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July
Riot Women (season 1)
6 episodes
“Riot Women” (season 1) — brings together five women in Hebden Bridge who are exhausted by being ignored, underestimated, and expected to keep everyone else’s lives running smoothly. Beth Thornton, a disillusioned teacher struggling with loneliness and a painful distance from her adopted son Tom, is pulled into the idea of forming a band by pub landlady Jess Burchill, whose local talent contest offers an unlikely escape from routine. They are joined by retired police officer Holly Gaskell, her blunt midwife sister Yvonne Vaux, and chaotic shoplifter Kitty Eckersley, whose raw voice and volatile energy give the group the punk spirit it was missing. Rehearsals begin as a mess of borrowed instruments, clashing personalities, forgotten chords, and arguments over what they should sing, but writing their own songs awakens anger about menopause, family demands, ageing parents, failed relationships, workplace cruelty, and the quiet erasure of women in middle age. As Nisha Lal and others enter their orbit, the band becomes more than preparation for one performance: it creates a space where private pain can be shouted, played, and finally heard. Yet the growing bond between Beth and Kitty is complicated by a buried connection that threatens both the music and the fragile trust holding everyone together. “Riot Women” (season 1) becomes a fierce, funny, and deeply emotional drama about friendship, rage, survival, and women discovering that making noise may be the first step toward reclaiming their lives. More …
July
The Chi (season 8)
8 episodes
“The Chi” (season 8) — returns to Chicago’s South Side for its closing chapter, where a sudden eruption of violence inside one of the neighborhood’s most powerful circles leaves the community shaken, suspicious, and forced to confront old debts that were never truly settled. Victor “Trig” Taylor and Shaad Marshall are pulled into a dangerous aftermath that forces friends, rivals, and family members to choose between truth, protection, and survival. Emmett Washington and Kiesha Williams try to build a steadier future with their baby daughter Jada, but money pressure, grief, and the weight of parenthood keep testing the peace they have fought to earn. Tiffany is drawn deeper into a shifting world of influence and loyalty, while Jake struggles to balance his Chi Seeds ambitions, Reg’s return, and the street temptations he hoped he had outgrown. Papa searches for purpose through faith, his podcast, and the church, even as the people around him reach for power, love, and escape in risky ways. Bakari’s attempt to move toward a cleaner life gives the season one of its most reflective threads, turning weddings, births, homecomings, and farewells into reminders that legacy is never simple on the South Side. Against a harsh winter of police pressure, family reckonings, and power struggles involving Nuck and Reg, the season asks who can still choose a different path when reputation, survival, and loyalty collide. “The Chi” (season 8) becomes a farewell drama about grief, legacy, community, and the painful hope that the next generation can break cycles the adults never fully escaped. More …
July
Power Book III: Raising Kanan (season 5)
5 episodes
“Power Book III: Raising Kanan” (season 5) — pushes Kanan Stark into the final stage of his transformation, as the South Jamaica teenager who once wanted a place in his mother’s business now begins chasing power on his own terms. With Raq Thomas back in his orbit and the Thomas family weakened by years of blood, betrayal, and broken trust, Kanan’s partnership with Breeze becomes the dangerous center of a new street education, teaching him that ambition means little without fear, strategy, and the willingness to cut loose anyone who slows the climb. Marvin tries to hold pieces of the family together while old instincts keep threatening his progress, Lou-Lou remains trapped between music, guilt, and the violence he can never fully escape, and Jukebox continues hardening into someone shaped as much by loss as by survival. Unique fights to reclaim his name in Queens, while new organized-crime players like Pino Bernardi and Flossie Siegel widen the battlefield beyond the Thomas family’s familiar corners. As police pressure, Mafia moves, street rivalries, and family resentments collide, the season turns Kanan’s coming-of-age into the origin of a colder legend. “Power Book III: Raising Kanan” (season 5) becomes a tense final chapter about loyalty, ambition, legacy, and the moment a young man stops trying to survive the game and starts learning how to own it. More …
July
Life, Larry and the Pursuit of Unhappiness: An Almost History of America (season 1)
3 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 …
July
Here We Go (season 2)
6 episodes
“Here We Go” (season 2) — returns to the Jessop household as life changes faster than any of them can manage, with Sam still filming every argument and humiliating disaster as proof that his family cannot complete even the simplest plan normally. Amy comes back from Norway missing the fjords and trying to decide what comes next, while Maya remains close enough to make love and independence more complicated. Rachel begins a university course and becomes determined to prove she can keep up with classmates half her age, even when student drinking games and her own lack of restraint suggest otherwise. Paul throws himself into police training with the same confidence and confusion he brings to everything, turning neighbourhood problems, anonymous Valentine’s flowers, and attempts to impress real officers into full investigations. Sue moves in and immediately takes command of the street, while Robin and Cherry’s approaching wedding creates proposals, dress shopping, an overambitious joint pre-wedding party, and strange ideas about their future. From Paul’s unreliable old boat and Sue’s chaotic street fair to Rachel’s competitive sister Penny, Sam’s looming exams, Maya’s plans, and one ill-advised tattoo, the season keeps pushing the Jessops toward change while proving they remain incapable of handling it gracefully. “Here We Go” (season 2) becomes another warm, sharply observed British family comedy about embarrassment, reinvention, and the stubborn affection holding everyone together when every celebration and good intention goes wrong. More …
