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Tag: streaming shows

  • New on Netflix: In ‘The Beast in Me,’ Claire Danes brings the crazy again as only she can

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    Premieres Wednesday:

    Being Eddie — Did you know that Shalimar Seiuli, the trans hooker Eddie Murphy was caught with in 1998, died a year later, after falling five stories down the face of her apartment building? Don’t expect to hear that fun factoid in this official retrospective of the legendary comedian’s career. But maybe we’ll get to see “James Brown’s Celebrity Hot Tub Party” again. (Netflix)

    A Merry Little Ex-Mas — On the cusp of their divorce, Alicia Silverstone and Oliver Hudson have plans to spend one final holiday together. But when his new girlfriend shows up, even that humble aspiration becomes a tall order. See, this is why it’s always better to make a clean break, like the Murdaughs did. (Netflix)

    Premieres Thursday:

    The Beast in Me — Afflicted by writer’s block since losing her son, an author (Claire Danes) gets interested in life again when a suspected murderer moves in next door. And why shouldn’t she? In the best-case scenario, she could get a whole new novel out of it. Especially if she can figure out how to outsource the adverbs to ChatGPT. (Netflix)

    Tiffany Haddish Goes Off — The irrepressible comic actor and some of her childhood buddies take a wacky girls’ trip to South Africa, Zimbabwe and Tanzania. No Nigeria, though, because a Signal chat they’re all on said some shit is about to go down. (Peacock) 

    Premieres Friday: 

    Come See Me in the Good Light — Documentary cameras follow married poets Andrea Gibson and Megan Falley as they navigate Gibson’s diagnosis of ovarian cancer. This doc won the Festival Film Favorite Award at this year’s Sundance, just five months before Gibson passed away. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame want you to know they could be just as punctual if this country would get off its ass and standardize Daylight Saving Time. (Apple TV)

    The Creep Tapes Season 2 — David Dastmalchian is among the guest stars as the found-footage series profiles new victims of the insidious Peachfuzz. Coincidentally, “the insidious peach fuzz” is what Usha has been calling JD ever since he started coming home smelling like Erika Kirk and White Claw. (Shudder and AMC+)

    Malice — It’s Saltburn without the whacking off, as a vengeful nanny (Jack Whitehall) plots the destruction of an upper-class British family headed by David Duchovny. Wait a minute, if it’s Fox Mulder we’re talking about, this is probably more like BRIGHTburn. WITH whacking off. (Prime Video )

    Nouvelle Vague — Richard Linklater dramatizes the filming of Godard’s Breathless in what Variety called “an enchanting ode to the rapture of cinema.” In their spare time, they all break into Barnes & Noble together and lick the Criterion Collection. (Netflix)

    The Seduction — The umpteenth riff on Les Liaisons Dangereuses is a prequel series that has roles for Anamaria Vartolomei, Diane Kruger and Vincent Lacoste. Not to be outdone, Disney+ has placed an eight-episode order for Cruel Intentions Babies. (HBO Max)

    Premieres Sunday:

    Landman — High-profile cast additions in Season 2 of the Texas big-oil drama include Colm Feore, Andy Garcia and Sam Elliott. Wait a minute, you’re telling me Sam Elliott wasn’t already in this thing? I thought SAG had a rule that you have to hire him if your show is set west of New Orleans and there’s a role for Dennis Weaver with pharyngitis. (Paramount+)

    Premieres Monday:

    Epic Ride: The Story of Universal Theme Parks — This glorified ad for the Universal family of parks has now been delayed two times since its promised launch last July. The problem is that they keep having to update it every time somebody snuffs it on Stardust Racers. (Peacock)

    The Mighty Nein — While you wait for the fifth and final season of The Legend of Vox Machina, enjoy the same cast of Critical Role principals in this stopgap animated show set in the world of Dungeons & Dragons. Or you could just visit your local comic shop on whatever day of the week everybody’s mom cleans out the basement. (Prime Video)

    Selena y Los Dinos: A Family’s Legacy — The Tejano sensation’s short but groundbreaking career is recapped in a doc that also won big at year’s Sundance, this one in the category of Archival Storytelling. The runner-up in that category: “The Inspiring Life and Brilliant Future of Andrew Cuomo.” (Netflix) 

    Plus everything else premiering on Netflix, Prime Video, Hulu, Peacock and Disney+ this week

    All the streaming shows debuting this week on Netflix, Apple TV, Prime Video and the rest

    Plus a schlock-doc about the racialized 2023 Ocala shooting and the return of ‘Loot’ on Apple TV


    Orlando’s daily dose of what matters. Subscribe to The Daily Weekly.




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    Steve Schneider
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  • What to watch this week: The triumphal return of ‘Down Cemetery Road,’ a second season of ‘Hazbin Hotel’ and more

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    Emma Thompson in ‘Down Cemetery Road’ Credit: courtesy of Apple TV

    Premieres Wednesday:

    Ballad of a Small Player — Filmmaker Edward Berger (Conclave) casts Colin Farrell as an inveterate gambler and swindler living under an assumed identity in China. The Wall Street Journal called it “a failed attempt to wring laughs out of this abundantly awful man.” That was on page B25, directly opposite a full-page profile of Peter Thiel. (Netflix)

    Down Cemetery Road — Emma Thompson plays a private investigator whose search for a missing girl uncovers a shocking secret: Vast numbers of Britons who were believed dead are secretly still alive and well. “How does a guy get in on that?” asks Keir Starmer. (Apple TV)

