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July
The Oval (season 7)
9 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
The Chi (season 8)
9 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
Sugar (season 2)
5 episodes
“Sugar” (season 2) — returns John Sugar to Los Angeles after the revelations surrounding his hidden past leave him more isolated than ever and no closer to finding his missing sister, Djen. Trying to keep moving, the private investigator accepts a new case from rising boxer Danny Moon, whose troubled older brother Ji has vanished after leaving behind a trail of fear, addiction, and cryptic warnings. The search pulls Sugar away from Hollywood mansions and into Koreatown pool halls, cheap apartments, hospitals, police rooms, and the city’s quieter corners, where every witness seems frightened of the same people. Lieutenant Ray Vega quickly emerges as a dangerous obstacle, using authority, charm, and intimidation to control the investigation, while the mysterious Charlotte Fischer enters Sugar’s orbit with motives he cannot easily read. As Ji’s disappearance begins pointing toward a wider conspiracy involving protected violence, compromised officials, and forces connected to Sugar’s own unanswered questions, his instinct to help the vulnerable clashes with the secrecy that has always defined him. Danny’s desperation and Sugar’s continuing search for Djen keep the case personal, even as each clue makes doing the right thing more dangerous. “Sugar” (season 2) becomes a stylish neo-noir mystery about loneliness, corruption, identity, and a detective forced to decide how much of himself he is willing to expose to save someone everyone else has already abandoned. More …
July
Criminal Minds (season 19)
9 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
Cape Fear (season 1)
8 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
All the Queen’s Men (season 5)
7 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
DTF St. Louis (season 1)
7 episodes
“DTF St. Louis” (season 1) — opens in suburban Missouri, where television weatherman Clark Forrest and sign-language interpreter Floyd Smernitch form an unlikely friendship after a chaotic live report brings them together. Both men look settled from the outside, yet each is quietly suffocating inside middle age, marriage, routine, and the fear that the best part of life may be over. Clark introduces Floyd to DTF St. Louis, a discreet hookup app for married adults seeking escape, but what begins as awkward curiosity soon entangles Floyd, Clark, and Floyd’s wife Carol in a triangle built from loneliness, secrecy, desire, and reckless attempts to feel alive. Clark’s wife Eimy and their daughters remain inside the family life he is risking, while Carol balances work, financial strain, her troubled son, and a marriage that no longer resembles the future she expected. When the story shifts toward a suspicious death, veteran detective Donoghue Homer and special-crimes officer Jodie Plumb begin reconstructing the summer through conflicting memories, digital traces, suburban routines, and lies that change meaning depending on who tells them. Moving nonlinearly between friendship, infidelity, investigation, and consequence, the season turns bike rides, backyard games, motel rooms, weather broadcasts, and domestic conversations into pieces of a darkly comic mystery. “DTF St. Louis” (season 1) becomes an unsettling drama about middle-aged desperation, male friendship, betrayal, and the damage caused by people trying to repair unhappy lives with choices they cannot take back. More …
July
The Empress (season 1)
6 episodes
“The Empress” (season 1) — introduces Elisabeth “Sisi” von Wittelsbach, a free-spirited Bavarian duchess whose life changes when she accompanies her older sister Helene to meet Emperor Franz Joseph, the man Helene is expected to marry. Instead, Franz and Elisabeth are drawn to each other, turning a carefully arranged visit into a scandalous choice that carries Sisi from the countryside into the rigid world of the Habsburg court. In Vienna, her spontaneity and refusal to obey every custom place her at odds with Archduchess Sophie, Franz’s formidable mother, who sees the new empress as politically dangerous and unprepared for the crown. While Franz struggles with war, unrest, and the burden of ruling an empire under pressure, his ambitious brother Maximilian watches for weakness, and Elisabeth tries to understand a palace where affection, duty, surveillance, and power are almost impossible to separate. Her connection with the people beyond the gates brings her closer to the poverty and anger hidden beneath imperial ceremony, while Leontine, Countess Esterházy, and Helene reveal different costs of surviving aristocratic expectations. As court intrigue, family rivalry, public unrest, and a passionate but fragile marriage close around her, Sisi must decide how much of herself she can preserve without abandoning the role she has unexpectedly inherited. “The Empress” (season 1) becomes a lush historical drama about love, freedom, political awakening, and a rebellious young woman discovering that becoming empress may require challenging the very court that crowned her. More …
July
You Me Her (season 1)
10 episodes
“You Me Her” (season 1) — begins with Jack and Emma Trakarsky, a successful suburban couple in Portland whose loving marriage has settled into routine, pressure around having a child, and a growing fear that something essential between them has gone quiet. Acting on reckless advice, Jack meets Izzy Silva, a graduate student working as an escort, but the encounter becomes emotionally complicated before it can remain a private mistake. When Emma discovers what happened, curiosity and jealousy pull her toward Izzy as well, creating an arrangement the three insist is controlled, temporary, and purely practical. Those rules quickly weaken through secret dates, awkward negotiations, unexpected tenderness, and the realization that each person wants something different from the connection. Jack worries about his career and losing Emma, Emma begins questioning the safe identity she has built, and Izzy struggles to protect her independence while hiding how deeply she is becoming attached. Around them, Izzy’s outspoken friend Nina, Emma’s confidante Carmen, Jack’s brother Gabe, and intrusive neighbors make secrecy almost impossible, especially as excuses, lies, and suburban expectations close in. What begins as an attempt to repair one marriage gradually becomes a test of whether love can expand without destroying trust. “You Me Her” (season 1) becomes a witty, intimate romantic comedy-drama about desire, identity, jealousy, and three people discovering that the relationship they never planned may be more honest than the lives they were trying to preserve. More …
July
Lucky (season 1)
2 episodes
“Lucky” (season 1) — throws Luciana “Lucky” Armstrong back into the criminal life she has spent years trying to escape when a multimillion-dollar heist in Las Vegas collapses overnight. She wakes to find her husband and partner Cary missing, the stolen cash gone, and FBI agents Billie Rand and Eli Gates already closing in, leaving her with no one to trust and no clean way out. Raised by her imprisoned father John to read strangers, build convincing lies, and turn panic into opportunity, Lucky relies on disguises, improvised scams, stolen cars, and old contacts as she races across casinos, highways, desert towns, and temporary hideouts. But the missing money also belongs to Priscilla, a ruthless crime boss tied to Lucky’s family history, whose enforcer Dutch makes every delay more dangerous, while Wayne Whittaker’s influence reveals how far the conspiracy reaches. As flashbacks expose the childhood cons that shaped her and the complicated love she still carries for John, Lucky begins questioning whether Cary betrayed her, was taken, or became trapped in a game larger than either of them understood. Every escape forces her to use the talents she wants to leave behind, blurring the line between survival and becoming the person her family trained her to be. “Lucky” (season 1) becomes a stylish, fast-moving crime thriller about deception, inherited damage, freedom, and a gifted con artist trying to write a future that is not just another version of someone else’s scheme. More …