July
Star City (season 1)
8 episodes
“Star City” (season 1) — steps behind the Iron Curtain into the same alternate-history space race, shifting the perspective from NASA’s triumphs to the Soviet program after the USSR becomes the first nation to put a man on the Moon. Inside the secretive world of Star City, cosmonauts, engineers, military officials, and intelligence officers are pushed to risk their bodies, careers, and families for a victory the state cannot afford to lose. Irina Morozova, Colonel Lyudmilla Raskova, Anastasia Belikova, Sergei Nikulov, and the people around them move through a system built on ambition, surveillance, propaganda, and fear, where every successful launch hides technical failures, political threats, and personal compromises. As training intensifies at the Yuri Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center, the dream of reaching further into space becomes tangled with informants, loyalty tests, leaking secrets, and the constant pressure to make Soviet glory look effortless. The season turns the wonder of space exploration into a paranoid political thriller, where the stars promise freedom but the ground is ruled by secrecy, suspicion, and consequences. “Star City” (season 1) becomes a darker companion to the larger space-race saga, exploring sacrifice, ideology, and the people forced to decide how much of themselves they can give to a dream controlled by the state. More …
July
Silo (season 3)
2 episodes
“Silo” (season 3) — splits its story between the shaken present of Silo 18 and the buried history of the world before the silos existed, turning Juliette Nichols’ fight for truth into something much larger than one rebellion. After surviving the outside and returning to the people who once believed every official lie, Juliette is left carrying memory gaps, political responsibility, and the dangerous role of mayor in a community still divided by fear, grief, and the need for answers. Bernard, Sims, Shirley, Knox, Martha Walker, Lukas, and the survivors of the uprising must decide whether freedom is possible inside a system designed to keep people obedient, while the threat of the Algorithm and the mysterious Safeguard suggest that the silo’s rules were never only about control from within. In the past, Congressman Daniel Keene and journalist Helen Drew begin uncovering the conspiracy that leads humanity underground, with Charlotte Keene, Senator Thurman, Anna, and powerful figures around Washington turning the “before times” into a political thriller of secrecy, disaster planning, and impossible moral choices. As the two timelines echo each other through lies, erased history, and people trying to survive decisions made generations earlier, “Silo” (season 3) becomes a broader, more revealing sci-fi drama about memory, rebellion, engineered truth, and the terrifying question of whether humanity was saved by the silos or imprisoned by the people who built them. More …
July
Cape Fear (season 1)
7 episodes
“Cape Fear” (season 1) — opens with Tom and Anna Bowden, a successful married pair of attorneys whose polished family life begins to fracture when Max Cady, the violent man from their past, is released from prison and starts moving back toward them with frightening patience. Years earlier, both Bowdens played a part in putting Cady away, and his return turns their home, careers, marriage, and children into targets in a campaign that is as psychological as it is physical. Anna’s history as Cady’s former defense lawyer adds guilt and ambiguity to the threat, while Tom’s role as prosecutor forces the family to confront whether justice was ever as clean as they wanted to believe. As Cady uses charm, legal knowledge, intimidation, and unnerving proximity to infiltrate their world, Natalie and Zack Bowden are pulled into a danger they barely understand, and figures like Noa Toussaint and investigator Ray Rawlins circle a case where every old decision seems to carry a new consequence. The season turns courtrooms, suburban comfort, public events, and private family spaces into places of surveillance and dread, asking whether Cady is simply seeking revenge or exposing something rotten beneath the Bowdens’ respectable surface. “Cape Fear” (season 1) becomes a tense psychological thriller about guilt, power, moral compromise, and the terrifying collapse of safety when the past refuses to stay buried. 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
The Five-Star Weekend (season 1)
8 episodes
“The Five-Star Weekend” (season 1) — centers on Hollis Shaw, a beloved food influencer and bestselling author whose beautifully curated Nantucket life cracks after the sudden death of her husband Matthew exposes grief, loneliness, and problems her followers never saw. Unable to move forward, Hollis decides to host a “five-star weekend,” inviting one important woman from each stage of her life to her coastal home: Tatum, her childhood best friend who still carries old wounds; Dru-Ann, her glamorous college friend facing professional and personal pressure; Brooke, a newer friend from motherhood whose polished life hides its own strain; and Gigi, a devoted fan from Hollis’s online world who arrives as both outsider and unsettling mirror. As Caroline, Hollis’s daughter, struggles with resentment and distance, and Jack, Hollis’s first love, reappears with memories of a life not taken, the weekend becomes less a luxury escape than an emotional reckoning. Shared meals, beach walks, old photographs, expensive rooms, private confessions, and quiet betrayals slowly reveal that each woman has brought her own unfinished story to Nantucket. “The Five-Star Weekend” (season 1) becomes a sunlit but bittersweet drama about female friendship, grief, reinvention, and the dangerous gap between the perfect life someone presents and the complicated truth waiting behind it. More …