    Hazbin Hotel Season 2 — With the forces of Heaven vanquished, Charlie finds her infernal hostelry overrun with new guests who see no need to renounce their evil ways. See, God? This is what happens when you think you’re putting Charlie Kirk somewhere where he can’t do any more damage. (Prime Video)

    Ink Master — The prize is not only $250,000 but recognition for one’s origins in Season 17, which carries the theme “Hometown Heroes.” That’s a significant departure from the previous 16 seasons, the theme of which was “hepatitis.” (Paramount+)

    Selling Sunset — Season 9 adds new realtor Sandra Vergara, who just so happens to be Sofia Vergara’s cousin. And also her adoptive sister. How does that work, you ask? Forget it, Jake, it’s Sunset! (Netflix)

    Star Wars: Visions — Season 3 of the animated anthology hearkens back to Season 1 by once again focusing entirely on anime. I don’t know, do we think that genre is really bankable yet? (Disney+)

    Colin Farrell in ‘Ballad of a Small Player’ Credit: courtesy of Netflix

    Premieres Thursday:

    Aileen: Queen of the Serial Killers — Archival footage and interviews with survivors paint a documentary portrait of the criminal psychopath who made living in Central Florida a waking nightmare in the late 20th century. And here you thought everyone had forgotten Glenda Hood! (Netflix)

    Amsterdam Empire — Famke Janssen takes on the role of a former Europop star who tries to ruin her husband’s cannabis business as revenge for his infidelity. I never thought I’d say this, but J.Lo’s inability to find true and lasting love suddenly seems kind of trivial. (Netflix)

    Hell House LLC: Lineage — The fifth and final installment in the franchise about a cursed haunted attraction is the first one that isn’t based on found footage. Which I’m assuming means it was stolen. (Shudder)

    Juan Gabriel: I Must, I Can, I Will — Four documentary episodes retrace the remarkable career of the flamboyant Mexican balladeer, who became a gay icon despite having fathered six children with three different women. In related news, my strategy of hanging around the Parliament House for four years is due to put me up to my neck in it any minute now. (Netflix)

    Son of a Donkey — The Australian YouTube duo known as Superwog launches a new series that explores the lighter side of modern challenges like road rage, online scams and failing kidneys. It must be nice to live in a country where those are your biggest problems. Some of us would gladly give up a kidney to be that close to Kylie. (Netflix)

    The Witcher Season 4 — The eagerly anticipated penultimate season finds Liam Hemsworth taking over the title role from Henry Cavill. But don’t worry, Henry fans: You’ll be able to see him soon enough, in … oh, I’ll think of something. (Netflix)

    Premieres Friday:

    Bad Influencer — A single mother with a special-needs child to take care of runs afoul of the law when she conscripts an aspiring influencer to help her sell phony handbags. And she might have gotten away with it, if Kim Kardashian hadn’t spotted the unauthorized knockoff of her pubes. (Netflix)

    Breathless — The Joaquín Sorolla Hospital has gone entirely private as Season 2 begins, forcing our already taxed resident physicians to make some tough choices. For example, when they have to tell a cancer patient that insurance won’t cover her treatment, do they do it through the portal or as a Zoom puppet show? (Netflix)

    The White House Effect — Return with us now to the complicated days of Bush 41, when warring factions of the Republican party problematized the administration’s response to climate change. Nowadays, the warring factions are the ones who want to ignore it and the ones who want to ignore it while wearing blackface. (Netflix)

    Premieres Monday:

    Crutch — This spinoff from the CBS series The Neighborhood has Tracy Morgan as a Harlem businessman who’s having to do a lot of recalibrating now that his grown son and daughter have moved back in with him. In the hilarious third episode, the son comes out as gay and Tracy stabs him to death with a kitchen knife. (Paramount+)

    In Waves and War — Follow the healing journey of three Navy SEALs who had to travel overseas to be prescribed psychedelics for their PTSD. Meanwhile, ICE want you to know they’re going to shoot you in the face if you try to charge them for that vanilla latte. (Netflix)

    Premieres Tuesday:

    All’s Fair — And speaking of Kim Kardashian, she’s been cast in the lead role of a divorce attorney in Ryan Murphy’s new legal drama. Supporting parts go to Glenn Close, Naomi Watts and Sarah Paulson, who might be stars themselves someday if they can just get their muffs on Candies. (Hulu)

    Leanne Morgan: Unspeakable Things — Taking a momentary step away from her Netflix sitcom, the Tennessee comedian fills us in on everything that’s been going on in her life, like adjusting to success and trying gummies. As opposed to Pete Davidson, who’s adjusting to gummies and thinking about trying success. (Netflix)

    Squid Game: The Challenge — The spinoff competition show stays married to the bit in Season 2, pitting another 456 contestants against each other in pursuit of $4.56 million. High concept, right? Now give me my two tickets to Tucson, because my flight is boarding at Gate 2 in two minutes. (Netflix)

    Plus a schlock-doc about the racialized 2023 Ocala shooting and the return of ‘Loot’ on Apple TV

    Plus everything else debuting on Netflix, HBO Max, Peacock and the rest

    Plus everything else debuting this week on Prime Video, Shudder, AMC+ and the rest


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    Steve Schneider
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  • New on Netflix: Season 3 of ‘The Diplomat’ roars back onto screens Thursday

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    Premieres Wednesday:

    Inside Furioza — The sequel to the 2021 crime drama Furioza has a new kingpin taking hold of the Polish underworld, with plans to extend its reach into other countries. At press time, a confused Stephen Miller had ordered the arrest of Doda. (Netflix)

