.
This appears to be a running bit of Adams, as she’s tweeted about not understanding the ending of Interstellar four different times since the start of the year.
LOST finale is the Interstellar of finales. You’re all lying to yourselves. https://t.co/AsHFra0YhL
— Kay Adams (@heykayadams) May 21, 2025
Unfortunately for Adams, she’s doing a bit of projecting about her inability to wrap her head around Interstellar, which really isn’t all that difficult to understand, especially if you’ve seen it more than once. It’s certainly more comprehensible than two of Nolan’s other famously twisty films, Memento and Tenet.
What Adams likely means to say — and either hasn’t crystallized the thought yet or is instead leaning into the hot takery that comes with being a sports media personality — rather than “it’s difficult to understand,” is that it’s “difficult to accept.”
do we actually love snow games or do we just lie about it like we lie about understanding interstellar…?
— Kay Adams (@heykayadams) January 19, 2025
I saw Interstellar the year it came out in — in IMAX with my college buddies, one of whom puked from being too high — and have likely watched it once a year since. It’s an excellent movie. But its third-act four-dimensional tesseract beat — in which it chunkily delivers the idea that “love is a dimension” — is a bit silly, therefore making it challenging to embrace.
Still, that ultimately doesn’t matter — at least not for me but apparently very much so for Kay Adams — because it’s done so earnestly, is supported by incredible actors, and iss wrapped inside one of the greatest technical sci-fi achievements of all time.
As for LOST, I’m not going to argue with her here — after about Season 2, the show’s logic completely goes off the rails, and while the finale itself was serviceable and undeniably emotional, it was also utterly confounding all the same.
I don’t think anyone understands Interstellar. pic.twitter.com/ZVbUjDZPuy
— Kay Adams (@heykayadams) January 7, 2025
Content shared from brobible.com.