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  • On Stage in December: ‘A Christmas Story,’ ‘Hadestown’ and ‘Little Women’

    Philadelphia theaters are closing out the year strong with Broadway hits, holiday shows and staged retellings of famous books. 

    For the Christmas lovers, multiple theaters are putting on performances of “A Christmas Carol,” plus the Walnut Street Theatre has “A Christmas Story” on its schedule and Philly actor and writer Chris Davis is back with his one-man version of “The Nutcracker.” 


    MORE: Fiber Craft Holiday Market returns to South Philly with 50+ vendors on Dec. 6


    Anyone looking for a break from the holidays can hit the books with Hedgerow’s version of “Little Women” and the Arden’s “A Wrinkle in Time.” Plus, Quintessence is putting on “The Pirates of Penzance,” and 1812 brings back its annual comedy show “This is the Week That Is.” 

    Here are 11 performances coming to local stages in December. 


    A Christmas Carol

    Now-Jan. 4 Various locations

    Multiple Philly-area theaters are staging versions of the Charles Dickens’ classic. Catch performances from Lantern Theater Co. from Dec. 13-28, People’s Light in Malvern from now until Jan. 4 and “A Sherlock Carol,” adding in a twist with a story of Sherlock Holmes, at the Stagecrafters Theater from now until Dec. 14. 


    Little Women

    Now-Dec. 28 | Hedgerow Theatre Co. | Media, Delaware County

    The musical version of Louisa May Alcott’s famous book reimagines the stories of Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy in song. The four sisters come of age during the Civil War and navigate love, friendship and loss. Tickets are $35. 


    The Pirates of Penzance

    Now-Jan. 4 | Quintessence Theatre | 7137 Germantown Ave. 

    A young pirate plans to marry his true love following his 21st birthday, when believes he’s free from his life of servitude. But a twist of fate regarding his birthday throws a wrench in his plans. Tickets are $65. 


    A Christmas Story

    Now-Jan. 4 | Walnut Street Theatre | 825 Walnut St. 

    All Ralphie wants for Christmas is a BB gun, but a series of comedic, unfortunate events including turkey-stealing dogs, a frozen flagpole and pink bunny pajamas get in the way. The stage show is a musical version of the 1983 holiday movie. Tickets start at $31. 


    This is the Week That Is

    Nov. 28-Dec. 31 | 1812 Productions | 1714 Delancey Place

    The annual political comedy from 1812 Productions is completely improv, so every night brings a new show mocking public figures. This year is the 20th anniversary of the performance. Tickets start at $55. 


    The Greatest Play in the History of the World

    Nov. 29-Dec. 14 | Inis Nua Theatre Co. 302 S. Hicks St. 

    At 4:40 a.m., time stops for everyone in the world except young singles Tom and Sara and a longtime married couple, the Forshaws. While the world remains at a standstill, the four neighbors connect and get to know one another. Tickets are $33. 


    Hadestown

    Dec. 2-7 | Ensemble Arts Philly | 1114 Walnut St.

    This award-winning musical is a modern retelling of the Greek myth of Eurydice, a young girl who goes to work in the Underworld, and Orpheus, her lover who comes to save her. The show, which is playing at the Forrest Theater, won eight Tonys and a Grammy. Tickets start at $59. 


    A Wrinkle in Time

    Dec. 3-Jan. 25 | Arden Theatre Co. | 40 N. 2nd St. 

    Madeleine L’Engle’s famous children’s novel is reimagined for the stage, telling the story of siblings Meg and Charles Wallace, their friend Calvin and three witches who help the children travel through time and space. Tickets start at $40. 


    Sunset Baby

    Dec. 5-14 | Playhouse West Philadelphia | 1218 Wallace St. 

    In modern-day Brooklyn, Nina’s estranged father, a former activist and Black Panther, reappears in her life. Throughout the show, the father and daughter unpack grief, betrayal and the lingering impact of political opposition. Tickets start at $15. 


    One-man Nutcracker

    Dec. 9-Jan. 5 | The Drake | 302 S. Hicks St. 

    Chris Davis, a Philadelphia actor and writer, performs his annual performance that condenses the ensemble-cast Christmas ballet into a one-man show. Davis plays the titular character, as well as the mouse king, sugar plum fairy and Clara. Tickets start at $18. 


    Ordinary People

    Dec. 12-21 | Theatre in the X | 1340 S. 13th St. 

    In North Philadelphia during the 1950s, a Christmas-loving young girl named Amy finds a man in the snow outside her home. The characters later examine their beliefs as the stranger, named J.C., is later revealed as Jesus. Tickets are pay what you can. 

    Michaela Althouse

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  • The 12 Best Horror Shows to Binge for Halloween

    The 12 Best Horror Shows to Binge for Halloween

    It used to be that horror on television was tame. It was PG-ish stuff like Scooby-Doo and The Twilight Zone. Good fare, but these shows all held horror at arm’s length, like it was a subgenre or something shameful. Now, with streaming, TV horror shows can be just as creepy and scary as their movie brethren. They’ve shed some of their sci-fi and mystery armor to be fully grown-up, unashamed gore that’s perfect for Halloween bingeing. Below are some of our faves. If you like them, you may also want to check out our lists for the best horror movies or scary Halloween tech.

    Updated October 2024: We added What We Do in the Shadows, Grotesquerie, Them, The Fall of the House of Usher, and Yellowjackets.

    Stranger Things

    A spiritual successor to many of the shows and movies Gen Xers and Millennials loved growing up, Stranger Things serves horror tropes with a nostalgic glow. The fourth season (the best so far) leans heavily into ’80s horror, with the villainous Vecna reaching his fleshy tentacles into his victim’s dreams to exploit their worst fears. The show reverently acknowledges its debt to Wes Craven’s A Nightmare on Elm Street series, with Freddy Krueger (Robert Englund) himself popping up as Vecna victim Victor Creel.

    What We Do in the Shadows

    Spun off from the wonderful movie of the same name by Jemaine Clement and Taika Waititi, this show about a group of vampire roommates living on Staten Island is comedy perfection. Nandor, Laszlo, and Nadja have been vampires for centuries and struggle to fit into the modern world. They live with energy vampire Colin Robinson and Nandor’s familiar Guillermo. It’s a comedy with a horror backdrop, beautifully made and acted by all concerned, and its sixth and final season is airing now.

    Castle Rock

    The eponymous depression town (in more ways than one) is a kind of nexus for Stephen King’s characters, and Castle Rock is a treasure trove of references for fans, but it also works as a captivating standalone story. Season 1 focuses on a mysterious inmate at Shawshank, and Season 2 introduces a young Annie Wilkes (pre-Misery). If someone built a King theme park, it would surely look like Castle Rock. This fictional Maine town first appeared in The Dead Zone, served as the setting for Needful Things, and has popped up repeatedly like a bad penny in King’s work over the years. With Hulu’s show, it gets a tale all its own.

    Archive 81

    When archivist Dan (Mamoudou Athie) is hired to restore some old video tapes, he soon becomes engrossed in the work of a woman named Melody (Dina Shihabi) who was investigating a demonic cult in a Lower Manhattan apartment building. This claustrophobic series is permeated with a growing sense of dread and relies heavily on an excellent performance from Athie. Though the show was sadly canceled after a single season, you can still listen to the podcast that inspired it if you want to dig even further into the tale.

    The Haunting of Hill House

    This ghost story centers on five adult siblings haunted by paranormal experiences that caused them to flee the family mansion years before. Loosely based on Shirley Jackson’s gothic horror novel of the same name, this creepy tale is skillfully directed by Mike Flanagan (Doctor Sleep), ably assisted by a strong cast that includes Carla Gugino, Timothy Hutton, and Victoria Pedretti. It is a complex and terrifying family drama, packed with spine-chilling imagery, that builds to a frightening climax. If you enjoy this, Flanagan’s Midnight Mass is also worth a look.

    Grotesquerie

    This fever dream of a show sees hard-boiled alcoholic detective Lois Tryon, brilliantly played by Niecy Nash, trying to track down a twisted killer with a penchant for gory religious tableaus. She enlists the help of a true-crime-obsessed journalist nun, played ably by Micaela Diamond. There are also notable turns from Lesley Manville as a Ratched-reminiscent nurse, Nicholas Chavez (Monsters) as a crazy priest, Courtney B. Vance as Tryon’s husband in a coma, and Travis Kelce making his acting debut.

    Ash vs. Evil Dead

    Rumored for years, fans of the Evil Dead movies finally got what they wanted when star Bruce Campbell reunited with director Sam Raimi to revive the ultimate horror anti-hero. Campbell was born to play wisecracking idiot Ash as he wades into deadites and demons to save humanity with a chainsaw and a boomstick. Raimi directs the first episode, Campbell stars throughout, and this is slapstick gore at its finest. The supporting cast has plenty of chemistry, and includes a fun turn from Lucy Lawless. And, while the frenetic action is mostly played for laughs, the gross-out gore hits impressive highs, or should that be lows?