    Loot — Molly and Arthur are stranded on a desert island at the top of the long-awaited Season 3, which is finally hitting screens after a hiatus of nearly a year and a half. See, for a while there, it looked as if star Maya Rudolph was going to be busy playing Kamala Harris. Isn’t it great when we can be two previews into one of these things and you already want to put the gun in your mouth? (Apple TV)

    Murdaugh: Death in the Family — Jason Clarke plays Alex Murdaugh, the “it” killer of 2023, in a drama series that was announced two months before he even went to trial. What were they going to do if he was acquitted, retcon him as a K-pop demon hunter? (Hulu)

    No One Saw Us Leave — The Mexico of the 1960s is the setting for a reality-based drama in which a couple’s divorce becomes needlessly complicated when the husband kidnaps the daughter. That’s a niche market for the lawyers all right, but I understand their billboards are the s***. (Netflix) 

    Six Kings Slam 2025 — Plant yourself in front of the screen for three days of men’s tennis from Riyadh, but think very carefully: Do you really want to spend that much time in a country even Shane Gillis wouldn’t visit? (Netflix)

    Premieres Thursday:

    Devil in Disguise: John Wayne Gacy — The humane approach is the modus operandi of an eight-episode dramatization that’s so determined to avoid exploitation it doesn’t reenact a single one of the infamous Gacy’s murders — or even show his victims interacting with him in any way whatsoever. As Derek Smalls would say, that’s a cozy 10 minutes. (Peacock)

    The Diplomat — As Season 3 commences, the sudden death of the American president elevates a psychopathic vice president into the top job. Listen, we’d take it. (Netflix)

    Romantics Anonymous — A chocolatier who has trouble making eye contact falls in love with a customer who doesn’t like touching people. Which explains why their meet cute is her throwing a bag of truffles at his head and missing by a mile. (Netflix)

    Starting 5 — The quintet of NBA greats profiled in Season 2 includes James Harden, No. 1 point guard for the Los Angeles Clippers. Or as I knew him until five minutes ago, that guy whose side eye I use to respond to every one of James Woods’ tweets. (Netflix)

    “The Perfect Neighbor” on Netflix Credit: courtesy Netflix

    Premieres Friday:

    27 Nights — The life of Argentinian artist and writer Natalia Kohen inspired this probing drama about a woman whose daughters have her committed, even though what looks like mental illness on her part might simply be eccentricity. It’s more complicated than it seems, because she was born four decades too early for the Tylenol defense. (Netflix)

    Good News — A black-comic take on the 1970 hijacking of a Japanese commercial flight, with the authorities exploring a bunch of zany strategies to restore order. Bright idea No. 1 is having Johnny in the control tower just unplug everything. (Netflix)

    Hollywood Hustler: Glitz, Glam, Scam — Former friends and even his ex-wife explain how they were taken in by Zach Horwitz, a struggling actor who fraudulently claimed to hold the foreign distribution rights to various big Hollywood films. Investors were seduced by fake contracts with Netflix and HBO — documents that were later ruled phonies because they didn’t include a single notification of coming subscription hikes. (Prime Video)

    Mr. Scorsese — Fellow filmmaker Rebecca Miller salutes the great Martin Scorsese with a five-part documentary that chronicles the great man’s life and work. Follow his entire creative evolution, from his early days as a student filmmaker at NYU to his later years as Kevin Feige’s No. 1 troll. Cinema! (Apple TV)

    The Perfect Neighbor — Bodycam footage is used almost exclusively to document the racial tensions that culminated in a 2023 shooting in Ocala. Or you could just plug your Nextdoor feed into Google Photos and hit “animate.” (Netflix)

    She Walks in Darkness — A Spanish secret agent risks her life to spend years undercover with the terrorist group known as ETA. But how dangerous can they be if they’re never totally sure when they’re going to get anywhere? (Netflix)

    The Thaw Season 3 — The six-episode third season of the Polish crime drama has widowed detective Katarzyna Zawieja (Katarzyna Wajda) investigating a drug ring run entirely by teenagers. Well, it’s a better return than they used to get from delivering Gritski, Poland’s family newspaper. (HBO Max)

    Turn of the Tide Season 2 — Eduardo returns to his Azores neighborhood three months after the events of Season 1, to find the local drug trade controlled by a new and intimidating enemy. Careful, Eduardo! Those Polish teenagers will f*** you up! (Netflix)

    Turn of the Tide: The Surreal Story of Rabo de Peixe — Learn the true story behind today’s returning crime drama in an accompanying documentary that shows how a humble fisherman’s life was turned upside down by the washing ashore of a massive shipment of cocaine. For one thing, he sure could gut those fish faster! (Netflix)

    The Twits — This animated adaptation of Roald Dahl’s book about “the meanest, smelliest, nastiest people in the world” features new songs by David Byrne. “No comment,” say Tina Weymouth, Chris Frantz and Jerry Harrison. (Netflix)

    Premieres Sunday:

    Fangoria Chainsaw Awards — Presenters in the 27th annual tribute to the best in horror cinema will include Ryan Coogler and GWAR. Expect the state of the art in bloody decapitations. And I’m sure GWAR have something fun planned as well. (Shudder)

    Premieres Tuesday:

    Who Killed the Montreal Expos? — Two decades later, Canada is still wondering how it lost its first MLB team to Washington, D.C. Which only goes to show that country is ahead of us in everything, because America is currently wondering how it lost everything to Washington, D.C. (Netflix)


    Orlando’s daily dose of what matters. Subscribe to The Daily Weekly.


