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July
The Oval (season 7)
7 episodes
“The Oval” (season 7) — returns to the White House for its final season, with Hunter and Victoria Franklin forcing their way back into power after another explosive crisis leaves the presidency surrounded by enemies, secrets, and unfinished betrayals. Their comeback depends on Dilva Prinn, a ruthless new press secretary and fixer who steps in to clean up the damage, control the story, and help the Franklins turn scandal into leverage before the country can fully see how unstable the administration has become. But Vice President Eli remains determined to bring them down, turning every private conversation, public appearance, and political move into part of a larger war for control. As Hunter chases revenge after attacks on the nation and Victoria pressures him to cooperate on her terms, Sam, Kyle, Donald, Priscilla, Bobby, Max, and the staff around them are dragged into shifting alliances where loyalty rarely lasts longer than the next threat. The season keeps the series’ mix of political melodrama, family warfare, blackmail, violence, and backroom deals, pushing the Franklins toward a reckoning where survival may matter more than reputation. “The Oval” (season 7) becomes a chaotic farewell chapter about power, corruption, vengeance, and the dangerous cost of trying to rule from a house built on lies. More …
July
Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed (season 1)
8 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
Head Girl (season 1)
2 episodes
“Head Girl” (season 1) — sets its story in a slightly grimy, restless Wellington flat, where three estranged friends in their early twenties are trying to become adults without admitting how lost they feel. Florence “Flo” Sadler has dropped out of university and decided she is in a “chrysalis of reinvention,” chasing literary greatness after one viral poem convinces her she might be a genius, even though a publishing deadline soon pushes her toward panic, imitation, and self-doubt. Sadie is a high-achieving PhD student developing an app that translates English into te reo Māori in real time, determined to appear perfect while confronting uncomfortable truths in her relationship with Djared and the pressure of always being the impressive one. Dee, lonely beneath her wild-party energy, steals toilet paper from parties she was not invited to, keeps a pet hedgehog in her room, and drags the flat toward chaos whenever stillness feels too hard to bear. As old tension, ambition, friendship, mental-health strain, poetry, nightlife, family approval, and money collide, the three women keep getting in each other’s way while secretly needing each other more than they can say. “Head Girl” (season 1) becomes a sharp New Zealand drama about voice, insecurity, female friendship, and the messy, furious years when everyone expects you to know who you are before you have even learned how to say it. More …
July
Criminal Minds (season 19)
7 episodes
“Criminal Minds” (season 19) — reopens the BAU’s darkest modern case as Emily Prentiss, David Rossi, JJ Jareau, Tara Lewis, Luke Alvez, Penelope Garcia, and Tyler Green are forced to work in the shadow of Elias Voit, the imprisoned serial killer whose Sicarius network still keeps spreading damage beyond his cell. As a new copycat begins echoing Voit’s methods, the team must decide how much access, attention, and trust they can risk giving a man who has already manipulated victims, investigators, and institutions for years. Rossi’s obsession with understanding Voit clashes with Prentiss’s need to protect the unit, while JJ tries to keep moving through a deeply personal season of grief, Garcia is pulled back into emotional and digital territory she would rather escape, and Tyler’s complicated connection to the case keeps testing where personal vengeance ends and justice begins. Each investigation pushes the BAU through online radicalization, hidden networks, staged brutality, and suspects who treat violence like a contagious idea rather than an isolated crime. With new guest figures circling the team and Voit turning every conversation into a psychological trap, the season becomes less about catching one monster than understanding how his influence keeps reproducing itself. “Criminal Minds” (season 19) becomes a tense continuation of the Evolution era, built around trauma, manipulation, loyalty, and the terrifying question of what happens when evil stops being one person and starts behaving like an infection. More …
July
Brilliant Minds (season 2)
20 episodes
“Brilliant Minds” (Season 2) deepens the emotional and psychological stakes as Dr. Oliver Wolf grapples with the revelation that his father, long presumed dead, is alive and suffering from a mysterious neurodegenerative illness. The season opens with a shocking flashforward: Oliver is now a patient at Hudson Oaks, a psychiatric facility, desperately trying to escape. This twist sets the tone for a dual-timeline narrative that slowly unravels how he ended up there. Back at Bronx General, Oliver and his team tackle complex cases, including MMA fighter Tommy Grudko, who exhibits violent, involuntary movements. Initially misdiagnosed with Alien Hand Syndrome, Tommy is later found to have corticobasal degeneration — a rare and devastating condition. The case mirrors Oliver’s own struggle with trust and family, as Tommy’s father had concealed the diagnosis to keep his son fighting. New characters like Dr. Anthony Thorne and second-year neuro resident Dr. Charlie Porter shake up the hospital dynamics. Oliver suspects Charlie is a mole planted by his mother, Chief of Staff Muriel Landon, to monitor his department. Meanwhile, Carol Pierce runs her own psychiatric practice after being suspended, and relationships among the interns — including Dana and EMT Katie — continue to evolve. As the season progresses, flashforwards reveal Oliver’s deteriorating mental state and hint at a deeper conspiracy involving his father’s condition and the hospital’s politics. With themes of betrayal, identity, and redemption, “Brilliant Minds” (Season 2) delivers a gripping blend of medical mystery and character-driven drama. More …
