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29
June
13:31

House of the Dragon (season 3)


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House of the Dragon (season 3)

2 episodes

“House of the Dragon” (season 3) — plunges Westeros into the full fury of the Dance of the Dragons, as Rhaenyra Targaryen and the Blacks move from fragile planning to open war against the Greens holding King’s Landing in Aegon II’s name. With Aemond One-Eye ruling through fear, Alicent trapped between guilt and survival, and Daemon still haunted by the cost of power, the season turns every council meeting, raven, fleet movement, and dragon flight into part of a civil war no one can truly control. Rhaenyra’s advantage grows through Dragonstone, House Velaryon, Jacaerys, Baela, Rhaena, and newly claimed dragonriders, but victory becomes more dangerous as the Triarchy, Corlys’s fleet, and the looming Battle of the Gullet threaten to make the sea as bloody as the sky. In King’s Landing, Criston Cole, Larys Strong, Helaena, Aegon, and Otto’s shadow keep the Greens divided by ambition, paranoia, and grief, while houses across the realm choose sides for reasons of loyalty, fear, revenge, or simple survival. As dragons become weapons of state and family bonds burn under political necessity, the war stops feeling like a question of rightful succession and becomes a tragedy spreading through every corner of Westeros. “House of the Dragon” (season 3) becomes a grand, brutal fantasy drama about inheritance, vengeance, loyalty, and the moment a dynasty begins destroying itself with the very fire that made it untouchable. More …

29
June
12:34

Archive 81 (season 1)


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Archive 81 (season 1)

8 episodes

“Archive 81″ (season 1) — centers on Dan Turner, a skilled but isolated archivist hired by the mysterious Virgil Davenport to restore a damaged collection of videotapes recorded in 1994 by graduate student Melody Pendras. Taken to a remote research facility with no easy way out, Dan begins reconstructing Melody’s documentary about the Visser, a burned-out New York apartment building whose residents seem connected by odd rituals, missing people, whispered music, and a history far older than the fire that destroyed it. As Melody’s camera moves through locked rooms, strange neighbors, basement gatherings, and her search for a girl named Jess, Dan becomes increasingly obsessed with the tapes, especially when pieces of Melody’s investigation begin linking to his own family tragedy. His friend Mark tries to keep him grounded from the outside, while figures like Samuel, Annabelle, Beatriz, Father Russo, and Dan’s father Steven Turner deepen the sense that the Visser was never just a building but a doorway into something dangerous. The season moves between past and present like a corrupted recording, turning static, mold, dreams, and half-seen images into clues that blur memory, grief, and supernatural dread. “Archive 81″ (season 1) becomes a slow-burn horror mystery about obsession, lost voices, cults, and the terrifying idea that some archives do not preserve the past so much as keep it alive. More …

29
June
12:20

Life, Larry and the Pursuit of Unhappiness: An Almost History of America (season 1)


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Life, Larry and the Pursuit of Unhappiness: An Almost History of America (season 1)

1 episodes

“Life, Larry and the Pursuit of Unhappiness: An Almost History of America” (season 1) — turns American history into a seven-part chain of anxious, petty, and absurdly modern misadventures, as a grumbling Larry-like troublemaker wanders through famous national moments and somehow makes each one about bad manners, personal inconvenience, social panic, and his own bruised ego. Framed around the country’s 250th anniversary, the season treats history less like a classroom lesson and more like a series of uncomfortable conversations that go wrong at the worst possible time: the Declaration of Independence becomes a debate over wording and credit, Alexander Graham Bell’s first phone call opens the door to complaints no invention can solve, political hearings collapse into verbal sparring, and even solemn civil-rights and wartime moments are filtered through awkward timing, selfish objections, and escalating misunderstandings. Barack Obama appears as a wry guide to the premise, while guest figures drift through sketches built around presidents, inventors, activists, soldiers, social climbers, and ordinary bystanders trapped beside the most irritating man in the room. The season’s comedy comes from shrinking great events down to human vanity, stubbornness, and bad etiquette, suggesting that America’s grand story has always had room for arguments over seats, rules, tone, and who gets blamed when everything becomes uncomfortable. “Life, Larry and the Pursuit of Unhappiness: An Almost History of America” (season 1) becomes a sharp historical sketch comedy about national myth, ego, inconvenience, and the ridiculous possibility that the past might have been just as neurotic as the present. More …

29
June
12:14

Rick and Morty (season 9)


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Rick and Morty (season 9)

6 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 …

29
June
12:14

Harry Wild (season 5)


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Harry Wild (season 5)

2 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 …

29
June
12:14

Grantchester (season 11)


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Grantchester (season 11)

3 episodes

“Grantchester” (season 11) — returns to the Cambridgeshire village in the summer of 1963 for the series’ final chapter, with Reverend Alphy Kottaram and DI Geordie Keating still solving murders together while everyone around them seems to be standing at a personal crossroads. Alphy’s growing connection with Meg Grey opens a gentler future than he expected, but new discoveries about his past and the family he might have known force him to question where he truly belongs and what faith means when identity itself feels unfinished. Geordie enjoys a rare calm with Cathy and their family, only for a tempting professional offer to threaten the unofficial partnership with Alphy that has become central to both his work and his life. Leonard Finch faces quieter but no less profound change as caring for a neighbour’s son awakens a paternal side he never fully imagined, while Mrs. C, Jack, Daniel, Miss Scott, Larry Peters, and the rest of the village continue to carry their own burdens through another run of baffling crimes. From parish tensions and locked-room suspicion to family secrets, forgiveness, and the cost of moving on, the season uses each mystery to push its characters toward decisions they can no longer delay. “Grantchester” (season 11) becomes a tender farewell to a long-running detective drama about friendship, faith, love, and the difficult grace of accepting that even beloved lives must change. More …