    Hannibal

    Set years before The Silence of the Lambs, this atmospheric show follows FBI special agent Will Graham as he tries to track down Hannibal Lecter without losing his sanity. Bryan Fuller’s blood-soaked show is gorgeously cinematic with plenty of tension, haunting visuals, and an ambient score that immerses you, but Mads Mikkelsen’s tightrope act as he veers from charismatic to cannibal is what makes this essential viewing. The supporting cast, which includes Gillian Anderson and Laurence Fishburne, is not bad either.

    American Horror Story

    I have a love/hate relationship with the anthology series American Horror Story, but with 10 self-contained seasons spanning classic horror scenarios, not to mention a stellar cast that includes Jessica Lange, it demands a place here. For me, it peaked early with the asylum in the second season, and subsequent seasons have been hit-or-miss. It’s fun for horror fans playing spot-the-trope, and the campy thrills come thick and fast, but it’s a guilty pleasure that can occasionally feel glib and exploitative, especially when it attempts to tie in real-life history. If you enjoy AHS, check out the sorority slasher Scream Queens, starring Emma Roberts as a loathsome mean girl and Jamie Lee Curtis as the school dean.

    From

    The residents of this small town in middle America find they cannot leave, and something evil comes out to hunt them when the sun goes down. While exactly where this spooky slow-burner is headed remains to be seen, it’s creepy enough to be worth a look. Harold Perrineau grounds the show with a compelling turn as Sheriff Boyd, struggling to hold his community together. Two seasons in, it’s light on answers, but I’m excited to see where they go with season three, which is airing now.

    Bates Motel

    Another horror prequel, Bates Motel is set in a time long before Psycho when Norman Bates is just a young lad who comes to an Oregon town with his mother to fix up a dilapidated motel. Despite their best efforts to start a new life, everything seems to conspire against them, and the seams begin to show quite quickly as Norman struggles to maintain his mental health. Anthony Perkins is a hard act to follow, but Freddie Highmore is convincing as a young Norman, and Vera Farmiga is excellent as his mother Norma. Their relationship is the heart of this suspenseful show. Unlike many listed here, Bates Motel got five seasons to build to a satisfying conclusion.

    Them

    The Emory family relocates from the rural South to East Compton, but as the first Black family in the neighborhood, they are not welcomed with open arms. The deeply unpleasant Betty (Alison Pill) makes it her mission to drive them out, and there’s a depressing lack of dissent to her rabid racism. The supernatural element feels thin, as each family member is haunted by their own ghost because it all pales in comparison to the real horrors they encounter in ’50s America. Deborah Ayorinde and Ashley Thomas are excellent as the Emorys. The second season focuses on a homicide detective and an entirely new story, and is even better than the first.

    Marianne

    A famous horror writer is lured back to her hometown by the death of a childhood friend and must take on an evil spirit who has been haunting her nightmares for years. This French show starts strong with a foreboding atmosphere and some chilling sequences. While it plays with familiar horror tropes, it is stylish and slick with a touch of humor, and leaning into witchcraft works perfectly in the old coastal town setting. Mireille Herbstmeyer makes the series work thanks to a truly unnerving performance as Madame Daugeron. It lost its way a little toward the end, it still shouldn’t have been canceled.

    The Fall of the House of Usher

    This fresh take on Edgar Allan Poe’s famous work casts the cursed Usher clan as opiate-peddling billionaires. The sordid tale is told by Roderick Usher (Bruce Greenwood) as he sits swilling whiskey in a dilapidated mansion, recounting the untimely demise of his family members to detective Auguste Dupin (Carl Lumbly) with a growing sense of dread. This grisly, gothic, and engrossing tale is Mike Flanagan’s final flourish for Netflix, and it comes closest to his previous best (Hill House).

    Lovecraft Country

    Atticus Freeman travels across 1950s America to find his father, but the horrors awaiting this young Black man reach beyond Jim Crow into Lovecraft’s twisted imagination. Beautifully crafted and daringly subversive, Lovecraft Country marries the real American horror of racism with Lovecraftian cults and monsters, as both step from the shadows to scare us. The much-missed Michael K. Williams and the wonderful Wunmi Mosaku stand out in this excellent cast.

    The Outsider

    When the mutilated corpse of a young boy is discovered in the woods of a small town in Oklahoma, detectives think they have a clear culprit, but an ironclad alibi throws a spanner in the works. This show is based on a Stephen King novel, though it doesn’t feel like one. Instead, it comes off as a Scandi crime drama at first, with a glacial pace that painstakingly builds a growing sense of dread. Ben Mendelsohn steers us through the gloom, and there are solid performances from Cynthia Erivo, Paddy Considine, and Jason Bateman (who directs a couple of episodes). King fans hungry for another detective show should also check out Mr. Mercedes, where a broken-down retired detective played by Brendan Gleeson hunts a psychopathic killer.

    Yellowjackets

    A high school girls’ soccer team is stranded in the wilderness of Canada after a plane crash, and as temperatures plummet and supplies dwindle, they are forced to take desperate measures to survive. There’s a nostalgic tinge to this for kids of the ’90s, and the action flicks between the 1996 crash and the survivors coming together again 25 years later. Things get unspeakably messed up throughout the first two seasons as we jump around in time, and a third season is due to land next year. An excellent cast boasts Juliette Lewis, Christina Ricci, and Lauren Ambrose.

    Simon Hill

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  • On stage in October: ‘Frankenstein,’ ‘Jersey Boys’ and ‘tick, tick … Boom!’

    On stage in October: ‘Frankenstein,’ ‘Jersey Boys’ and ‘tick, tick … Boom!’

    Let us be the first to tell you: October is a packed month at Philly theaters. 

    Between a number of companies kicking off their 2024-2025 seasons and special Halloween productions, there are tons of shows taking to the stages across the region. In fact, there are so many list belore would become unwieldy if we included them all, but there are a few more deserving of quick mentions: the Arden’s one-week extension of “POTUS,” the Wilma’s production of “Dog Man: The Musical,” based on Dav Pilkey’s beloved series and the Esparanza Arts Center’s original trilingual show, “Nichos.” 

    Here are 11 more shows at theaters in and around Philadelphia this October:


    The Book of Mormon

    Oct. 1-6 | The Academy of Music | 240 S. Broad St.

    If you can’t get enough of the “The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives” TV series, “The Book of Mormon” might quench your thirst … or cleanse your palette. The musical comedy from the creators of “South Park” follows two missionaries from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints as they travel to Uganda and attempt to convince unenthusiastic residents to join the faith. Tickets start at $29.00. 


    This Is The Week That Is

    Oct. 3-Nov. 3 | Plays and Players Theater | 1714 Delancey St.

    The annual variety show from 1812 Productions returns this month with musical parodies, improv and sketch comedy. This year, the show is themed around the presidential election, and political comedy fans might recognize Producing Artistic Director Jennifer Childs, who’s also directing “POTUS” at the Arden. Tickets start at $38.00. 


    La Egoísta

    Oct. 4-20 | Philadelphia Theatre Co. | 480 S. Broad St. 

    Premiering for the first time in the city, La Egoísta tells the story of Josefina, a Philadelphia stand-up comedian whose career is taking off right after the death of her mother and the sudden illness of her sister. The show was written by Philly’s Erlina Ortiz, the 2022 winner of the National Latine Playwright’s award and the director of the Power Street Theatre. Tickets start at $25.00. 


    Legally Blonde The Musical

    Oct. 5-27 | The Media Theatre | Media, Delaware County

    The talent of Elle Woods extends beyond legal expertise and the perfect shade of pink in this comedic production based on the hit movie. The award-winning show will leave audiences smiling and feeling a new sense of self-confidence, the theater says. Tickets start at $35. 

    If spooky is more your vibe, the Media Theatre is also putting on a one-night performance of “Dracula The Musical In Concert” on Oct. 28. 


    Frankenstein

    Oct. 8-20 | Lightbooth Blackout | Chester, Delaware County and Oct. 31-Nov. 3 | Center City Stage | 825 Walnut St., 3rd Floor

    The Mary Shelley classic gets a refresh in this performance from Lightbooth Blackout in partnership with the Lone Brick Theatre Company at Widener University. The new adaption fuses the book’s text with modern dialogue and an original score is played live during the show. Tickets start at $20. 

    If you can’t get enough of the bolted monster, Center City Stage is doing a stage production of “Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein.” The show starts out with a group of young artists together in a storm, but everything changes once lightening strikes. Center City Stage calls the show is an immersive experience that “blurs the line between reality and fiction.” Tickets are $25. 


    tick, tick…Boom!

    Oct. 9-27 |  Theatre Horizon | Norristown, PA

    The semi-biographical show by Jonathan Larson, the late composer and co-creator of “Rent,” hits this suburban stage this month in Norristown. The musical follows a New York City composer on his 30th birthday as he’s on the precipice of his big break, starring Broadway’s Robi Hager and Angel Sigala alongside Montgomery County native Elena Camp. Tickets start at $25. 


    Robin & Me: My Little Spark of Madness

    Oct. 9-27 | Hedgerow Theatre Company | Media, Delaware County

    Delaware County native Dave Droxler wrote and stars in this autobiographical play about some of his most ridiculous and difficult moments in life and how his idol, Robin Williams, helped him through it. The show comes to the area after an off-Broadway run last year that won it five Broadway World awards. Tickets start at $35. 


