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June
The Sheep Detectives (2026)
“The Sheep Detectives” (2026) — opens in the seemingly peaceful English village of Denbrook, where kindly shepherd George Hardy spends his evenings reading murder mysteries aloud to the flock he raises only for wool, never suspecting that Lily, Mopple, Cloud, Sir Richfield, Zora, Wool-Eyes, Sebastian, and the rowdy twins Reggie and Ronnie understand far more than any human imagines. When George is found dead under suspicious circumstances, the sheep immediately apply everything they have learned from detective fiction and decide that their beloved shepherd has been murdered. Their investigation sends them nosing through fields, village lanes, the local inn, legal offices, church corners, and butcher-shop gossip, while clumsy policeman Tim Derry struggles to make sense of a case the animals may understand better than he does. Human suspects gather quickly, from George’s estranged daughter Rebecca Hampstead and mysterious lawyer Lydia Harbottle to innkeeper Beth Pennock, reporter Elliot Matthews, rival shepherd Caleb Merrow, Reverend Hillcoate, and other villagers with motives tucked behind polite smiles. As the flock tries to communicate clues without causing a full human panic, their cosy farm world turns into a comic whodunnit about grief, loyalty, memory, and the strange brilliance of creatures everyone keeps underestimating. “The Sheep Detectives” (2026) becomes a warm, eccentric family mystery where the smallest witnesses may be the only ones woolly enough, stubborn enough, and clever enough to uncover the truth. More …
June
Marriage (season 1)
4 episodes
“Marriage” (season 1) — centers on Ian and Emma, a long-married couple whose life together is built less on grand declarations than on habits, silences, irritation, loyalty, and the tiny negotiations that fill ordinary days. After returning from a holiday in Spain, they slip back into the familiar rhythm of home: awkward airport conversations, an argument over a jacket potato, visits to Emma’s difficult father Gerry, painful memories they rarely name directly, and a dinner with their daughter Jessica and her self-important boyfriend Adam. Ian, recently made redundant, drifts through his days with embarrassment, boredom, and a need for reassurance he does not always know how to ask for, while Emma throws herself into work at a law firm where her boss Jamie dismisses her ideas and blurs professional boundaries in quietly unsettling ways. Around them, small encounters at the gym, in restaurants, at the office, and inside family rooms expose how much resentment and tenderness can live inside the same relationship. The season avoids melodrama in favor of pauses, half-finished sentences, shared looks, and the strange intimacy of two people who know each other too well and still fail to understand each other completely. “Marriage” (season 1) becomes a restrained, painfully observant drama about middle age, grief, routine, and the fragile comfort of staying beside someone when love no longer looks simple but has not disappeared. More …
June
Star City (season 1)
3 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 …
June
Mayflies (season 1)
2 episodes
“Mayflies” (season 1) — traces the lifelong friendship of Jimmy Collins and Tully Dawson, two men whose bond was forged in 1986 in a small Scottish town, when music, rebellion, school’s end, and a wild trip to Manchester made them believe they could escape the ordinary lives waiting for them. Thirty years later, Jimmy is a writer living in London with his wife Iona, while Tully remains in Scotland with Anna, still carrying the same reckless warmth that once made him feel untouchable. A sudden phone call pulls Jimmy back home, where Tully reveals a terminal cancer diagnosis and asks for help with a decision that turns their friendship into a test of love, loyalty, memory, and moral courage. As the present-day story moves through pubs, hospital rooms, old haunts, and painful conversations with Anna, Iona, Tibbs, Hogg, Limbo, Barbara, and Fiona, flashbacks return to the boys they once were: loud, hopeful, frightened, and desperate to live differently from their fathers. The season balances youthful euphoria with the brutal intimacy of saying goodbye, asking whether friendship can survive the weight of someone’s final wish. “Mayflies” (season 1) becomes a tender Scottish drama about male friendship, mortality, music, and the promises people make when they are young, only to discover decades later what keeping them may truly cost. More …
June
Your Friends & Neighbors (season 2)
10 episodes
“Your Friends & Neighbors” (season 2) — follows Coop, freshly cleared of murder charges yet still clinging to his double life as a suburban thief in the affluent, image‑obsessed Westmont Village, where every brunch, fundraiser, and poolside conversation hides a new layer of rot. As he slips deeper into his high‑end burglary routine with Elena acting as lookout, the arrival of billionaire newcomer Owen Ashe destabilizes the neighborhood’s fragile social order and threatens to expose Coop’s secrets, turning his once‑controlled heists into a minefield of shifting alliances and escalating risk. As Owen begins inserting himself into local politics and private social circles, his influence warps the neighborhood’s hierarchy in ways that make Coop’s operations increasingly unpredictable. And with Westmont’s residents growing more paranoid and performative, every theft becomes a test of whether Coop can stay invisible in a community obsessed with appearances. With new neighbors stirring chaos, old scandals resurfacing, and Coop’s personal life fraying under the weight of lies, the season pushes him toward choices that blur survival, thrill, and self‑destruction. “Your Friends & Neighbors” (season 2) becomes a sharper, darker suburban crime dramedy where status, deceit, and desperation collide, and where every stolen object is just another reminder of how quickly a carefully curated life can implode. More …