28
June
18:05

From (season 4)


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From (season 4)

10 episodes

“From” (season 4) — follows the survivors as the town’s reality begins to warp in ways that defy every rule they’ve clung to, with new structures, new sounds, and new patterns in the night suggesting that whatever controls this place is no longer hiding its intentions. Strange signals, shifting memories, and fractures in time pull the group into deeper paranoia as alliances strain under the weight of fear and unanswered questions. As whispers of impossible sightings spread through the town, a growing sense of déjà vu begins to erode the survivors’ trust in their own memories. As the boundaries of the town flicker and distort, some residents begin experiencing overlapping timelines that leave them unsure which version of events they can trust. And when a new arrival claims to have seen the group in a place that shouldn’t exist, it forces them to confront the possibility that the town’s influence extends far beyond its borders. The season tracks their attempts to decode the town’s evolving design — from unexplained disappearances to glimpses of alternate versions of their own lives — while the creatures outside grow bolder, smarter, and disturbingly coordinated. “From” (season 4) becomes a tense, dread‑soaked descent into a living labyrinth, where survival depends not on escape but on understanding the purpose of the nightmare they’ve been trapped in. More …

28
June
18:01

Avatar: The Last Airbender (season 2)


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Avatar: The Last Airbender (season 2)

7 episodes

“Avatar: The Last Airbender” (season 2) — sends Aang, Katara, and Sokka deeper into the Earth Kingdom after the fall of the Northern Water Tribe, as the young Avatar realizes that saving the world means mastering earthbending, not just running from the Fire Nation’s war. Their search leads them to Toph Beifong, a blind prodigy whose sheltered life, fierce independence, and ability to “see” through the ground make her both the perfect teacher and a difficult new member of the group. While Aang struggles with patience, responsibility, and the weight of becoming the Avatar everyone needs, Katara grows more confident in her own power, Sokka keeps trying to hold the team together through strategy and humor, and the journey toward Ba Sing Se reveals how fear and denial can hide inside even the safest-looking cities. Elsewhere, Zuko and Iroh move through the Earth Kingdom as fugitives, forced to question honor, identity, and survival without the Fire Nation’s protection, while Azula enters the conflict with precision, ambition, and a ruthless need to prove herself to Ozai. As bending battles, refugee trails, political secrets, and uneasy alliances reshape the Gaang’s mission, “Avatar: The Last Airbender” (season 2) becomes a richer fantasy adventure about growth, trust, balance, and the painful truth that finding the next element may be easier than knowing who to become. More …

28
June
17:25

Interview with the Vampire (season 3)


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Interview with the Vampire (season 3)

4 episodes

“Interview with the Vampire” (season 3) — opens after Daniel Molloy’s explosive book has dragged Louis, Claudia, Armand, and Lestat into the public imagination, leaving Lestat de Lioncourt unwilling to remain the monster in someone else’s version of the story. Reinventing himself as a vampire rock star, Lestat takes the stage with a band, a camera crew, and a dangerous hunger for control, turning concerts, interviews, rehearsals, and backstage chaos into his own confession, performance, and revenge. But his attempt to rewrite the past keeps pulling him back through memories of aristocratic France, his violent making by Magnus, his bond with his mother Gabrielle, his love for Nicolas, and the old wounds that shaped him long before New Orleans. As Daniel, now changed by his own immortal transformation, circles the tour with the instincts of a journalist and the appetite of something less human, Louis and Armand remain emotional ghosts in Lestat’s orbit, forcing the season to question whose memory can ever be trusted. With ancient vampire power stirring through figures like Akasha, the glamour of rock fame begins to look less like freedom and more like a signal fire to creatures far older than Lestat understands. “Interview with the Vampire” (season 3) becomes a flamboyant gothic reinvention about fame, confession, desire, and a vampire determined to make the world hear his truth, even if telling it wakes something terrible. More …

28
June
15:13

Deadliest Catch (season 22)


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Deadliest Catch (season 22)

8 episodes

“Deadliest Catch” (season 22) — sails farther north than the fleet has gone in years, as a rare population of red king crab pulls the captains 225 miles toward St. George Island and into colder seas, heavier ice, and storms that make every set feel like a gamble against the edge of the map. With familiar grounds no longer enough to protect their livelihoods, Sig Hansen launches a risky underwater-drone scouting mission, guided by Wild Bill Wichrowski’s hard-earned knowledge of the region, while Johnathan Hillstrand, Keith Colburn, Rick Shelford, and the rest of the fleet chase crab that could save a season or break a boat before the first big haul is landed. Jake Anderson enters the year at his lowest point, stripped of both his vessel and stability at home, only to find one last chance at redemption through the legendary Cornelia Marie. Around the hunt, the season carries the emotional weight of real danger, especially aboard the Aleutian Lady, where the loss of deckhand Todd Meadows reminds every crew that the Bering Sea does not separate television drama from life-and-death risk. Between crushing ice, mechanical strain, exhausted deckhands, family pressure, and captains forced to bet on unfamiliar water, “Deadliest Catch” (season 22) becomes a harsh, mournful, high-stakes chapter about survival, legacy, and the brutal price of chasing fortune in one of the most unforgiving fisheries on Earth. More …