    Jersey Boys

    Oct. 9- Nov. 3 | Walnut Street Theatre | 825 Walnut St

    Newark supergroup Franki Valley and the Four Seasons take the stage again in this Tony award-winning jukebox musical. Featuring hits like “Sherry,” “My Eyes Adored You” and “Can’t Take My Eyes Off of You,” the show changes “seasons” to show the perspective of each of the group’s members. Tickets start at $49. 


    Considering Matthew Shepard

    Oct. 10 | The Mann Center | 5201 Parkside Ave. 

    The Grammy-nominated choral drama tells the story of Matthew Shepard, a young gay man who was murdered in a hate crime incident in 1998. Philadelphia conductors Rollo Dilworth and Jay Fluellen lead more than 500 singers in play’s the final movement. Tickets are $36. 


    Confabulation

    Oct. 10-20 | Bob & Selma Horan Studio Theatre | 62 N. Second St.

    The Strides Collective’s production follows a gas station attendant who joins a past-life regression support group after the death of her ex-girlfriend. A hypnotherapist leads members of the group, who turn into the people from the protagonists’ life, through their journeys to find themselves. Tickets start at $25. 


    The Rocky Horror Show

    Oct. 11 – Nov. 3 | Bucks County Playhouse | New Hope, Bucks County

    It’s not science fiction, Ariana Grande’s brother, Frankie Grande, returns for the titular role as Dr. Frank-n-Furter in “The Rocky Horror Picture Show.” Based on the 1975 cult film, the musical follows an innocent couple who seek shelter at an old castle and encounter mad scientist Frank-n-Furter. Tickets start at $75.

    Michaela Althouse

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  • Ranking the Netflix Real Estate Shows by Juiciness of Agent Drama

    Ranking the Netflix Real Estate Shows by Juiciness of Agent Drama

    If you’ve logged onto Netflix at all recently, you’ve probably seen at least a few real estate shows pop up on your recommended list, with titles evoking the glamor and fame that one presumably achieves with a clientele predominated by plastic surgeons. From Paris to Tampa to Beverly Hills, these glossy reality series bring the best of unscripted television tropes to the world of luxury home sales, with agents whose egos are even bigger than their properties’ primary suites. Between the OG that started it all, Selling Sunset, and new additions like Owning Manhattan, we’re slowly witnessing the growth of a thrilling new subgenre I’ll tentatively brand “Real(i)ty TV.”

    While the glitz and glam of the houses on display are essential to the shows’ appeal, that’s not what these programs are really about. If it’s pure real estate porn you’re after, you can head to ol’ reliable HGTV and stuff yourself with episodes of House Hunters and its exponential offspring. Netflix’s beloved real(i)ty shows, on the other hand, are for those of us who want drama—who thrive off the chaos of ambitious, plasticky people crying in Teslas and boasting about commission rates in home movie theaters.

    Thus, it feels only right to analyze these shows (for brevity’s sake, only the tip of a steadily growing iceberg) by ranking their dramatic value. Never mind the properties’ cost, square footage, or resale value; the more important criteria here are things that numbers cannot express, such as vanity, envy, horniness, and hot tub make-outs. Let us dive into the world of real(i)ty TV not with housing at the forefront, but with all the shady stuff that goes down when listing agents are at play.

    5. Buying London

    Meet Daniel Daggers: a bespectacled British man who, first and foremost, earnestly calls himself “Mr. Super Prime” and, secondly, heads the luxury London property group DDRE Global. Daggers considers himself the great disruptor of London’s real estate market, mainly because he’s shaped his team of international agents into savvy lifestyle influencers and he spends his free time ramming into desks around his office as he tours homes via a VR headset. While Buying London ranks undeniably high on the Posh British Accent-ometer and features a truly smashing soundtrack of generic British girl pop, it is unfortunately lacking in the juicy drama we’ve come to expect from other British reality hits like Love Island.

    There’s no shortage of charming moments: Agent Oli Hamilton (who looks like a yassified version of Severus Snape) flexes his unmatched pinstripe suit collection, and the team embarks on a group meditation session followed by gourmet smoothies. But the show simply doesn’t have enough petty plotlines to fill its seven-episode season, which means that, instead, we get a montage of Oli receiving a “total style makeover” (wearing a beanie) and scenes of Daniel’s parents insisting he find a wife before they die. I agree with Daniel’s mother that “it’s a pity” he isn’t pursuing love—not because I necessarily care about whether he finds a Mrs. Super Prime, but because watching men with big egos and deeply unbuttoned shirts bumble through dates is one of life’s great pleasures.

    The one semi-dramatic plotline on Buying London is Oli’s flirtationship with DDRE’s Swedish interior designer, Juliana Ardenius (who just happens to be a former model and Miss Teen Universe contestant). Their chemistry is … not exactly electric but, nevertheless, palpable enough to arouse the suspicions of Oli’s non-model/non–Miss Teen Universe wife, Avia, who later confronts Juliana over drinks. But even this minor tiff ends up resolved at a later company party, when Juliana tells Avia she “would never go for Oli in a million years,” and they toast to “a fresh start.” (Pour one out for Oli, who definitely got a self-confidence boost from being the kingpin of a half-baked love triangle.)

    4. Owning Manhattan

    Ryan Serhant, founder of the self-titled real estate brokerage SERHANT., claims to have done over $8 billion in property sales. He also wrote a book called Big Money Energy, and—as he refuses to let anyone forget—is a cool 6-foot-3. (His favorite pastime is standing in property photos to demonstrate a condo’s very high ceilings.) Ryan’s all-star team of agents sells properties across Manhattan and some of the bougier areas of Brooklyn, giving us viewers a much-needed reminder that Williamsburg hasn’t been “gritty” for a good 20 years. The show is ripe with other endearing (annoying) New York-y things, such as agent Chloe Tucker Caine being a former Broadway star (and, thus, the person who assesses the vocal acoustics of newly listed penthouses) and agents patiently explaining to old-school Manhattanites what influencers are.

    There’s nothing too juicy going down at SERHANT., with the lack of workplace romance proving especially upsetting considering everyone looks like a grown-up Gossip Girl character. As with any good New York story, we see the agents hustle for power and status, with a refreshingly innocent subplot following Southern belle agent Savannah Gowarty’s transition to life in “the big city.” Meanwhile, the firm’s Brooklyn expert, Tricia Lee, must fight to have her voice heard among the big bad Manhattan agents, including Nile Lundgren (whose bald head–singular hoop earring combo tells us everything we need to know about him).

    The real standout of Owning Manhattan, however, is Jonathan Normolle, a Danish nightlife junkie who believes that having neck tattoos makes him “the next generation” of real estate. He’s like a Jersey Shore cast member who overstayed his welcome in Europe and now raves about leather parties and pickled herring, so, naturally, he becomes the series’ sole villain and tragic Icarus figure. (In trying to achieve podcast stardom, Jonathan, alas, flies too close to the sun.)

    Though watching Jonathan’s rise and fall—from real estate wunderkind and model to … just model—is plenty satisfying, there’s nothing that leaves us grasping for more by the end of the season. Sure, we find Ryan scrambling to save face after losing out on a major deal, but that’s the boring business stuff (a.k.a. what HGTV is for). This is Netflix, baby, so bring on the gossip, backstabbing, and betrayals!

    3. Buying Beverly Hills

    Now in its second season, Buying Beverly Hills focuses on Mauricio Umansky, founder and CEO of the Agency, a global real estate brokerage based out of L.A. As the husband (spoiler: now ex-husband) of Real Housewives star Kyle Richards, Mauricio was predestined for reality show success, and it also doesn’t hurt that his top agents are his three oldest daughters, all of whom are as business savvy as they are skilled at applying bronzer. Ladies and gentlemen: King Lear.

    The show delivers on its family drama. In the latest season’s subplots, middle daughter Alexia feels slighted by her other sisters’ newfound closeness, Mauricio and Kyle casually discuss the latter’s cheating allegations while preparing an Italian salad, and Alexia partners on a deal with Joey Ben-Zvi, her smarmy ex-boyfriend turned colleague, who—it must be noted—wears sunglasses indoors and sweaters as over-the-shoulder accessories. There’s also eldest daughter Farrah’s separation from her fiancé, Alex, which leaves her emotionally distraught enough to take over a barely defined director of operations role and even sport leisure wear on camera.

    The true pièce de résistance of this season is the introduction of a new villain: Michelle Schwartz, a managing partner at the Agency who—for reasons apparent only to her—believes herself to be Mauricio’s obvious successor (never mind that they’re basically the same age). Joey’s early-season observation that “when you fuck with one Umansky, you fuck with all the Umanskys” proves quite prophetic when Michelle promises to mentor the Umansky girls only to later talk shit about them (calling them, among other things, “business suicide”).

    Thus comes an epic showdown (rooftop poolside spat) between the Umansky sisters and the Wicked Witch of the Westside, and, truly, there’s never been more damning jabs thrown with margaritas in hand. But really, Michelle’s comeuppance is just the cherry on top of a season jam-packed with big life changes, major power swings, and—get this!—men opening up about their emotions.

