If you haven't found some series, write to us and we will try to find it!
June
Not Suitable for Work (season 1)
7 episodes
“Not Suitable for Work” (season 1) — centers on five ambitious twenty-somethings trying to turn post-college chaos into real adult lives in New York’s Murray Hill, where career pressure, rent, romance, and friendship all collide in apartments, offices, bars, and hallways that feel too small for everyone’s expectations. AJ Pascarelli arrives as an intense first-year analyst at a powerful investment bank, determined to prove she belongs in a world built on competition and impossible hours, while Davis Beau Bradley Barrett III hides insecurity behind finance-bro confidence and a messy longing for something more serious. Across the hall, Abby Chilukuri works as a fashion-obsessed assistant to demanding celebrity stylist Vanessa Hsu, chasing glamour while learning how easily style, status, and self-worth can blur. Josh Teitelbaum, a privileged aspiring media producer, wants to be taken seriously beyond his family name, and Kel Washington, a former med student turned substitute teacher and would-be actor, tries to redefine success without disappointing everyone around him. As bosses like Bill Gibson, old connections, awkward hookups, workplace disasters, and shifting roommate loyalties keep testing the group, the season turns professional ambition into a comedy of embarrassment, desire, and emotional growing pains. “Not Suitable for Work” (season 1) becomes a sharp, warm ensemble comedy about young adulthood, fragile confidence, chosen friendship, and the strange moment when getting the life you wanted still leaves you unsure who you are supposed to be. More …
June
Tip Toe (season 1)
5 episodes
“Tip Toe” (season 1) — opens in Manchester, where Leo, a charismatic bar owner on Canal Street, and Clive, an electrician with a wife and two teenage sons, begin as long-standing neighbours whose everyday irritation gradually hardens into something far more dangerous. At first, their conflict seems built from ordinary suburban friction: noise, parking, glances across the street, sharp words, and the uncomfortable sense that two households are watching each other too closely. But as the world around them grows louder with prejudice, conspiracy, political anger, and fear of anyone seen as different, Clive’s resentment begins to find permission in the voices around him, while Leo’s confidence becomes something he feels forced to protect more carefully. Stephanie, Diane, Marie, George, Saul, Zee, Judy, Mikey, Hanna, Melba, Curtis, and Regime all widen the story beyond one feud, showing how families, friends, bars, schools, and streets can become infected by suspicion when cruel opinions stop sounding private. The season turns Manchester’s life, neighbourhood routines, and domestic spaces into a tense social thriller where small acts of hostility gather force until no one can pretend they are harmless. “Tip Toe” (season 1) becomes a gripping drama about fear, radicalisation, community, and the terrifying moment when ordinary neighbours stop tiptoeing around hatred and begin acting on it. More …
June
Sugarcreek Amish Mysteries: Blessings in Disguise (2025)
“Sugarcreek Amish Mysteries: Blessings in Disguise” (2025) — begins with Cheryl Cooper, a Chicago banker whose life collapses after the end of a three-year engagement, accepting Aunt Mitzi’s offer to escape to Sugarcreek, Ohio, a quiet Amish town that feels almost impossible to understand from the outside. What should be a place to recover quickly becomes an uneasy test of patience, humility, and trust, as Cheryl struggles with country-store work at Swiss Miss, unfamiliar customs, and the feeling that everyone around her knows how to read the town’s silences better than she does. Her friendship with Naomi Miller gives her a gentle bridge into the Amish community, while Naomi’s brother Levi becomes a warm but complicated presence as Cheryl tries not to mistake comfort for a new life too quickly. But Sugarcreek’s peace is shaken by a secret tied to a lost Amish daughter, a hidden adoption, and strange clues that suggest someone has been protecting the truth for years. As Police Chief John Robertson looks for order, and people like Esther Miller and Kathy orbit the growing mystery, Cheryl’s outsider perspective becomes both a problem and a gift, helping her notice what longtime residents have learned to overlook. The film blends small-town warmth, faith-based healing, and cozy suspense as Cheryl begins to see that starting over may require solving more than her own heartbreak. “Sugarcreek Amish Mysteries: Blessings in Disguise” (2025) becomes a gentle mystery drama about belonging, forgiveness, community, and the unexpected way a broken plan can lead someone toward home. More …
June
Ground Up (season 1)
6 episodes
