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Ben Travers Writer Indiewire

Ben Travers

TV Critic

Ben Travers is the New York-based TV Critic and Deputy Editor at IndieWire, where he’s been writing reviews, analyzing industry trends, and interviewing key figures since 2014. He is the 2021 winner for Best Entertainment Commentary at the Southern California Journalism Awards, and a 2020 finalist for Best TV Critic at the National Arts & Entertainment Journalism Awards. Ben helped launch IndieWire’s Consider This series, which advocates for each year’s most deserving awards contenders, and he was on set for “Veep’s” final day of filming. (Seeing Julia Louis-Dreyfus eviscerate another human being live, in person, changed him forever.) A lifelong student of Sylvester Stallone and more-recent scholar of “The Leftovers,” “Better Things,” and “BoJack Horseman,” he is also an experienced moderator, having led conversations for the Television Academy, Screen Actors Guild, PaleyFest, SXSW, ATX TV Festival, and San Diego Comic-Con (at Hall H, in front of 6,000 screaming fans). Prior to joining IndieWire, Ben served as an editor and critic at PopMatters, as well as a production assistant on major motion pictures. He holds degrees in journalism and cinema from the University of Iowa. He loves puns, baseball, black coffee, and soft sweatshirts. Follow him on Twitter @BenTTravers and Instagram @BenTravers5

Latest by Ben Travers
Two chefs with coffee at a kitchen island, one sitting atop and the other leaning back against it; still from 'The Bear'
yes/no/maybe, chef
IndieWire's Ben Travers and Proma Khosla take a closer look at "The Bear" Season 3, covering the hottest and coldest dishes across all 10 episodes.
'The Bear' Season 3 stars Matty Matheson as Neil Fak, shown here in close up with a confused expression
Faster please, Chef!
Hulu released all 10 episodes of "The Bear" Season 3 at once, following the same strategy that's been used since the FX series became a surprise sensation. So why are we still clamoring for a weekly release?
'The Bear' Season 3 stars Ayo Edebiri as Sydney, shown here in close-up wearing an orange bandana, a white chef's coat, and a disappointed expression
Pick Up the Phone, Carmy
Reflective to the point of inertia, the new season marks a minor next chapter of Christopher Storer and Joanna Calo's restaurant drama, albeit with enough savory portions to satisfy loyal diners.
The best TV comedies of all time.
From "The Bear" and "Moonlighting" to "Curb Your Enthusiasm" and "Martin," these scripted TV comedies are the best of the best.
Barry Jenkins on the set of 'The Underground Railroad,' shown in a black-and-white photograph wearing a wide-brimmed hat, a white button-down, and clear glasses, standing next to a camera
Q&A
As the director's 2021 masterpiece makes its Criterion debut, Jenkins looks back on his first TV series, Amazon's controversial original release, and the unique power of long-form storytelling.
Eric Bogosian as Daniel Molloy in 'Interview with the Vampire' Season 2, Episode 7, 'I Could Not Prevent It' (shown here staring just above his laptop)
A Story of Love, Not Butchery
Season 2's penultimate episode, "I Could Not Prevent It," marks a uniquely fang-tastic achievement. Not only does it harness the show's greatest strengths into one unrelenting hour of television, but it also brings two years of patient preparation full circle.
Julio Torres stars in 'Fantasmas,' the HBO series, shown here looking over a glass wall while on the phone
Do a Bump for Fufu
Julio Torres' inspired new HBO series centers hamster nightclubs and sequined toilet seats while slyly crafting a vicious indictment of late-stage capitalism.
Devery Jacobs in 'Reservation Dogs,' Hoa Xuande in 'The Sympathizer,' and Emma Stone in 'The Curse' as part of a photo collage for the Emmys
Consider These
With Emmy nominations voting now open, IndieWire has compiled a helpful list of meritorious candidates for TV Academy members to consider. So please, dear readers, remember these names.
'Presumed Innocent' stars Jake Gyllenhaal as Rusty Savage and Renate Reinsve as Carolyn Polhemus, shown here wearing suits, sitting together
Bill Camp and Elizabeth Marvel Innocent
The biggest red herring in David E. Kelley's monotonous mystery is casting Renate Reinsve in the original film's most thankless role, only to give her the same shallow treatment yet again.
'The Boys' Season 4
A World Full of Killing and Blood Spilling
Eric Kripke's action-satire returns as bloody and bold as ever, but the latest battle between average Americans and an encroaching fascism feels all the more dour in these trying times.
'House of the Dragon' Season 2 stars Matt Smith as Daemon, shown here sitting on a stump wearing a suit of armor
Dead Boy Objectives
Ryan Condal and George R.R. Martin's hit "Game of Thrones" prequel still feels like its merely biding time between battles in the first half of a fiendish, flickering second season.
Three people sit courtside at an LA Clippers game in a still from 'Clipped,' the FX series: Jacki Weaver as Shelley Sterling, Ed O’Neill as Donald Sterling, Cleopatra Coleman as V Stiviano
Go Celtics
In retelling recent history, creator and showrunner Gina Welch starts off by gleefully skewering Donald Sterling before closing with a savage slam on the broader system that supported him.
Top of The Line Weekly
A weekly digest that captures the best of our Top of the Line coverage.

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