    2. Selling Sunset

    Where does one begin with a show that’s led by twin brothers who are 5-foot-6 and bald but nevertheless radiate machismo? Perhaps, to properly express the many, many dramatic arcs of the show’s latest season, we’re better off starting with its final episode, which (naturally) included the Oppenheim Group agents exploring their allegiances and darkest secrets via polygraph test moderated by … Tan France?

    Things at the Oppenheim Group have never been messier. Agents repeatedly hurl deeply personal insults at each other; newcomers are received with trepidation, if not outright hostility; and Bre Tiesi dishes on sleeping with Michael B. Jordan and co-parenting a son with Nick Cannon. There’s also endless use of the phrase “social climber,” which is apparently the equivalent of “whore” in the luxury real estate world, where being self-made is everything. Take a shot every time Nicole Young calls Chrishell Stause this if you want to get completely sloshed in under an hour.

    Oh, and Jason Oppenheim and his young, German model girlfriend, Marie-Lou, break up—but you already saw that coming. (Thank you to client/guest star Nikki Glaser for the acute observation that “for someone who doesn’t want kids, it’s weird that you’re dating one.”) Dating someone 20 years your junior is, it turns out, not always the surest path to true love, even if Marie-Lou did—as Jason never fails to mention—study economics at university. Way to go, Jason; you fumbled a relationship with the next Adam Smith.

    Meanwhile, Chrishell and her Australian musician partner, G Flip, go from the honeymoon stage of dating to literally honeymooning in a matter of months. They also reveal plans to have a wedding ceremony every year on their anniversary: an ambitious, not-at-all-annoying goal seemingly designed to give Jason, Chrishell’s ex, an annual reminder of what could’ve been. We don’t see much of G Flip this season, but, when we do, they always look fresh out of a Matrix movie or Hot Topic ad, so we’re led to believe that Chrishell made the right call based on vibes alone.

    1. Selling the OC

    I’m prepared to get flack for ranking a Selling Sunset spinoff higher than Selling Sunset itself, but, truly, nothing can top the flawless dramatic structure of the OC’s latest season, which checks all the boxes of the best telenovelas. To start, we get an unprecedented (and objectively baller) power move from agent Gio Helou when he sends a speedboat to carry attendees from his colleague Kayla Cardona’s open house to the one that he’s hosting just across the Bay.

    From here, things only get more chaotic at the Oppenheims’ OC office. A large chunk of the latest season consists of arguments about whether Austin Victoria did indeed ask fellow agent Sean Palmieri to join him and his wife for a threesome. (A question also arises of whether there would have been weed available at this threesome, which—to be fair—would have made for a more alluring proposition.) Like many of the great issues of our time, the truth of this alleged threesome proposal is left murky, which makes the whole ordeal all the more captivating. Among many other profound quotes, Austin remarks that the office is turning into a brothel and then tells Sean, “You’re not hot, bro … You’re making up rumors that my wife and I want to fuck you?!”

    The best subplot of Selling the OC is equally messy but far more romantic, following the will-they-won’t-they relationship of agents Tyler Stanaland and Alex Hall. The back-and-forth of it all is enough to put Pam and Jim and Ross and Rachel to shame: Alex even considers forgoing her trip to Italy with a new love interest after Tyler pleads with her to stay. (Never mind that he completely ignored her in the preceding weeks.) While the fact that (spoiler alert) they don’t work out is definitely for the best, it’s pretty great to watch them try to convince themselves otherwise. Real estate agents … they’re just as delusional as the rest of us!

    Holyn Thigpen is an arts and culture writer based in Brooklyn. She holds an MA in English from Trinity College Dublin and spends her free time googling Nicolas Cage.

    Holyn Thigpen

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  • You can thank John Adams for July 4 parades and fireworks – WTOP News

    You can thank John Adams for July 4 parades and fireworks – WTOP News

    It was 148 years ago this week that Founding Father John Adams correctly predicted how Americans would celebrate the birth of The United States.

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    John Adams July 4 predictions

    It was 148 years ago this week that Founding Father John Adams correctly predicted how Americans would celebrate the birth of The United States.

    On July 3, 1776, only one day after the Continental Congress voted for Independence, Adams wrote a letter to his wife and listed the ways he believed this monumental date would be remembered.

    “It ought to be solemnized with Pomp and Parade, with Shews, Games, Sports, Guns, Bells, Bonfires and Illuminations from one End of this Continent to the other from this time forward forever more,” wrote Adams.

    Yes, the future president predicted that we would be going to Independence Day Parades, playing games, attending shows (“shew” is an old form of show) and seeing fireworks.

    “John Adams really believed there would be celebrations in the streets with a lot of pomp and circumstance around Independence Day,” said author and D.C. tour Guide, Rebecca Grawl. “I think he was spot on with that prediction.”

    Gilbert Stuart’s portrait of John Adams circa 1800/1815; oil on canvas.
    (Courtesy National Gallery of Art)

    Courtesy National Gallery of Art

    Fireworks burst above the National Mall, and from left, the Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monument and the U.S. Capitol building during Independence Day celebrations on Thursday, July 4, 2024 in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)
    Fireworks burst above the National Mall, and from left, the Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monument and the U.S. Capitol building during Independence Day celebrations on Thursday, July 4, 2024 in Washington.
    (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)

    AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein

    FILE - Fireworks burst on the National Mall above the Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monument and the U.S. Capitol building during Independence Day celebrations in Washington, Monday, July 4, 2022. (AP Photo/J. David Ake, File)
    FILE — Fireworks burst on the National Mall above the Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monument and the U.S. Capitol building during Independence Day celebrations in Washington, Monday, July 4, 2022.
    (AP Photo/J. David Ake, File)

    AP Photo/J. David Ake, File

    Grawl pointed out that Adams thought it was a day for great celebration.

    “He believed Americans would come together to acknowledge this momentous occasion that he and the other Founding Fathers had worked so hard for: Independence,” Grawl said.

    As accurate as his prediction was, Adams did get one important part wrong: He thought the celebrations would occur on July 2.

    While yes, it was on July 2, 1776, that the Continental Congress voted for Independence, the delay to July 4 was due to the Declaration of Independence.

    According to the National Archives, the Declaration of Independence, drafted mostly by Thomas Jefferson, and edited by his colleagues in the Continental Congress, was adopted two days later.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Valerie Bonk

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  • Photo of Bradley Cooper in ‘Burnt’ appears on ‘The Bear’ Season 3 finale, but why? (No spoilers)

    Photo of Bradley Cooper in ‘Burnt’ appears on ‘The Bear’ Season 3 finale, but why? (No spoilers)

    Loyal viewers of “The Bear” are accustomed to unexpected celebrity guest stars and cameos, but a surprise pseudo-appearance from actor Bradley Cooper confused many.

    Season 3 was released, in full, Wednesday on Hulu. In a scene of the season finale, protagonist Carmy (Jeremy Allen White) looks at a collection of newspaper clippings and photos of real-life chefs and restaurant owners. Among the images is one Jenkintown native Cooper from his 2015 film “Burnt” — and beyond that blink-and-you-miss-it moment we won’t spoil any other details about how the season ends.


    WHAT TO STREAM THIS WEEK: ‘House of the Dragon,’ ‘The Bear’ and ‘Godzilla Minus One’


    It happens as Weezer’s “In the Garage” plays. Cooper’s photo appears after a shot of chef Rosio Sanchez and before photos of pastry chef Malcolm Livingston II and restaurateur Will Guidara. With no additional context, fans of “The Bear” are left with several questions.

    It’s easy to forget about “Burnt,” an ill-received film starring Cooper as a fictional two-star Michelin chef named Adam Jones. In the movie, Jones attempts a comeback after his temperamental behavior and substance abuse placed his career on hold. 

    Though “Burnt” has a similar setting as “The Bear” and their themes overlap, the movie has fallen into obscurity in the decade since its release.

    So what does this visual reference to the film mean for “The Bear?” Perhaps “Burnt” is in the same fictional universe as Carmy and his crew.

    Olivia Colman, John Mulaney and Jamie Lee Curtis are among the celebrities who have made guest appearances in “The Bear.”  Could the photo cameo be setting up a future appearance by Cooper as a new character.

    Maybe the fictional staff of Ever really enjoyed “Burnt,” or maybe the photo is just an inside joke among the writers and producers of “The Bear.” Who knows? Representatives for FX, which produces the show, did not respond to a request for comment.

    Whatever the case, this brief appearance in the highly acclaimed show is par the course for Cooper, who made sudden cameos in last year’s “Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves” and on “Abbott Elementary.” And in December, Cooper made an appearance in New York City as a line cook on a food truck, making and selling cheesesteaks.