“Ground Up” (season 1) — sets its story in Tasmania, where AFL administrator Hugh Shen is sent from Melbourne to build the island’s first AFL team from nothing, only to discover that a football club requires far more than a ball, a logo, and a few confident press releases. The dream of the Great Southern Football Club is tied to a controversial taxpayer-funded stadium, divided locals, angry protesters, impossible deadlines, and a bureaucracy that turns every decision into a meeting about another meeting. Hugh wants the project to be his path toward serious power inside the league, but his plans keep colliding with CFO Destiny Pitt, who has been sent to protect the budget and remind everyone that enthusiasm is not a funding model. Around them, AFL boss Alistair Penfold, Jameson, Angela Linscombe, Catherine la Fontaine, sponsors, consultants, politicians, and community voices all pull the club in different directions, from team songs and mascots to stadium messaging, membership drives, coaching choices, and public outrage. As Hugh tries to sell hope to a state that is not sure it wants the bill, the season turns sporting ambition into office chaos, where every win creates three new problems and every slogan sounds better before anyone has to explain it. “Ground Up” (season 1) becomes a sharp Australian workplace comedy about sport, politics, ego, red tape, and the absurd task of building a dream while everyone argues over who is paying for it. More …
June
Every Year After (season 1)
8 episodes
“Every Year After” (season 1) — returns Percy Fraser to Barry’s Bay a decade after she cut herself off from the summers that once defined her, pulled home by a loss that forces her to face Sam Florek, the boy who became her first love and the person she hurt badly enough to leave behind. The season moves between two timelines: the teenage years when Percy’s family cottage, the lake, Sam’s mother Sue, his brother Charlie, and her friendship with Delilah made every summer feel like a private world, and the present, where adulthood has turned those memories into unfinished business. Percy arrives carrying guilt, professional uncertainty, and the fear that coming home may only reopen wounds no one wants named, while Sam tries to protect the tavern, his family’s legacy, and the version of himself that survived without her. Around them, Charlie’s charm, Delilah’s old hurt, and the lives of Chantal and Jordie widen the story beyond a single romance, turning Barry’s Bay into a place where love, friendship, grief, and betrayal are all tangled together. As lake days, late-night conversations, old rituals, and painful silences bring the past closer, Percy and Sam must decide whether first love is something to recover, mourn, or finally understand honestly. “Every Year After” (season 1) becomes a nostalgic romantic drama about memory, forgiveness, growing up, and the difficult truth that the people who know you best can also be the ones you most need to face. More …
June
From (season 4)
8 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 …
June
You’re Killing Me (season 1)
5 episodes
“You’re Killing Me” (season 1) — follows bestselling mystery novelist Allie Chandler, whose once-glittering career is beginning to lose momentum just as she arrives in the quaint New England town of Founders’ Cove for a writers’ convention. When the suspicious death of a close friend turns the event from professional embarrassment into a real murder case, Allie cannot resist treating the crime like the kind of puzzle she used to solve on the page. Her instincts quickly put her at odds with Jack Kerrigan, the town’s newly arrived police detective, who wants evidence, order, and fewer dramatic theories from a celebrity author. But Allie also finds an unlikely partner in Andi Walker, an ambitious young true-crime podcaster whose digital sleuthing, recordings, and hunger for a breakthrough clash sharply with Allie’s old-school methods. As the two women dig into rival writers, local gossip, private grudges, and secrets hiding behind Founders’ Cove’s postcard charm, their partnership becomes both a source of comedy and the best chance of finding the killer. “You’re Killing Me” (season 1) becomes a cozy, sharp murder-mystery drama about relevance, reinvention, unlikely friendship, and the danger of discovering that real murder is far messier than fiction. More …
June
The Way Home (season 4)
9 episodes
“The Way Home” (season 4) — follows the Landry family as Alice approaches high‑school graduation, Kat and Elliot weigh the future of their relationship, and Del confronts the quiet ache of becoming an empty‑nester again, only to discover that the past refuses to stay buried. As Kat stumbles into a new era of Port Haven’s history and Alice revisits a familiar time, long‑dormant mysteries resurface, hinting that the answers they’ve sought for generations may lie in the shifting timelines that continue to pull them back toward the pond. As echoes of unresolved choices ripple across eras, the Landrys begin to sense that the timelines are no longer running parallel but slowly folding into each other. And with each crossing, the emotional stakes deepen, revealing connections that challenge everything they thought they understood about fate and family. The season tracks their attempts to navigate fresh beginnings while reckoning with unresolved secrets, unexpected reunions, and revelations that tie the Landry lineage to Port Haven more deeply than they ever imagined. “The Way Home” (season 4) becomes an emotional, time‑bending final chapter about family, legacy, and the inevitability of confronting the past before stepping into the future. More …
June
Rick and Morty (season 9)
4 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 …
June
Interview with the Vampire (season 3)
2 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 …