    Plus everything else debuting on Netflix, HBO Max, Peacock and the rest

    Plus everything else debuting this week on Prime Video, Shudder, AMC+ and the rest

    Plus: Jessica Chastain in ‘The Savant,’ Brett Goldstein in ‘All of You’ and everything else premiering on streaming



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    Steve Schneider
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  • On Our Streaming Radar: Slow Horses, The Savant, Beauty in Black and Reasonable Doubt

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    This week’s streaming lineup is stacked with powerhouse performances, Houston connections, and stories that move from the shadowy corners of espionage to the glittery mess of family drama. Whether you’re looking for thrillers, courtroom battles, or binge-worthy scandal, here are four series you’ll want to press play on.

    Slow Horses (Season 5)

    A standout returning this week is Apple TV+’s Slow Horses. Based on Mick Herron’s acclaimed spy novels, the series follows MI5 operatives who’ve made mistakes significant enough to be exiled to “Slough House”—the dumping ground of British intelligence. Written off as useless, the so-called “slow horses” are left to push papers and fade away… except things never stay quiet for long.

    At the center is Jackson Lamb, the flatulent, rude, unkempt, yet razor-sharp leader of Slough House, played with brilliant bite by Gary Oldman. Known for roles like Commissioner Gordon in Christopher Nolan’s Dark Knight trilogy and Sirius Black in the Harry Potter franchise, Oldman has found his longest-running role yet in Slow Horses.

    When I caught up with Oldman ahead of the Season 4 premiere, he reflected on how unusual this role has been for him. “I’ve experienced Cinematically. I’ve experienced a sort of recurring character. I was a Gordon for three Batmans and I came back as Sirius Black in the Potter Series,” he said. “But I have always been a fan of long form TV and would look on it somewhat enviously thinking, wouldn’t that, oh, I would love to do that and come back with a recurring character, the same group of people.”

    He went on to describe the camaraderie that’s developed on set: “What I’ve discovered is really that we are like a family, and to the credit of the show, we’ve had the same dp, Danny Cohen, and we’ve had the same sound operator and we have the same sound, makeup, costume, and of course the actors. So now we are four years in. We are a very sort of close-knit family. That side of it I have really enjoyed. It’s almost like being in the same experience that one might have with a theater company.”

    Season five (yes, the show’s momentum is that strong) debuts September 24 on Apple TV+.

    The Savant

    Next up, Also on Apple TV+ is The Savant, starring Academy Award winner Jessica Chastain. The series introduces us to Jodi Goodwin, better known as “The Savant,” an undercover investigator whose job is to infiltrate online hate groups and prevent domestic extremist attacks before they happen. Inspired by the 2019 Cosmopolitan article “Is It Possible to Stop a Mass Shooting Before It Happens?,” the series is rooted in real-life reporting and takes viewers inside the dangerous, hidden world of extremist networks.

    Chastain leads the cast alongside Nnamdi Asomugha as her husband, Charlie Goodwin, with Cole Doman (Sharp Stick), Jordana Spiro (Ozark), and Trinity Lee Shirley (Swagger) rounding out the ensemble. When I spoke with Chastain ahead of the series premiere, she explained that the most important part of playing this character was protecting the real person she’s based on.

    Chastain said that “important thing when playing this character was to keep her safe, which meant kept keeping her identity a secret in private. So, we spoke on the phone, but I didn’t want to use anything in playing her that would identify her and open her and her family up to danger.”

    She went on to say that while she avoided details that might expose her subject, she “definitely took inspiration from her interior life, her emotional life. I asked her a lot of questions about what it was like this balancing act, but then I also asked simple questions. What’s your favorite music? What’s your favorite food? What do you do when you’re stressed out? And that helped as well. But I had to kind of build from scratch in order to not put her in danger.”

    The first two episodes debut on Apple TV+ September 26, followed by weekly installments in the eight-episode season.

    Beauty in Black (Season 2)

    If you like drama, mess, and tea served hot, look no further than Beauty in Black, returning to Netflix for its second season. Created by Tyler Perry, the series follows Kimmie, an exotic dancer whose life becomes deeply intertwined with a wealthy and dysfunctional cosmetics family. At the heart of the family empire is Mallory, played by Houston’s own Crystle Stewart—Miss USA 2008.

    When I asked Stewart whether she saw parts of herself in Mallory, she laughed and admitted there were some similarities. “Yeah, she’s that girl,” Stewart told me. “So, I think her business savviness, her business acumen that’s similar to mine, her assertiveness, her love for fashion, her philanthropic efforts.” But she went on to point out where she and her character differ: “She can be nice in public, but I think that’s more of a tactic versus personality trait. I think I’m nice in person, so there’s some similarities, but on the other end, her nastiness and her willing to do anything to keep that control in the business, I think that’s where we differ.”

    The show was one of Netflix’s most-watched dramas during its first season, and season two doubles down on the crime, glamour, and betrayals fans loved.

    Part 1 of the new season is streaming now, with Part 2 dropping later this month.

    Reasonable Doubt (Season 3)

    Finally, Hulu’s Reasonable Doubt returns for its third season, bringing more drama both inside and outside the courtroom. From executive producers Kerry Washington and Larry Wilmore, the series stars Emayatzy Corinealdi as Jax Stewart, a defense attorney balancing high-stakes cases with life as a single mother of two.

    The show cleverly takes inspiration from Jay-Z’s 1996 debut album of the same name and even names its episodes from some of Hov’s most well-known records—borrowing titles like “99 Problems” and “Can’t Knock the Hustle” in Season 1, “Can I Live?” in Season 2, and continuing the theme this year with episodes called “Run This Town” and “No Church in the Wild.”