    Chris Compendio

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  • ‘Shogun’ Episode 3, Influential Childhood TV Shows, and Trailers for ‘3 Body Problem’ and ‘Fallout’

    ‘Shogun’ Episode 3, Influential Childhood TV Shows, and Trailers for ‘3 Body Problem’ and ‘Fallout’

    Chris and Andy talk about the third episode of Shogun and how the show uses confrontation set pieces to drive the plot (1:00). Then, they answer a few more mailbag questions, talking about the lasting impact of Dune: Part Two (28:16), the most influential TV shows of their childhoods (41:24), and the trailers for 3 Body Problem and Fallout (48:18).

    Hosts: Chris Ryan and Andy Greenwald
    Producer: Kaya McMullen

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / RSS

    Chris Ryan

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  • If you liked Hazbin Hotel, here’s what you should watch next

    If you liked Hazbin Hotel, here’s what you should watch next


    Hazbin Hotel’s frenetic first season finished up on Friday, with a dozen reveals and dangling plot threads, all primed for a second season. The devilish comedy comes from creator Vivienne Medrano, who first posted the pilot episode on her YouTube channel, and follows Charlie, the princess of Hell, who opens a hotel in hopes that demons will rehabilitate and get to heaven. Oh, and it’s also a musical!

    The first season finished with a bang, but it might be some time before we see the second season of Hazbin Hotel. So if you need something to sate your devilish desires for now, Medrano handpicked some of the show’s biggest influences.

    Invader Zim

    Image: Netflix

    Where to watch: Paramount Plus

    Merdano calls this one a “huge one” and it’s not hard to see why: Both shows share a similar kind of feverish sensibility, along with a strong, vibrant color palette. The spindly style of Invader Zim feels clearly at play in Hazbin, with characters like Alastor and Angel Dust feeling like they could fairly comfortably roll between shows.

    The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy

     A scowling blonde girl stands next to a oafish boy, who stands next to the Grim Reaper, who’s making a disgusted face

    Image: Cartoon Network Studios

    Where to watch: Max

    The other childhood show Merdano cites is about two kids (one a clueless happy-go-lucky oaf, the other a cynical and smart-ass tomboy) who summon the Grim Reaper and beat him at a game of limbo, thus making him their eternal servant best friend. They get wrapped up in the paranormal world of demons, gods, and other supernatural creatures, but it’s all done with a goofy spin. The infernal through-line from Grim Adventures to Hazbin Hotel is pretty obvious.

    BoJack Horseman

    BoJack looking sad in front of the Griffith Observatory

    Image: Netflix

    Where to watch: Netflix

    While there were other shows she watched when she was younger, Medrano says Netflix’s BoJack Horseman — about an anthropomorphic, depressed washed-up sitcom actor (who is also a horse) — is the one that came at the “perfect time” to show her that she could tell a complicated emotional story in adult animation.

    “[It’s] actually one of my favorites of all time; phenomenal show,” Medrano says. “It kind of showed me that adult animation can not only just be raunchy comedy, but it can be a story that has intense development of its characters. It can have incredibly flawed characters. It can make you cry. It can really get deep and dark.

    “It had just started around the time that I was like, really making the pilot and they kind of made me go, Oh, wow, adult animation is starting to change. And it’s starting to evolve.”

    South Park

    South Park stick of truth hero

    Where to watch: Paramount Plus

    Medrano calls South Park a “huge turning point” for her with adult animation — an experience a lot of people had around Comedy Central’s classic. The show tackled topical ideas and events, all with a gleeful, jaded humor that has kept it running since 1997. “From that point on,” Medrano says, “I kind of just kept watching [adult animation].”

    Rick and Morty

    (L-R) Morty and Rick staring at a holographic projection of the multiverse with Evil Morty in Rick and Morty.

    Image: Adult Swim

    Where to watch: Max

    Similar to BoJack, Medrano cites this ever-popular Adult Swim comedy as a proponent of the depth and humor she tries to balance with her work. As anyone who has watched Rick and Morty can attest, there’s more to the show and more to Pickle Rick than the reputation it gives. “Something like Rick and Morty that is still very raunchy, and vulgar, and shocking in a lot of ways — it went this direction of like, Yeah, but let’s go a little deeper, let’s get a little darker. I think that also helped shift the space kind of more towards Oh, that works! That has an audience that did really well.



    Zosha Millman

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  • The best shows to watch on Max

    The best shows to watch on Max

    You know the deal: It’s not TV, it’s HBO.

    But ever since HBO rebranded to Max, guess what? You can call it TV again, and nobody can stop you.

    We’re here to round up some of the best TV shows available to watch on Max. More than enough people have likely already extolled to you the virtues of The Sopranos, The Wire, Deadwood, and Game of Thrones. (If not, where have you been?) Consider this a supplementary list. A Max 2.0, if you will.

    For more great TV, check out our lists of the bests shows of 2022 and 2023, which include many selections on Max.


    Editor’s pick: Rome

    Image: HBO

    Before the fantasy renaissance Game of Thrones kicked off, Rome was the setting for HBO’s best sword-swinging prestige play. And while this amped up historical drama didn’t quite hit the heights of HBO’s A Song of Ice and Fire adaptation, it’s still plenty entertaining, and one of the most interesting shows on Max.

    Rome’s first season chronicles the rise and fall of Julius Caesar. The story is told through the lives and intrigue of the most powerful players, including Game of Thrones vets Ciarán Hinds as Caesar and Tobias Menzies as Brutus, but also through two lowly soldiers (Ray Stevenson and Kevin McKidd), who just happen to be around to witness some of the biggest moments in this period of Rome’s history.

    As fun as Rome is as a series in its own right, it’s equally as fascinating as a historical document for HBO. While it feels slightly out of step with the slower dramas the network was known for at the time, like The Wire, Deadwood, or The Sopranos, Rome’s quick-paced brutality and prestige sheen make it feel right at home in the current line up for Max. — Austen Goslin


    Fringe

    the scientist from fringe working on a math equation on a board

    Image: Fox

    Back in 2008, J. J. Abrams, Alex Kurtzman, and Roberto Orci launched a series that was intended to be spiritual successor to The X-Files by way of Lost. Over the course of five seasons, Fringe became that and so much more: a cerebral procedural drama about urban legends, parallel universes, anomalous oddities, and a beleaguered mad scientist’s long quest for redemption.

    The series centers on Olivia Dunham (Anna Torv), an FBI agent assigned to investigate unexplained phenomena related to a mysterious series of occurrences known simply as “The Pattern.” With the help of a Department of Homeland Security consultant (Joshua Jackson) and his eccentric father (John Noble), a brilliant yet troubled researcher known for his speciality in the field of “fringe science,” Dunham is tasked with unmasking the culprits responsible for these strange phenomena and bringing them to justice.

    The series overcame multiple threats of cancellation and precipitously declining ratings to amass a passionate cult following, all while delivering one of the most complex and emotionally moving storylines seen in a mainstream sci-fi TV drama. Featuring guest appearances from such lauded sci-fi icons as Leonard Nimoy and Peter Weller and an absolute standout supporting performance by the late Lance Reddick as Fringe Division director Phillip Broyles, Abrams and company’s show is an enduring series worthy of reappraisal and admiration. —Toussaint Egan

    Unicorn: Warriors Eternal

    (L-R) A bronze steampunk robot in a top hat (Copernicus), a woman with dark flowing hair and a black silhouette (Melinda/Emma), an Elven warrior with blue skin and long white hair (Eldred), and a young boy in a school outfit with glowing orange eyes (Seng) stand together in an action pose in Unicorn: Warriors Eternal.

    Image: Cartoon Network Studios/Williams Street

    What do you get when you combine Arthurian legend, the “rubber hose” art style of Osamu Tezuka and Max Fleischer, and the determination of one of the most successful American animators of the past 20 years? You get Unicorn: Warriors Eternal, of course — the passion project of director Genndy Tartakovsky and writer Darrick Bachman set in a Victorian steampunk world.

    The series follows a trio of immortal warriors: Melinda, a powerful sorceress; Seng, a cosmic monk; and Edred, a warrior elf, who are reincarnated across several generations by the wizard Merlin to fight an unending battle against an ancient evil. Upon realizing her destiny as the latest reincarnation of Melinda, a young bride-to-be named Emma Fairfax sets off in search of how to get her old life back while fending off the droves of malicious henchmen her reawakening has brought about.

    Brilliantly animated and exquisitely original, Unicorn: Warriors Eternal is without a doubt one of the best animated series Max has to offer. Both Tartakovsky and Bachman have expressed interest in exploring the world of Unicorn more in future installments. Only time will tell if that comes to fruition, but one of the best ways to help ensure that it does is by watching the entire series in full. You won’t regret it. —TE

    Banshee

    Frankie Faison, wearing a hat and a red polo, crosses his arms while sitting at a bar in Banshee.

    Image: Cinemax

    Like Antony Starr in The Boys and Warrior on Max? Have I got some good news for you!

    Warrior creator Jonathan Tropper’s first show, Banshee, follows an expert thief recently freed from prison who accidentally becomes the sheriff of a small fictional Pennsylvanian town.