June
Two Weeks in August (season 1)
8 episodes
“Two Weeks in August” (season 1) — centers on Zoe, a people-pleasing wife and mother who joins her husband Dan, their family, and a circle of old university friends for what should be a sun-soaked Mediterranean escape on a Greek island. At first, the holiday promises lazy days, shared dinners, old jokes, and the comforting illusion that time has not changed the group very much, but one drunken night and an illicit kiss disturb the fragile balance between the couples. Jess, Nat, Jacob, Solomon, and the others arrive with marriages, parenting choices, buried resentment, and private disappointments already straining beneath the surface, and the island’s beauty only makes their tensions feel more exposed. As Zoe begins questioning the role she has accepted in her own life, Dan’s neediness, old alliances, flirtations, and small humiliations turn the holiday into a pressure cooker of suspicion and emotional games. What starts as a sharply observed group drama gradually slips into darker, stranger territory, where the friends’ worst impulses, jealousies, and fears begin to shape the trip as much as the landscape around them. “Two Weeks in August” (season 1) becomes a tense, sunlit psychological drama about friendship, marriage, self-deception, and the frightening moment when a perfect getaway starts revealing who everyone really is. More …
June
The Terror (season 3)
5 episodes
“The Terror” (season 3) is a new turn in the anthology horror series, now under the subtitle Devil in Silver, shifting the story into a decaying psychiatric hospital where Pepper, an ordinary mover, after a routine job goes wrong, finds himself among society’s forgotten patients and staff whose rules feel like a blend of collapse and ritual. The season unfolds as a standalone narrative, preserving the franchise’s signature approach where social or institutional decay becomes the engine of dread. The hospital’s realism is sharpened into something oppressive, turning mundane details into instruments of psychological pressure. In the corridors where time moves like a nightmare, he encounters a presence that feeds on human suffering and realizes the institution operates by its own laws, replacing reality with hallucinations, memory fractures, and a suffocating sense of inevitability. As the walls close in and the night shifts become trials of endurance and sanity, Pepper is forced to confront the fractures and fears the creature exploits within him. “The Terror” (season 3) becomes a claustrophobic, ritualistic nightmare where survival demands facing what rots inside the hospital — and inside the human mind. More …
June
The Chi (season 8)
3 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 …
June
Rivals (season 2)
6 episodes
“Rivals” (season 2) picks up in the aftermath of the brutal franchise showdown, as Rupert Campbell‑Black’s rising influence and Tony Baddingham’s wounded pride ignite a new wave of power plays that ripple through Cotchester’s media world, pulling Declan O’Hara, Freddie Jones, and Taggie into fresh storms of ambition, betrayal, and dangerously shifting loyalties. As new scandals begin to surface, the city’s media elite scramble to control narratives before they spiral out of their grasp. Rumors of back‑channel deals and covert alliances spread quickly, turning every newsroom into a battlefield. Even long‑standing friendships start to fracture under the pressure of public scrutiny and private agendas. And each strategic move only deepens the sense that the industry is heading toward a reckoning no one can fully predict. As Corinium and Venturer scramble to secure their futures, old alliances fracture under the pressure of scandal, political interference, and the ruthless demands of an industry where reputation can collapse overnight. In a season where every victory comes with a hidden cost and every rivalry sharpens into something more volatile, “Rivals” (season 2) becomes a sharper, faster, and more combustible battle for control of the spotlight — and the empire behind it. More …
June
Dutton Ranch (season 1)
5 episodes
“Dutton Ranch” (season 1) follows a fractured Montana dynasty as old wounds resurface when the next generation of Duttons returns home to a ranch still haunted by violence, loyalty, and the legacy of choices made long before they were born. As the family reunites, long‑buried disputes flare up with a force that threatens to split the ranch in two. Rumors of land deals and political pressure begin to circle, drawing opportunists who see the Duttons’ turmoil as an opening. Even the surrounding community feels the tremors, sensing that the balance of power in the valley is shifting. And every uneasy conversation hints at deeper fractures waiting to erupt. As shifting alliances, buried family secrets, and rising external threats converge on the land they’re sworn to protect, each member of the clan is forced to confront the cost of carrying a name that has shaped the region for over a century. In a world where power is inherited but survival must be earned, “Dutton Ranch” (season 1) becomes a sweeping, character‑driven battle for identity, territory, and the future of a family built on unbreakable land and unforgivable history. More …