    Created by Scandal writer Raamla Mohamed, the series has built a passionate fan base for its mix of sharp writing, stylish direction, and layered characters. Season 3 also features Houston’s own Angela Grovey as Krystal Walters. When I spoke with Grovey about stepping into this season, she shared what to expect.

    “With Jax and Louis, they’re navigating the sticky situation we left you with in Season 2 involving a baby, and then we really shake things up in the office.” She continued about some new additions to the cast, “Joseph Kore is joining us as Bill Sterling this year, and he really stirs things up at the firm. There are some power dynamics and struggles going on at our law office that play a big role this season.

    After premiering with two episodes, the series continues with “Run This Town” on September 25.

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    Brad Gilmore

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  • On Our Streaming Radar: Invasion, Late-Night Legends, and Shape Island

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    In the ever-evolving world of television, streaming is no longer just the future, it’s the now. From sports to scripted dramas, the digital revolution has reshaped how, when, and what we watch. Just last week, ESPN unveiled its long-awaited direct-to-consumer platform, while the UFC inked a $7 billion deal with Paramount, further cementing the fact that streaming isn’t simply an option, it’s the arena where the biggest battles for audience attention are fought.

    But with that explosion of choice comes the constant struggle: what’s worth your time? With new series and specials dropping every week across Netflix, Apple TV+, Peacock, and beyond, it’s easy to feel lost in the shuffle. Consider this your guide. Here are three standout titles streaming now, each wildly different, but each worth your attention. From a globe-spanning alien invasion to a nostalgic return of late-night royalty, to a charming children’s adventure with a message for the whole family, these are the shows that cut through the noise.

    When Invasion premiered on Apple TV+, it set itself apart by widening the frame. Instead of focusing on one city or one set of survivors, the series follows people across the globe, from Japan to Oklahoma to Afghanistan, showing the alien threat as a truly worldwide event. Now in its third season, those disparate stories finally begin to converge as humanity unites to push back against the invaders.

    For Simon Kinberg, that scale wouldn’t be possible in film. “A movie is two hours of storytelling,” he said, pointing out the difficulty of cramming a full cast of characters and a plot into just 120 pages. “You can make certain jumps, but it’s hard to create something that feels really dense and deep.” With Invasion, he’s found the opposite to be true. “In television, you have so much time for the characters to breathe, and that’s what I’ve loved. It’s like the difference between movies as short stories or poems, and television as a novel.”

    By the end of Season 3, viewers will have spent nearly 30 hours inside this story, the equivalent of 15 feature films. Kinberg compared it to his decades with the X-Men franchise, which spanned eight X-Men branded films. “That’s only half the amount of time we’ve already had with Invasion,” he said. “I’ve loved being able to slow play and just go deep with the characters as the story continues to have forward momentum.”

    Of course, more time means new challenges. “In movies, it’s pretty mechanical in terms of structure,” Kinberg explained. “Thirty minutes to set up, 60 minutes to escalate, 30 minutes for the finale. In TV, it’s way more open. You can do a lot more radical things because you have more time.”

    That sense of freedom is what keeps Invasion bingeable. Its deliberate pacing may test impatient viewers, but it also builds a layered, human drama beneath the spectacle of an alien war , one that’s as much about people and connection as it is about survival.

    Invasion (Apple TV+)

    Late-night television has been in the headlines recently for a variety of reasons , from CBS’s decision to cancel The Late Show with Stephen Colbert to Jimmy Fallon’s recent crossover with Greg Gutfeld, the conservative comic and commentator who declared himself as the new “king of late night” with his Fox News cable show. However, Shout! TV, a streamer that is finding its footing in classic programming, is bringing the classic confidence and comedy of a king once crowned. With the surname of Carson.

    “Here’s Johnny,” indeed, because Shout! TV has struck a deal with the Carson Entertainment Group to stream over 500 episodes of The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. From 1962 until 1992, Carson stood on the star at center stage and delivered a monologue not just to a particular demographic, but to the entirety of America. Over three decades, he broke some of comedy’s biggest names, Eddie Murphy, Robin Williams, Jerry Seinfeld, George Lopez, David Letterman and, of course, eventually handed the desk to Jay Leno.

    Until now, most of Carson’s Tonight Show run had only been seen in clips or sporadic reruns. Some of the original tapes were literally stored in salt mines before being carefully digitized for streaming. For the first time, viewers can experience Carson’s legacy in full.

    Matt Arsulich, Senior Director of Product Management at Shout! Studios, told me that the project was only possible because Carson owned his show, a rarity in late-night. “As opposed to some other talk shows where the host did not necessarily own or control the show, that is the case with Johnny Carson,” Arsulich explained. “So for 30 years, he was the host of The Tonight Show. Over the years, folks might be familiar with DVDs that were available for a long time, and reruns would air on certain networks. But with the way we consume television now , transitioning more and more to streaming , this partnership felt like the right moment.”

    The deal with Carson Entertainment Group, still run by members of his family, has brought nearly 500 episodes online for free across Tubi, Roku, Pluto, and more. “We also have a dedicated channel that shows these episodes 24/7,” Arsulich added.

    For a medium in flux, the return of Carson is a reminder of what late night once was , sharp, confident, and universal. And maybe, for today’s fractured audiences, that’s exactly what it needs again.

    The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (Shout! TV)

    In a week when many streaming premieres lean dark or nostalgic, Apple TV+ is offering a welcome burst of whimsy. Shape Island, the animated children’s series based on the picture book by Mac Barnett and Jon Klassen, returns for its second season, inviting viewers of all ages to spend more time with its three unlikely roommates: a square, a circle, and a triangle learning how to live together in harmony.