    It’s a perfect fish-out-of-water setup for a great lead performance, and Starr is fantastic, carrying this show much like he does The Boys. It’s also one of those shows that falls in between the era of serial television and the era of “10-hour movies,” and the mix often gives Banshee the best of both worlds, as Starr’s Lucas Hood uses his unconventional background and skills to be a very different kind of sheriff. Not everything works in the show — some of the plotlines are more thought through than others — but it’s a consistently good time anchored by a great premise and a fantastic leading performance. —Pete Volk

    Batman: The Animated Series

    Still of Batman standing on a building with a streak of lightning in the background from the theme sequence of Batman: The Animated Series.

    Image: Warner Bros. Animation

    My love for Batman: The Animated Series is a well-established public fact.

    Bruce Timm and Eric Radomski’s seminal 1992 reinvention of the Dark Knight changed American animated television forever. Set in an anachronistic 1950s vision of Gotham City, the show follows billionaire playboy Bruce Wayne/Batman, of course, but also a rogues’ gallery almost as large as his arsenal of gadgets and vehicles.

    The dark color palette and art deco aesthetic is as much a revelation to behold now as they were over 30 years ago. The series’ writing delivered some of the more memorable and defining stories related to Batman’s various nemeses, while also inventing its own enduring original character in the form of Harley Quinn, the paramour and sidekick to Batman’s adversary the Joker. There’s too much to say about Batman: The Animated Series to fit into only one article, let alone one blurb. To say that it is one of the best series to watch on Max is an understatement; it’s practically a prerequisite. —TE

    Veep

    Julia Louis-Dreyfus, wearing a blue dress, walks with campaign posters around her, along with Tony Hale, Sam Richardson, and other supporting staff.

    Image: HBO

    For every profession, there’s a TV show that makes people who work that job go, Yeah, that’s the one that got it really right. When watching Veep, the insult-filled comedy about a dysfunctional vice president and her dysfunctional staff, it won’t bring you comfort to know that it’s the show most D.C. insiders nod along to as the best reflection of their life. But the genius of Veep is you can put that out of your mind for a spell; you’re laughing too hard to care.

    In Veep, you can see the roots of big shows to come: Succession and its insult comedy, the comedy of errors of Barry. But Veep is singular because it is just always fucking on. Where most shows are finding themselves in the first season, Veep confidently charges out with guns blazing and F-bombs flying. And it only gets stronger from there. As you watch, and you inevitably remember that this is how our elected officials (at the very least) feel they should be reflected, it might seem terrifying. Then again, in a way it makes sense; Occam’s razor tells us the simplest explanation is often the right one. And that’s the same ethos that makes Veep’s comedy so cutting — these are the simplest people, doing the simplest mismanagement you can imagine. At least here, it’s funny. —Zosha Millman

    Watchmen

    Sister Night (Regina King), a hero dressed almost entirely in black.

    Photo: Mark Hill/HBO

    People have a lot of opinions about Watchmen. One of the more popular ones is that no one should bother adapting or expanding on it, and they are, generally speaking, right. Damon Lindelof’s sequel/reinvention of Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons’ acclaimed comic appeared about as ill-conceived as every prior attempt to revisit Watchmen, and Lindelof even seemed apologetic about attempting the same. How lucky we all are that he did: HBO’s Watchmen was dazzling, a nine-episode limited series that took the superhero metaphor to uncharted territory, turning a deconstruction of superheroes into a stylish contemplation of American power and racism. Violent, funny, and surprisingly moving, HBO’s Watchmen lures you in the same way the comic did: A man is found dead, and that death exposes a conspiracy that threatens to unravel the entire world. —Joshua Rivera

    I May Destroy You

    michaela coel in I May Destroy You, sporting pink hair

    Photo: Natalie Seery/BBC/Val Productions

    Michaela Coel’s searing black comedy follows Arabella, an author with a viral success under her belt and a terrible case of writer’s block keeping her from her next one. When Arabella blacks out following a night with friends at the pub, she learns that she was raped, and attempts to reconstruct the night as best she can. What begins with abject horror grows — thanks to Coel’s incredible performance and razor-sharp writing alongside co-writer Sam Miller — to become a morbidly hilarious, compassionate portrait of modern womanhood, where violence is an occupational hazard of being alive and surviving trauma becomes a marketable asset. I May Destroy You is remarkable for the tonal tightrope it walks but also its unsparing eye, which lets no one — not the audience, nor its characters — off the hook when it comes to its most biting satire or devastating blows. —JR

    Starstruck

    Rose Matafeo stands in a club, wearing a sparkling dress with her hands on her hips, in Starstruck.

    Photo: Mark Johnson/Max

    A rom-com about Jessie (Rose Matafeo) — an unassuming Kiwi woman living in London, where she works at a movie theater — and Tom Kapoor (Nikesh Patel), the actor and movie star that she keeps running into and falling in love with, Starstruck makes charm look easy. Like most romantic comedies, a lot of this is due to Matafeo and Patel’s easy chemistry, as both play characters with a naturalism that makes the unlikeliness of their relationship less of a big deal and more of a big complication. It is just hard to get involved with someone whose whereabouts are news, which forces the 20-something Jessie to be way more decisive than any 20-something is about anything. Starstruck is, at least in part, a rom-com about how many good romances are ones that nearly don’t work out, and its old-school screwball approach to modern love makes it feel both specific and timeless. —JR

    Station Eleven

    Kirsten (Mackenzie Davis) riding a horse as a member of the traveling Shakespeare troupe in Station Eleven

    Photo: Ian Watson/HBO Max

    Look: If you’re going to watch one pandemic show, you should make it Station Eleven. The story itself is simple: In a world where a flu-like pandemic wiped out the bulk of civilization, Kirsten (Mackenzie Davis) leads a traveling theater troupe in the Great Lakes area. A run-in with a dangerous wanderer makes her revisit her past, and stare down a dangerous future.

    Like a lot of HBO shows, Station Eleven tells its story by braiding individuals and their stories together. Through the various perspectives and players of the story, Station Eleven builds something new: a treatise on the value of art, the things that stick with us, and the people we choose to keep in our hearts, whether for reasons happy or sad. Without being too preachy, the show breaks free of mere COVID-19 relevance. What makes Station Eleven a relevant watch isn’t what makes it a powerful one. What we carry through the pandemic isn’t all we’ll take away. —ZM

    The Leftovers

    A family gathers around a dinner table at a restaurant in The Leftovers

    Photo: Van Redin/HBO

    The show kicks off a few years after 2% of the population has vanished. Not a fiery rapture, nor a giant robot plucking a few people off the face of the planet before life goes on. No — this is more like a quiet missing, the sort of act that’s confounding just for how sudden it is, and all the more so when the world keeps spinning. Such trauma is total disorientation for everyone in The Leftovers, whether they like it or not. The world has been rocked, and as some try to hold on to their old way of life, others want to get as far away from it as they can.

    And so The Leftovers (and everyone in it) spins out from there. Like so much of modern media, The Leftovers is “about” “grief.” But as it kaleidoscopes out and picks out one character or another to focus an episode around, it tells a story much more heady and richer than so many other tales of grief and coping. And as it goes on, The Leftovers grows more bold, more mysterious, until reaching its final chapter, an all-timer of a finale. Each of these chapters and characters is its own fault line, but in The Leftovers, you never know when things will come tumbling down. —ZM

    Adventure Time

    Jake the Dog, Finn the Human, and BMO hug it out on the floor of their treehouse in Adventure Time.

    Image: Cartoon Network

    I’ve recently rewatched Adventure Time for the second time, and I’m happy to report it still holds up even as you continue to age out of its target demographic.

    The tales of Jake the Dog, Finn the Human, and the rest of their colorful friends and foes deftly move between silly humor and intense drama in ways few other shows have. While ostensibly a children’s show, Adventure Time isn’t precious with its audience: It isn’t afraid to delve into serious topics (the finale remains a remarkable feat, using the end of a long-running show as an allegory for grief), tell complex stories and jokes, or throw in a few real scares.

    That’s all packed into a story with a massive scope, told in bite-size episodes as hilarious as they are moving. And the show looks good while it’s doing it, consistently pushing itself and the medium to find new ways to express itself. That’s how Adventure Time can be an excellent show for children that also gained a dedicated fandom of adults: It’s just That Good.

    When you’re done with Adventure Time, the post-finale specials Distant Lands and the new spinoff Fionna and Cake are also on Max and worth your time. —PV

    Pete Volk

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  • The returning TV shows you should catch up on in 2024

    The returning TV shows you should catch up on in 2024

    The upcoming year on television is full of exciting new shows to jump into, whether it’s The 3 Body Problem, Shōgun, The Veil, or Manhunt. But once you get into all the returning shows, the 2024 lineup gets daunting. Sure you can start House of the Dragon, Silo, or Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power with just one season of homework to catch up, and shows like True Detective: Night Country and Orphan Black: Echoes you can jump into with no previous knowledge of the series — but what happens when a show’s going into its fourth or fifth season. How do you know if the commitment is worthwhile?

