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July
Lucky (season 1)
2 episodes
“Lucky” (season 1) — throws Luciana “Lucky” Armstrong back into the criminal life she has spent years trying to escape when a multimillion-dollar heist in Las Vegas collapses overnight. She wakes to find her husband and partner Cary missing, the stolen cash gone, and FBI agents Billie Rand and Eli Gates already closing in, leaving her with no one to trust and no clean way out. Raised by her imprisoned father John to read strangers, build convincing lies, and turn panic into opportunity, Lucky relies on disguises, improvised scams, stolen cars, and old contacts as she races across casinos, highways, desert towns, and temporary hideouts. But the missing money also belongs to Priscilla, a ruthless crime boss tied to Lucky’s family history, whose enforcer Dutch makes every delay more dangerous, while Wayne Whittaker’s influence reveals how far the conspiracy reaches. As flashbacks expose the childhood cons that shaped her and the complicated love she still carries for John, Lucky begins questioning whether Cary betrayed her, was taken, or became trapped in a game larger than either of them understood. Every escape forces her to use the talents she wants to leave behind, blurring the line between survival and becoming the person her family trained her to be. “Lucky” (season 1) becomes a stylish, fast-moving crime thriller about deception, inherited damage, freedom, and a gifted con artist trying to write a future that is not just another version of someone else’s scheme. More …
July
Trying (season 5)
2 episodes
“Trying” (season 5) — returns to Nikki and Jason after they have finally built the noisy, imperfect family life they once feared they would never have, only for that fragile balance to be shaken when Kat, Princess and Tyler’s biological mother, unexpectedly appears at their door. What should be an ordinary new chapter of school routines, work pressures, teenage moods, and exhausted parenting quickly becomes a more complicated test of love, security, and what it really means to belong. Nikki tries to stay generous and steady, even as Kat’s arrival awakens every fear that motherhood can still be questioned or taken away, while Jason attempts to keep everyone calm with the same awkward optimism that usually makes things better and worse at once. Princess is old enough to ask painful questions about identity, loyalty, and the family story she has been given, while Tyler responds to the disruption in quieter, more unpredictable ways. Around them, Karen, Scott, Vic, Freddy, and the wider circle of friends and relatives bring comic interference, emotional advice, and their own messy versions of adulthood, reminding Nikki and Jason that parenting never stops being a shared embarrassment. As old insecurities, adoption wounds, biological ties, and everyday chaos collide, the season keeps the show’s gentle humor while asking whether a family built through choice can survive the arrival of someone tied by blood. “Trying” (season 5) becomes a warm, bittersweet comedy about parenthood, fear, patience, and the difficult reassurance that love is not made weaker just because it has to make room for the truth. More …
July
Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed (season 1)
10 episodes
“Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed” (season 1) — follows Paula Sanders, a newly divorced mother trying to hold together her fractured family, custody battle, and sense of identity when her life takes a sharp turn into a dangerous maze of blackmail, murder, and youth soccer. What begins as a private moment of escape becomes a nightmare after Paula is convinced she has witnessed a crime, only to find that the police are not nearly as alarmed as she is. With her ex-husband Karl Hendricks still tangled in her personal life, her daughter Hazel watching more than Paula realizes, and friends like Mallory orbiting the chaos, Paula starts digging on her own, pulling at clues that lead from online deception and suburban secrets to a conspiracy that seems to know exactly how vulnerable she is. Detectives Sofia Gonzales and Baxter become part of the growing pressure around her, while figures like Trevor, Rudy, and Geri complicate a mystery where everyone appears to be hiding some version of the truth. As Paula’s amateur investigation collides with school fields, digital trails, family arguments, and threats that become increasingly personal, the season turns her midlife unraveling into something darker, funnier, and more dangerous than she expected. “Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed” (season 1) becomes a darkly comedic thriller about panic, reinvention, motherhood, and the terrifying possibility that solving the crime may be the only way Paula can rebuild herself. More …
July
Backrooms (2026)