    Narrated by Yvette Nicole Brown, the show has always been more than just colorful fun for kids. It sneaks in lessons about empathy, cooperation, and acceptance while remaining engaging enough for parents to watch along. For Brown, lending her voice to the series has been one of the highlights of her career.

    “Absolutely,” she said when asked what drew her to the project. “This is actually, and I don’t know if I’ve ever said this publicly, this is my favorite show that I’ve done voiceover for. Every time I would get a call where they need you to do more Shape, I’m like, let’s go win-win, because it’s just relaxing and I get to be silly and some of my line readings and they just let me. It’s like a warm hug. You just kind of lay in there and you tell the story. So this is my favorite voiceover to do and it’s one of my favorite shows to watch because it’s just so beautiful and just soulful. It’s just a soulful, sweet show.”

    That sense of comfort and joy, she explained, is exactly what makes Shape Island resonate so widely. Brown pointed out that while the series is aimed at kids, it contains reminders that adults often need just as much.

    “Yeah. You know what? I think we forget as adults, we’re all just big kids. You know what I mean? Those of us that still have a sense of whimsy or a sense of wonder, we understand that we’re in these grownup bodies, but at our heart and soul, we’re just kids trying to figure it out,” she said. “And so if I’m an adult that enjoys it, as long as it’s not too advanced or too adult in what it’s talking about, I’m pretty sure a kid will vibe with it. And Shape Island has stories that not just speak to what a kid may be going through or learning about. Adults need to learn this stuff too. It’s really the show that we can all watch together.”

    The heart of the series, Brown added, is that it doesn’t shy away from universal truths. “We have to learn to coexist. We have to learn to celebrate each other’s differences. We have to learn that everybody’s not out to get us. These are all the things that we need to get a refresher on as adults. And so as kids learn it, we relearn it. But we’re all the same, just big old kids.”

    That mix of whimsy and wisdom is what sets Shape Island apart. It’s bright enough to capture a child’s attention, but soulful enough to remind grown-ups of the simple lessons they may have forgotten. Season two continues that tradition, proving that even in a crowded streaming landscape, sometimes the most powerful stories are told in the simplest shapes.

    Shape Island Season 2 (Apple TV+)

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    Brad Gilmore

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  • What to watch this week: Tig Notaro directs Dakota Johnson in coming-out comedy ‘Am I OK?’

    What to watch this week: Tig Notaro directs Dakota Johnson in coming-out comedy ‘Am I OK?’

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    Photo courtesy Sundance Institute/Emily Knecht

    Dakota Johnson and Sonoya Mizuno in ‘Am I OK?’

    Premieres Wednesday:

    Hitler and the Nazis: Evil on Trial — Documentary legend Joe Berlinger (Paradise Lost) takes a six-episode stroll through the history of the Third Reich, with the Nuremberg Trials as a framing device. If you’re unfamiliar with that aspect of the story, the Nazis all had their convictions overturned on appeal because the judge hadn’t allowed them to tweet smack about the Allies. (Netflix)

    How to Rob a Bank — Explore the methodology of the late Scott Scurlock, who got dubbed “The Hollywood Bandit” for wearing theatrical disguises while holding up 17 banks in the Seattle area. Fun fact: The Unknown Comic tried something similar after falling on hard times, but drawing a new face on the bag for each heist didn’t fool anybody. (Netflix)

    Under Paris — Remember when Bérénice Bejo was nominated for an Oscar for her role in The Artist? Now she’s starring in a Netflix movie as a scientist who discovers a giant, bloodthirsty shark lurking in the river Seine. And that’s all it is: just a shark. If the woman’s going to wave the white flag on her whole-ass career, the least they could do is make it half kraken or something. (Netflix)

    Premieres Thursday:

    Am I OK? — Tig Notaro and Stephanie Allynne direct Dakota Johnson as a woman who has to confront the real reason she can’t form successful relationships with men. Personally, I’m guessing it’s because they aren’t bears. (Max)

    Baki Hanma vs. Kengan Ashura — Characters from the two hit manga series meet in a contest of martial-arts prowess. It’s kind of like RuPaul’s Drag Race All-Stars, but with a slightly lesser possibility of violence. (Netflix)

    Basma — Writer/director/star Fatima Al-Banawi drew on her degree in psychology to compile this dramatic portrait of a young woman who returns to her native Saudi Arabia after completing her academic studies in the U.S.A., just in time to discover that her father has become a delusional paranoiac. Gosh, a guy really has to be crazy if he still seems off to you after you’ve been living with Americans. (Netflix)

    Counsel Culture — Get a better understanding of the mental-health issues facing today’s men in this series hosted by Nick Cannon and adapted from his podcast of the same name. Because “Nick Cannon” and “podcasting” are two things that always go together perfectly smoothly, as your rabbi well knows. (Prime Video Freevee)

    Criminal Minds: Evolution — As Season 2 dawns, the members of the Behavioral Analysis Unit are shocked to learn that last season’s big bad — serial killer Elias Voit — has been transferred to their own neck of the woods by the feds. It seems like this shouldn’t be too much of a concern unless you don’t trust the feds. So count me in, because boy do I not trust the feds! (Paramount+)

    Kübra — The Turkish thriller series has cooked up even more trouble for protagonist Gokhan Sahinoglu, whose acceptance of his role as a modern-day prophet threatens to put him at odds with just about everybody in Season 2. Yeah, people just naturally resent a prophet. Look at what Britney has to deal with every day. (Netflix)