    That’s what we’re here for today: To help you figure out what shows with new seasons in 2024 you should catch up on, and which ones might not be worth the effort. First things first, we’re counting out the easy ones: Big returning shows like The Boys, You, and Bridgerton are cultural phenomena that have been massive for years, so you probably know whether or not they’re for you. If one of them seems like your bag, start watching, but trust your gut instinct either way. As for everything else, here’s what you should know:

    Image: Peacock

    Watch it if you like: 30 Rock, or any sitcom with a constant barrage of hilarious and offbeat jokes
    Previous seasons: Two
    Where to watch: Peacock (Netflix after March 14)

    This is an easy one. This sitcom about four women who used to be pop stars in a girl group is heading into its third season, and its first after moving from Peacock to Netflix. There are only 16 episodes in the first two seasons, and at just 30 hilarious minutes each, it’s easy to breeze through. —Austen Goslin

    (L-R) Mike Colter as David Acosta, Aasif Mandvi as Ben Shakir and Katja Herbers as Kristen Bouchard of the Paramount+ series Evil.

    Image: CBS

    Watch it if you like: Elementary, or any other offbeat procedural, or exorcism movies
    Previous seasons: Three
    Where to watch: Paramount Plus

    From the minds behind all-time great legal procedural The Good Wife, Evil takes the elements of procedural shows we know and love and expertly applies them to the demonic and supernatural. Gleefully playful, surprisingly scary, and mischievously funny, Evil is unlike anything else on television. —Pete Volk

    Jennifer Tilly as Jennifer Tilly sitting in court

    Image: Syfy

    Watch it if you like: The Chucky movies, horror comedy, Jennifer Tilly
    Previous seasons: Two-and-a-half
    Where to watch: Peacock

    Chucky is one of the boldest shows on television, never afraid to reinvent itself or dive into the deepest recesses of its canon. After seasons set in a quiet small town and a Catholic boarding school, the current season (in a mid-season break) is set in the freakin’ White House!! It’s one of the funniest shows on TV, and almost inarguably the goriest. Four more years! —PV

    Jack Lowden and Gary Oldman talk in front of a secure area in Slow Horses

    Image: Apple TV Plus

    Watch it if you like: Dry British humor, spies, fun television
    Previous seasons: Three
    Where to watch: Apple TV Plus

    Slow Horses really started to catch on with the 2023 debut of its third season, but if you’re not on board yet, 2024 is the perfect time to catch up. The series centers around Slough House, essentially the island of misfit toys for disgraced British spies who are disdainfully called Slow Horses. The horses are led by Jackson Lamb, a fantastic spy with awful hygiene and a penchant for rudeness — played terrifically by Gary Oldman. Slow Horses’ third season was its best so far, which is saying something for one of the most fun and watchable shows on TV. —AG

    The cast of Abbott Elementary talk in the teacher’s lounge.

    Photo: Ser Baffo/ABC

    Watch it if you like: Sitcoms like Parks & Recreation, or generally sweet and funny shows
    Previous seasons: Two
    Where to watch: Hulu

    Genuinely funny broadcast sitcoms feel like a rarity nowadays, but Abbott Elementary is doing a great job holding down the fort. Set in a Philadelphia elementary school, the growing roster of phenomenal guest stars helps keep each episode fresh, while the show lets its core cast of teachers grow as characters, friends, and more. Abbott isn’t the funniest sitcom ever, but it’s got a few great jokes every episode and as much heart and personality as any show on TV right now. —AG

    Siegfried wears a wool suit and looks adoringly at a horse in All Creatures Great and Small.

    Image: PBS Masterpiece

    Watch it if you like: Animals, British shows, procedurals
    Previous seasons: Two
    Where to watch: PBS All-Access

    The latest adaptation of James Herriot’s books about being a veterinarian in the British countryside as World War II looms is equally tender, charming, and beautiful. Another example of applying the procedural format in an unlikely direction, All Creatures is about how we care for our community — human and animal alike — and it’s one of the best shows hidden away on PBS. —PV

    Austen Goslin

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  • Our Most Anticipated Shows of 2024

    Our Most Anticipated Shows of 2024

    Chris and Andy talk about some of the TV and movies they consumed over the holidays, including Maestro and The Holdovers (1:00). Then, they discuss how this past summer’s strikes might impact the upcoming 2024 TV slate (14:03), before getting into some of their most anticipated shows of the year, including Industry Season 3, Masters of the Air, and Sinking Spring (22:34).

    Hosts: Chris Ryan and Andy Greenwald
    Producer: Kaya McMullen

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / RSS

    Chris Ryan

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  • Netflix teen shows are trying to let ace characters come out and explain themselves

    Netflix teen shows are trying to let ace characters come out and explain themselves

    Until my early 20s, I believed I was a “normal” sex-haver. I assumed any guilt or repulsion I felt after intimacy was a universal experience. It wasn’t until a year ago that, after hearing me mention that I had repeatedly dissociated after kissing various Tinder dates, my friend said: “You know what asexuality is, right?” I stuttered, offended; of course I knew what it meant, but only in that “jock calling the nerd asexual because he won’t ever get laid” way. She called my bluff and showed me a video from an asexual YouTuber who echoed many of my secret opinions about dating and intimacy. This set me on the path to find as many video essays about asexuality as possible, which explained that I wasn’t broken or in need of the “right person”; my love would just come from somewhere besides sex. Any blueprints for where I might find it or what that love might be instead were a mystery, as I quickly found that asexual representation in media is an absolute travesty.

    There’s no easy way to show an identity based around the lack of something rather than its presence, but when you start throwing out SpongeBob as my LGBTQIA+ rep, I know it’s not a serious conversation. Good asexual (aka ace) characters do exist — Bojack Horseman’s resident goofball Todd Chavez is beloved by many for his swagless slacker schemes — but most rely on negative stereotypes that perpetuate the myth of inhumanity among those who don’t build their love lives around sex.

    Asexual people in media are represented as dispassionate outcasts who avoid close relationships; they are cold and calculating celibates (like Sherlock Holmes), or they force sex upon themselves to fix their perceived inadequacies (like Olivia from whatever the hell The Olivia Experiment was trying to be). Asexual representation isn’t nearly as prevalent in media as gay, lesbian, or bisexual rep, but three of Netflix’s biggest teenage shows of 2023 — Sex Education, Heartstopper, and Everything Now — featured aces as core characters with storylines dedicated to understanding their identities. Much like their queer antecedents who introduced the general public to non-cis, non-hetero ways of life, these ace characters have to come out and explain themselves. Despite good intentions, it’s hard for each character to not read as a first attempt.

    Sex is everywhere in our society, especially during high school, when hormones rage, emotions deepen, and the world cracks open like a spoiled fruit. Putting those primal feelings into words is hard, but that hasn’t stopped Sex Education from highlighting as many sexual identities as possible, including a brief storyline in season 2 in which theater kid Florence (Mirren Mack) recognizes her own asexuality. In a conversation with sex therapist Jean (Gillian Anderson), Florence voices her discontent with social pressures to date and hook up, poignantly stating that she’s “surrounded by a feast” but isn’t hungry. As soon as Florence accepts her ace identity, the series moves on from her; Florence’s sexlessness was a problem to be voiced but not an orientation to be explored.

    Photo: Samuel Taylor/Netflix

    It wasn’t until the final season this year that the show’s creators went all in on asexuality with Sarah “O” Owen (Thaddea Graham), a woman of color and sex therapist at Cavendish. O acts as a rival and antagonist to series protagonist Otis (Asa Butterfield); so much of the season revolves around Otis’ attempts to reclaim his place as the sole sex therapist on campus. During their bizarre election where students vote for who they most trust to therapize their sexual dilemmas, Otis tries to prove that O is untrustworthy and unreliable by revealing that she ghosted several former partners. To save her reputation, O comes out as asexual and says she ghosted partners because she didn’t know how to talk about it yet — although given all the scheming and scratching she had pulled over the course of the season, you’d be forgiven for thinking her coming out might be a ploy for sympathy. I did.

    This misunderstanding became a prevalent enough internet discourse that Yasmin Benoit — an ace activist and woman of color who served as a script consultant for the season — took to X (formerly Twitter) to reveal multiple scenes and lines were changed or cut that addressed both the racial bias and acephobia that O faces throughout the season. Without this additional context, I found it difficult to be as offended as I should have been when Otis accused her of using asexuality as a way to tarnish his image. The show instead portrays O spending most of the season trying to maintain her pristine image, all the way down to her slick influencer branding. This emphasis on her insincerity sometimes obscures how terrible it is that Otis attempts to claim her space and ruin her life.

    It isn’t until episode 7 that her backstory dump — which delves into how her schoolmates singled her out for her race and Northern Irish accent, how she felt abnormal because she didn’t have crushes or intimate fantasies, how she felt safe in her sex clinic but felt if she ever told the truth no one would trust her because “who wants to have sex advice from someone who doesn’t have sex?” — finally brings her closer to the character Benoit seemingly set out to create. For me, the damage was already done: O remains a messy, calculating, and isolated asexual, rather than being the thoughtful representation the ace community deserves.