“Backrooms” (2026) — opens inside the ordinary glow of a furniture store, where Clark, a weary owner surrounded by showroom lamps, carpeted displays, and artificial domestic comfort, discovers a hidden passage into a place that should not exist. Beyond the familiar walls lies the Backrooms: an endless maze of yellowed halls, buzzing fluorescent lights, empty offices, impossible corridors, and rooms that feel copied from the real world by something that never understood how people live. Clark’s attempts to explain what he has seen pull his therapist, Dr. Mary Kline, into the same nightmare, while Bobby, Kat, and others become connected to disturbing home videos and supernatural events that suggest the space is not just a location but a system that observes, imitates, and traps. As the group searches for missing people and a way back to recognizable reality, every turn makes the architecture feel less abandoned than hungry, turning silence, bad lighting, carpet stains, and distant mechanical hums into sources of dread. The film uses liminal horror not through simple monsters, but through the fear of being lost in a place that looks almost familiar and still feels utterly wrong. “Backrooms” (2026) becomes a cold, unsettling sci-fi horror film about isolation, memory, modern emptiness, and the terrifying possibility that some doors do not lead somewhere else so much as remove you from the world entirely. More …
July
Sugar (season 2)
4 episodes
“Sugar” (season 2) — returns John Sugar to Los Angeles after the revelations surrounding his hidden past leave him more isolated than ever and no closer to finding his missing sister, Djen. Trying to keep moving, the private investigator accepts a new case from rising boxer Danny Moon, whose troubled older brother Ji has vanished after leaving behind a trail of fear, addiction, and cryptic warnings. The search pulls Sugar away from Hollywood mansions and into Koreatown pool halls, cheap apartments, hospitals, police rooms, and the city’s quieter corners, where every witness seems frightened of the same people. Lieutenant Ray Vega quickly emerges as a dangerous obstacle, using authority, charm, and intimidation to control the investigation, while the mysterious Charlotte Fischer enters Sugar’s orbit with motives he cannot easily read. As Ji’s disappearance begins pointing toward a wider conspiracy involving protected violence, compromised officials, and forces connected to Sugar’s own unanswered questions, his instinct to help the vulnerable clashes with the secrecy that has always defined him. Danny’s desperation and Sugar’s continuing search for Djen keep the case personal, even as each clue makes doing the right thing more dangerous. “Sugar” (season 2) becomes a stylish neo-noir mystery about loneliness, corruption, identity, and a detective forced to decide how much of himself he is willing to expose to save someone everyone else has already abandoned. More …
July
The Breadwinner (2026)
“The Breadwinner” (2026) — centers on Nate Wilcox, a dependable salesman who has always understood his place in the family as the provider, while his wife Katie quietly performs the far more complicated job of keeping their chaotic household running. Everything changes when Katie’s practical home invention earns a life-changing deal on Shark Tank and sends her away on an extended business trip, leaving Nate in charge of their three daughters, Gracie, Hadley, and Sam, for the first time. Certain that parenting can be handled with confidence, shortcuts, and a sensible schedule, he quickly loses control of school mornings, meals, carpools, household repairs, sibling arguments, and the hundreds of invisible tasks Katie made look effortless. As the house begins falling apart in both comic and painfully literal ways, Nate turns to friends, improvised solutions, and increasingly desperate attempts to prove that he does not need rescuing. Yet the girls are not simply problems to manage, and their different needs force him to listen, adapt, and see how much of family life he has taken for granted. Katie, meanwhile, must balance an opportunity she has earned with the guilt of being away and the fear that success will change the family’s familiar rhythm. “The Breadwinner” (2026) becomes a warm family comedy about reversed roles, domestic chaos, and a father discovering that providing for the people he loves means more than bringing home a paycheck. More …
July
All American (season 8)
2 episodes
“All American” (season 8) — returns to Beverly Hills and Crenshaw six months after the championship showdown, compressing its final chapter into one decisive week as football, family, and friendship pull the characters toward futures they may not be ready to claim. Cassius and KJ face an unexpected fight over their shared path, while KJ’s growing intensity worries the people closest to him and threatens to carry Khalil into the same emotional storm. Jordan tries to build a genuine family bond with Cassius beyond coaching and competition, but their unresolved tensions make every decision involving Beverly’s players feel personal. Layla comes home from tour to a marriage that needs attention, while Amina’s sudden return disrupts the fragile balance between KJ and Khalil just as college showcases, recruitment pressure, and life-changing choices demand their full focus. Coop, finally thriving in her professional life and relationship with Breonna, steps into the familiar role of peacemaker, even as the success she worked for begins raising new questions about what she truly wants next. Preach and the adults around the younger generation struggle to offer guidance without controlling lives that are already changing too quickly. As old faces reconnect with new ones and rivalries blur into family, “All American” (season 8) becomes an emotional farewell about ambition, mental pressure, love, and whether everything learned on and off the field has prepared this community to move forward without losing the bonds that made it home. More …