    Nelma Kodama: The Queen of Dirty Money — Fresh out of prison for her involvement in one of Brazil’s most infamous corruption cases, the black-market money trader sits down with interviewers to paint herself as a mere stooge to an all-powerful criminal network. Smart move, Nelma. Everybody hates Ticketmaster. (Netflix)

    Queer Planet — The next time somebody insists to you that heteronormativity is the natural order of things, plunk them down in front of this documentary about the fluidity of sexuality that exists throughout the animal world. Just make sure they’re wearing pants, because you never know what’s going to turn those people’s crank. (Peacock)

    Rafa Márquez: El Capitán — Go straight to the horse’s mouth to learn about the highs and lows in the life of the great Mexican defender. “Ooh, a defender! Like a crusading public defender?” No. “OK, maybe an Aztec soldier with a nifty golden sword?” Nope, defender as in soccer. “Goddammit, hasn’t the UN’s Human Rights Council outlawed that yet?” (Netflix)

    Sweet Tooth — The third and final season takes the action to Alaska, where human/deer hybrid Gus is pursued by forces dedicated to the cause of human supremacy. On the plus side, I think Marisa Tomei has finally convinced Joe Pesci not to shoot him. (Netflix)

    click to enlarge Daniel Brühl and Théodore Pellerin in 'Becoming Karl Lagerfeld' - photo courtesy Disney+/Hulu

    photo courtesy Disney+/Hulu

    Daniel Brühl and Théodore Pellerin in ‘Becoming Karl Lagerfeld’

    Premieres Friday:

    Becoming Karl Lagerfeld — Daniel Brühl plays the title role in a French-made period piece that shows the legendary designer battling rival Yves Saint-Laurent (Arnaud Valois) to define fashion in the ’70s. Interestingly, the series only came about because the French government announced it was willing to fund “somezing like ze Ryain Murph-AY.” (Hulu)

    Hierarchy — Just when they’ve fully accustomed themselves to their school’s rigid social order, the students at a Korean private academy have to cope with a whole bunch of unfamiliar phenomena, like untimely death and the arrival of a new pupil who’s there on a scholarship. I mean, the occasional corpse is something every kid should learn to deal with, but a full-rider? Ewwwww! (Netflix)

    Perfect Match — Season 2 brings together past contestants from shows like Love Is Blind, The Ultimatum and Too Hot to Handle to find a pairing that might actually stick this time — and to vote on one another’s prospects while they’re at it. Here’s hoping Season 3 adds the Baby Reindeer chick, to really spice things up. (Netflix)

    Queenie — Author Candice Carty-Williams is executive producer and showrunner of this series adaptation of her 2019 novel, with Dionne Brown in the title role of a 20-something Jamaican British woman who reacts to being dumped by making some questionable choices. Hey, getting dumped is when you get to make all the questionable choices you want. Sleep around! Share needles! Become a showrunner! This is your mulligan! (Hulu)

    Transformers: EarthSpark — The first nine episodes of Season 2 feature guest voice-over work from Richard Ayoade, “Weird Al” Yankovic and Flea. Not to be outdone, Luther Campbell is lobbying hard for a part in the next He-Man show. (Paramount+)

    Premieres Tuesday:

    How Music Got Free — Yes, that title is meant to be ironic. Because what we have here is an industry-sponsored excoriation of the file-sharing explosion of the early 21st century, with the tech innovators of the time denounced as “thieves” who ruined music for everybody. But seriously, if that were true, the recording artists of today wouldn’t be able to make a single penny for their … oh, shit. ShitshitSHIT. (Paramount+)

    Keith Robinson: Different Strokes — Get a humorous lesson in perseverance from comic Robinson, who suffered life-threatening strokes in both 2016 and 2020. But that’s what’s  gonna happen when a guy’s refreshing fivethirtyeight.com every 10 seconds. (Netflix)

    Love Island — Ariana Madix of Vanderpump Rules replaces Sarah Hyland as host in Season 6, with the action now set in Fiji. Meanwhile, herpes replaces hepatitis C as the pathogen you’re most likely to contract from just watching. (Peacock)

    Tour de France: Unchained — Season 2 invites us to relive the thrills of the 2023 race, through every one of its 21 nail-biting stages. (Is anybody else a little weirded out that that’s three times as many stages as grief gets?) (Netflix)

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  • New on Netflix: K-drama goes surreal in ‘Chicken Nugget’; a twisty Hindi-language mystery, and more

    New on Netflix: K-drama goes surreal in ‘Chicken Nugget’; a twisty Hindi-language mystery, and more

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    Premieres Wednesday, March 13:

    Bandidos — A bunch of deep-diving opportunists try to retrieve a centuries-old treasure from the waters of the Gulf of Mexico — before a competing party can get to it first. Damn, that Jason Momoa is really hard up these days. (Netflix)

    Little Wing — A New Yorker article by Susan Orlean becomes a dramatic feature about a 13-year-old who hopes to bring her family back to solvency by rising to the top of the lucrative sport of … pigeon racing. If the kid is smart, she’ll keep her money on the DL when Orlean is around. Because nobody’s forgotten that shit she and Chris Cooper tried to pull with the orchids. (Paramount+)

    Premieres Thursday, March 14:

    24 Hours With Gaspar — A private detective decides to spend his last day of life taking part in a jewelry heist in this crime drama, which netted nine nominations at the 2023 Indonesian Film Festival. It won Best Adapted Screenplay, a category it got shunted into when somebody realized “Gaspar” is Indonesian for “Ken.” (Netflix)