    The final season of Sex Education is a mixed bag, but it tries to create a three-dimensional ace character; Heartstopper felt content to stop at character. The show’s second season does a lot to darken its light and fluffy image: It tackles biphobia, abusive parents, and disordered eating. But it never quite knows what to do with Isaac (Tobie Donovan). The laconic bookworm finds himself courted by James (Bradley Riches), and their awkward flirtations are drawn out for most of the season until they finally kiss in a Parisian hotel’s hallway. Isaac seems repelled by the intimacy and is sent into a spiral — though we don’t see it. Isaac’s explanation to James in the following episode is familiar to asexuals: He has never had a crush on someone and hoped that maybe James would be different. But he wasn’t.

    Charlie (Joe Locke) riding on Isaac’s (Tobie Donovan) shoulders as they both smile

    Photo: Samuel Dore/Netflix

    When his friends cajole him for details about the kiss, Isaac snaps, yelling that he knows they don’t find his life interesting with its lack of romantic drama. It’s a sentiment shared by series creator Alice Oseman herself, who identifies as aromantic and asexual (aroace) and in an interview with The Guardian stated, “The world is obsessed with sex and romance. And if you don’t have that, you feel like you haven’t achieved something that’s really important.” In her novel Loveless, she tries to explore narratives where romance and sex aren’t the main focus with aroace protagonist Georgia. But where Georgia has 400-plus pages to grow and change, Isaac’s character can only come out in bits and spurts around the central romance between Nick (Kit Connor) and Charlie (Joe Locke). We never get to know his personality or desires, so Isaac’s frustration with his friends seemingly comes from nowhere.

    Literally two minutes after his outburst, Isaac meets an artist exhibiting a piece about their aroace identity, and everything they say resonates with him: the loneliness of existing in a world that prizes romance and sex when you don’t feel those attractions, the confusion that comes with feeling different without the words to describe it, the freedom of letting go of those external expectations and existing as yourself. Isaac immediately accepts himself as aroace. It’s a beautiful sentiment hamstrung by the fact that Isaac was just given the answers to his identity problems, no introspection necessary.

    Will (Noah Thomas) sits and smiles in close over

    Image: Netflix

    By contrast, Everything Now is a show without easy answers; its depiction of disordered eating, substance abuse, sexual intimacy, and mental health struggles are important if not always easy to watch. While much of the series focuses on recovering anorexic Mia’s (Sophie Wilde) return to high school after a brief hospitalization, it was her friend Will (Noah Thomas) who captured my heart. Will is boisterous, confident, and fashionable, traits that he claims won the lusty affection of the cheesemonger at his workplace. Except the cheesemonger doesn’t know his name, and when “Cheese Guy” eventually does try to hook up with him, Will runs away. Will is embarrassed about his virginity and chooses to lean into the stereotype of the promiscuous gay man, as if cultivating the image of a sex-haver will absolve him from engaging in something that repulses him.

    After a drunk Mia reveals his lie to a party full of their classmates, Will hides in the bathroom. He’s uncharacteristically quiet and embarrassed, compressing himself as tightly as possible into the bathtub. His sulking is interrupted by Theo (Robert Akodoto), a nice and popular schoolmate. Despite Will’s protestations, Theo stays and comforts him. Will echoes O and Isaac here: He feels broken for not wanting sex, and that something must be wrong with him. Theo suggests that maybe Will needs a connection to engage in romantic or sexual intimacy, and the next day the two kiss passionately and start dating. Although it’s never stated outright, Will’s requirement for emotional connection to precede intimacy is a sign that he’s demisexual, an even smaller sliver of the asexual pie that often goes unrepresented. Being in a relationship isn’t an easy adjustment for Will; he worries that Theo will eventually want sex or something more that he isn’t willing to give. The anxiety overwhelms Will and, despite Theo’s willingness to take things slow, he refuses to discuss his fear of intimacy and ultimately ends the relationship.

    These Asexuality 101-esque narratives feel reminiscent of the early aughts, when queer characters were defined by their otherness in an effort to educate rather than represent. They’re the type of stories that I needed to hear growing up, stories that gently told me that I wasn’t broken while placing me on a path toward self-acceptance. After a year of research and introspection, however, their lack of nuance feels half-baked, especially in comparison to the three-dimensional queer characters who surround them. Asexuality is a complicated identity where multiple conflicting truths can coexist. Aces might feel little to no sexual attraction, but that doesn’t mean that we can’t date, fall in love, or even have sex if we so desire; seeking fulfillment through solely platonic relationships is equally valid, and, too often, narratively unexplored. O, Isaac, and Will hint at a future where we might see asexuality with all its complexity on our screens. Maybe by then, the universal feeling won’t be that we are broken. Maybe it will be that we are just a little different.

    Mik Deitz

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  • Top Unscripted TV Shows and Moments of the Year

    Top Unscripted TV Shows and Moments of the Year

    Juliet and Callie return to discuss their top unscripted TV shows and TV moments of 2023! They discuss their favorite shows, like Survivor Season 45 (SPOILER ALERT 6:45) and their top cast members (5:01), Southern Charm Season 9 (18:50), Bravo moments and people (31:38), the Love Is Blind franchise (41:26), and much more!

    Hosts: Juliet Litman and Callie Curry
    Producer: Jade Whaley
    Theme Song: Devon Renaldo

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / RSS

    Juliet Litman

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  • Blizzard shares World of Warcraft roadmap for updates through 2024

    Blizzard shares World of Warcraft roadmap for updates through 2024

    Blizzard Entertainment has a host of content planned for World of Warcraft, both the retail version of the game and the Classic servers. Today, executive producer Holly Longdale shared a roadmap through 2024, which includes the start of the Worldsoul Saga announced at this year’s BlizzCon.

    There will be three more content updates for the current expansion, Dragonflight. While the expansion won’t continue the usual three-act structure, with a raid at the end of each chapter, we’ll still be seeing the aftermath of the story play out. Patch 10.2.6 is marked with a cheeky pirate skull, and not much else, so that’s a hint that we can likely expect some naval trouble soon. There will also be updates to Dragonflight’s existing dungeons and outdoor content.

    Image: Blizzard Entertainment

    In the spring and summer of 2024, players will be able to test the upcoming The War Within expansion. Blizzard has worked hard to make this expansion the start of a story that plays out over the game’s next three expansions in The War Within, Midnight, and The Last Titan, so it’s likely that the early War Within content will have hints and foreshadowing that will pay off down the road.

    Blizzard is also continuing to develop World of Warcraft Classic, which allows players to experience past eras of World of Warcraft. Cataclysm Classic is on the way, but there’ll be new changes to the traditional gameplay styles. There’s already Hardcore Mode, which means if your character dies, they’re permanently dead. An upcoming “Self-Found” mode will restrict the player from acquiring gear or assistance from allies; it’s a one-person venture to the top.

    The World of Warcraft Classic roadmap, showing new gameplay modes like the Season of Discovery, as well as the launch of Cataclysm Classic.

    Image: Blizzard Entertainmnt

    These updates will play out throughout the course of the year, so we may see certain dates and events get shifted. However, it looks like Blizzard is dedicated to providing consistent updates to both version of its popular MMO. While Cataclysm wasn’t the most beloved expansion, the new changes to Classic modes has helped to revitalize player interest. We’ll have to see how the rest of Dragonflight plays out, and how it helps set the stage for the upcoming The War Within.

    Cass Marshall

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  • The Top 10 TV Shows of 2023

    The Top 10 TV Shows of 2023

    Chris and Andy remember Andre Braugher, famous for his roles on Homicide and Brooklyn Nine-Nine, who passed away this week (1:00). Then they reflect on the state of TV in 2023 and how we seem to be at the twilight of peak TV (9:00), before ranking their 10 favorite shows of the year, including Full Circle, The Gold, and Daisy Jones & the Six (41:59).

    Hosts: Chris Ryan and Andy Greenwald
    Producer: Kaya McMullen

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / RSS

    Chris Ryan

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  • This Drama About Friendship Is A Top Show On Netflix Right Now

    This Drama About Friendship Is A Top Show On Netflix Right Now

    “Wednesday” is the most popular show on Netflix, according to the streaming service’s public ranking system.

    In this latest installment in the “Addams Family” franchise, Jenna Ortega stars as Wednesday, daughter of Morticia and Gomez Addams (played by Catherine Zeta-Jones and Luis Guzmán). The new horror comedy premiered on Netflix Nov. 23 and takes the spooky titular heroine to boarding school, where she must solve a murder mystery.

    The second most popular show of the moment is “Firefly Lane,” an adaptation of Kristin Hannah’s bestselling novel. Starring Sarah Chalke and Katherine Heigl, the drama depicts the bond between two friends from their teen years into their 40s. The first part of the second season was released on Dec. 2, with part two set to come out in 2023.

    In third place is the new cooking competition show “Snack vs. Chef,” which debuted on Nov. 30. Twelve chefs compete for a $50,000 prize in a series of challenges that involve recreating iconic snack foods and inventing their own.

    And true crime fans are clearly tuning into “Crime Scene: The Texas Killing Fields.” This new addition to the “Crime Scene” docuseries, which explores the unsolved murders of four women in Texas in the ’80s and ’90s, is also trending on the streaming service.

    Read on for the full top 10 list, and if you want to stay informed about everything joining Netflix each week, subscribe to the Streamline newsletter.

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