July
Ruthless (season 6)
4 episodes
“Ruthless” (season 6) — returns to the Rakudushi compound at its most unstable point, with Ruth Truesdale turning survival into influence as her growing hold over The Highest begins to reshape the cult from inside its own walls. After years of manipulation, punishment, false prophecy, and failed escape attempts, Ruth understands better than anyone that freedom cannot be won by panic alone; it has to be planned, performed, and hidden beneath obedience. But the compound is sliding toward chaos as talk of mass sacrifice, cracked loyalties, new alliances, and outside pressure from the FBI make every prayer circle, private meeting, punishment, and whispered warning feel like part of a larger collapse. Desiree’s moves in the woods, George’s rescue, Theresa’s demands, Joan’s cover-ups, Obadiah’s jealousy, and the shifting positions of Andrew, Zane, Tally, River, and the rest of the Rakudushis leave Ruth surrounded by people who may help her one moment and betray her the next. As The Highest grows more volatile and Ruth’s power becomes harder to ignore, the season turns the cult’s familiar rituals into a battlefield of strategy, fear, faith, and psychological control. “Ruthless” (season 6) becomes a tense continuation about manipulation, fractured belief, escape, and the dangerous moment when a woman trapped inside a cult starts learning how to use its own madness against it. More …
July
Rick and Morty (season 9)
8 episodes
“Rick and Morty” (season 9) — throws Rick Sanchez and Morty Smith back into another run of unstable sci-fi chaos, where the family’s attempts to act even slightly normal are constantly derailed by portals, cosmic grudges, and adventures that turn dumb ideas into universe-threatening disasters. After years of multiverse trauma, Rick is still trying to pretend he has everything under control, while Morty keeps drifting further from the role of terrified sidekick and into someone more willing to question, resist, or make terrible choices of his own. The season sends them through strange new corners of space and reality, from the long-promised madness of Boob World and a parking-lot battle outside Trader Joe’s to sentient furniture, alien summer camp, and bizarre domestic crises that drag Beth, Space Beth, Jerry, and Summer into Rick’s orbit whether they want it or not. As every mission mutates from joke to catastrophe, the Smith family is forced to deal with old resentment, shifting power inside the household, and the uncomfortable truth that Rick’s genius rarely saves anyone without creating a bigger mess first. With its mix of brutal jokes, cosmic absurdity, family dysfunction, and sudden emotional turns, “Rick and Morty” (season 9) becomes another sharp, unpredictable chapter about control, dependence, growing up, and the terrifying freedom of realizing that even infinite realities cannot stop your family from being your biggest problem. More …
July
Harry Wild (season 5)
4 episodes
“Harry Wild” (season 5) — returns to Dublin with retired literature professor turned private investigator Harry Wild facing a new run of murders that feel stranger, more theatrical, and more personal than the usual cozy cases she and Fergus Reid stumble into. The season opens when new state pathologist Pierce Kennedy notices that several supposedly accidental deaths share an eerie connection: matching musical-note tattoos tied to Debussy’s “Clair de Lune.” His discovery pulls Harry and Fergus into a case where medicine, music, memory, and staged tragedy begin to overlap, while Garda DS Jordan McDonald and Charlie Wild try to keep the investigation from becoming another one of Harry’s rule-breaking adventures. Pierce’s arrival also changes the rhythm of Harry’s world, bringing professional friction, quick banter, and a spark that unsettles her just as she and Fergus are both dealing with the emotional bruises left by recent heartbreak. Across undercover missions, suspicious deaths, family tension, pub conversations with Glenn, and Lola’s continuing place in the team’s orbit, Harry must decide when to trust instinct, when to trust evidence, and when a charming new ally may be complicating both. “Harry Wild” (season 5) becomes another warm, witty mystery chapter about grief, reinvention, partnership, and the pleasure of watching Harry refuse to age quietly while murder keeps giving her reasons to interfere. More …