July
All the Queen’s Men (season 5)
5 episodes
“All the Queen’s Men” (season 5) — returns to Atlanta for the final stretch of Madam’s war to protect Club Eden, where one shocking attack leaves her empire unstable, her closest people shaken, and every rival looking for a weak point. Marilyn “Madam” DeVille has built her kingdom through beauty, fear, money, and control, but the new season forces her to face the cost of ruling a world where loyalty is never guaranteed and every secret can be used as a weapon. As the search for the person responsible intensifies, Blue, Dime, Amp, Doc, Fuego, Babyface, and the dancers around Eden are pulled into a crisis that tests who is truly family and who has only been surviving under Madam’s protection. Law enforcement pressure, old enemies, hidden betrayals, and opportunists circling the club turn the aftermath into a dangerous fight for power, with the business Madam poured everything into suddenly vulnerable from both outside attacks and fractures within. Personal relationships become just as risky as criminal moves, especially when love, ambition, revenge, and survival keep colliding behind the lights of Eden. The season leans into the show’s mix of glamour, melodrama, crime, and betrayal while pushing Madam toward choices that could define what remains of her legacy. “All the Queen’s Men” (season 5) becomes a tense final chapter about loyalty, control, survival, and the brutal truth that a queen’s throne is only as strong as the people willing to defend it. More …
July
Pressure (2026)
“Pressure” (2026) — unfolds in the final 72 hours before D-Day, when the largest seaborne invasion in history depends not only on ships, soldiers, and strategy, but on the uncertain judgment of a Scottish meteorologist asked to predict the behavior of the sky itself. Group Captain James Stagg arrives at Allied command with grim forecasts, limited data, and the burden of telling General Dwight D. Eisenhower that the weather over the English Channel may turn the planned assault into a catastrophe. Around them, Kay Summersby, Bernard Montgomery, Trafford Leigh-Mallory, John Eisenhower, Irving P. Krick, and other military voices bring competing instincts, political pressure, personal pride, and the terror of delay into rooms where every hour costs secrecy and every mistake could cost thousands of lives. As rain, wind, cloud cover, tides, and clashing weather models become matters of life and death, Stagg must defend science against impatience, doubt, and rival predictions while Eisenhower carries the impossible responsibility of choosing whether to launch or wait. The film turns maps, briefings, coded messages, airfields, and sleepless command rooms into a battlefield before the battlefield, where courage means standing by a forecast no one wants to hear. “Pressure” (2026) becomes a tense historical war drama about responsibility, uncertainty, leadership, and the quiet truth that one of World War II’s most famous military decisions was shaped by men staring at clouds and trying to read the future. More …
July
Savage House (2026)
“Savage House” (2026) — descends into 1715 England, where a pox outbreak, Jacobite unrest, and the first tremors of the Georgian age turn the crumbling estate of Sir Chauncey Savage and Lady Savage into a filthy, frantic theater of class panic. Sir Chauncey, a debt-ridden social climber terrified of losing the status he married into, sees salvation in the planned visit of the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire, believing one perfect display of wealth and loyalty could rescue the family name from ruin. Lady Savage, sharper and no less compromised, tries to preserve appearances while navigating her own appetites, resentments, and the rot spreading beneath the household’s polished language. Around them, Dorothy Neville, Reginald Halifax, Fanny Savage, Mr. Black, and the servants and creditors circling the estate expose a world where every bow, flirtation, debt, duel, and dinner arrangement hides humiliation or violence. As illness spreads outside the walls and political loyalties grow more dangerous inside them, the Savages’ desperate preparations become a grotesque race to disguise poverty, betrayal, and decay before polite society arrives. “Savage House” (2026) becomes a dark period comedy about ambition, class performance, marital warfare, and the absurd brutality of people willing to spill blood just to look respectable. More …
June
Ruthless (season 6)
2 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 …
June
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 …