    Apples Never Fall — In an adaptation of Liane Moriarty’s 2021 novel, the children of two retired tennis coaches have to consider some disquieting possibilities after the mom (Annette Bening) goes missing. At least nobody has to trawl the rivers, since we’ve all seen how that bish can swim. (Peacock)

    Art of Love — A Turkish Interpol officer develops an even deeper distaste for the art thief she’s been pursuing when she learns he’s a guy she used to bang. And thus begins a desperate game of cat and mouse — if that’s what you call it when the cat gave the mouse herpes. (Netflix)

    From Dreams to Tragedy: The Fire That Shook Brazilian Football — A three-episode docuseries takes stock of the catastrophic 2019 blaze that claimed 10 lives at the Flamengo football club’s training center in Rio de Janeiro. Wait a minute: Somebody finally found a way to make soccer interesting, and we’re supposed to cry about it? (Netflix)

    Girls5Eva — The series moves to Netflix for Season 3, in which the ladies hit the concert trail to promote their comeback album — despite having no itinerary, tour manager or booked venues. What I’m hearing here is that they’re on a major label. (Netflix)

    The Girls on the Bus — The writings of New York Times reporter Amy Chozick are adapted into a scripted series that follows female journalists on the presidential campaign trail. Your heart will swell with pride as they prove they can draw false equivalencies and normalize fascism as well as any man. (Max)

    Invincible — As the second half of Season 2 commences, Mark and Oliver are searching for a way to get back to Earth so they can stop the Viltrum Empire from subjugating the entire planet. Given that the distance is millions of miles and time is of the essence, I’m gonna say SunRail is out. (Prime Video)

    Justice, USA — Male, female and juvenile inmates are featured in a two-part exposé of the Nashville prison system. You can tell which ones have been locked up the longest, because they can be heard asking the guards why they don’t get Johnny Cash concerts anymore. (Max)

    Red Ollero: Mabuhay Is a Lie — Captured in concert during an August 2023 three-night stand at the Teatrino Promenade in San Juan, the Filipino comic sets out to dispel some of the biggest misconceptions about Pinoy culture. Well, for one thing, Imelda Marcos did not invent Crocs. (Netflix)

    Premieres Friday, March 15:

    The Bloody Hundredth — A documentary profile of the brave men of the 100th Bomb Group arrives just in time to promote the final episode of the like-themed drama series Masters of the Air. Gosh, it’s so inspiring when corporate synergy gives us a window to honor the fallen. (Apple TV+)

    Chicken Nugget — K-drama takes a turn for the surreal as a woman gets turned into a chicken nugget, sending her father scrambling to find a way to restore her. But is this really a big deal? I know people who are essentially 87 percent cheese fries. (Netflix)

    Irish Wish — After trying her darndest to suppress a crush on her best friend’s fiancé, Lindsay Lohan wakes up one morning to find they’ve traded places. (I mean she’s traded places with her friend, not with the fiancé. But now that I’ve said it out loud, isn’t that the movie you’d rather be watching?) (Netflix)

    Iron Reign — The life of a Barcelona drug lord gets significantly more complicated after his family business receives a problematic product shipment. It’s amazing the hot water you can get into when you order a kilo of blow off Amazon and they send you six cases of Gold Bond instead. (Netflix)

    Manhunt — A seven-part limited series dramatizes the nearly two-week search for John Wilkes Booth that played out while the nation was still reeling from the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Given that Booth was an actor, did anybody think of looking in the break room at Applebee’s? (Apple TV+)

    Murder Mubarak — A firmament of Bollywood stars plays the suspects in a twisty Hindi-language mystery that shows an “unconventional cop” trying to find the killer amid a group of outwardly normal folk. It’s a tough case to crack, mostly because he doesn’t speak Hindi. (Netflix)

    The Outreau Case: A French Nightmare — A Gallic version of The Crucible played out 20 years ago, when the accusations of four French children got their parents and other adult authority figures convicted of sexual abuse. As this docuseries shows, the public erupted in outrage when the charges proved to be as bogus as gas-station escargot. On the bright side, we finally canceled Pepé Le Pew. (Netflix)

    The Reluctant Traveler With Eugene Levy — Eugene schleps all over Europe in Season 2, on a quest to explore some of the continent’s most intriguing locales. First up: The credit union where the Romanians hide all that money they’ve been withholding from NATO. (Apple TV+)

    Premieres Monday, March 18:

    Stormy — The notorious Stormy Daniels goes before the documentary cameras to reveal the real woman behind the sex scandal that failed to bring down a president but sent two lawyers to prison. Or as Ken Jennings would call it, “a solid consolation prize.” (Peacock)

    Premieres Tuesday, March 19:

    Brian Simpson: Live From the Mothership — Not only is this the first stand-up special for Austin-based comic Simpson, it’s the first by anybody to be recorded at Joe Rogan’s Comedy Mothership. You really want to be funny in that environment, you stop your set right before the first punchline and demand that everybody produce their vax card. (Netflix)

    Dinner Party Diaries With José Andrés — The internationally renowned chef opens up his kitchen to swap stories and recipes with guests Jamie Lee Curtis, O’Shea Jackson Jr. and Bryan Cranston. “Hey Bryan, why is that béarnaise sauce so blue?” (Prime Video)

    Forever Queens Season 2 — With their comeback single a hit, the titular quartet of middle-aged Mexican performers suddenly find themselves down two members and scrambling to hire replacements. In a shocking turn of events, the first right of refusal goes to anybody from BTS who isn’t currently in the army. (Netflix) 

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    Steve Schneider

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