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June
Not Suitable for Work (season 1)
5 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
Deli Boys (season 2)
6 episodes
“Deli Boys” (season 2) — returns to Philadelphia with Raj and Mir Dar discovering that inheriting Baba’s criminal empire was only the beginning, because running DarCo as the city’s rising cocaine operation has left them buried under dirty money they barely understand how to move. With the deli still serving as the ridiculous public face of a much larger mess, Mir tries to expand the family business without accidentally destroying it, while Raj becomes fixated on revenge against Ahmad, turning every half-baked plan into another threat to their fragile control. Lucky remains the sharpest mind in the room, but even her ruthless confidence is tested when the brothers seek help from Max Sugar, a casino king and money launderer whose charm, danger, and strange romantic pull complicate both business and family loyalty. As Philly D.A. Andrew Chadwater circles the Dars with anti-drug ambition, and new figures tied to politics, law, gambling, and old family connections push into their orbit, the season turns more money into more chaos at every step. Between botched schemes, criminal etiquette lessons, Lucky’s shifting power, Prairie’s oddball presence, and the brothers’ constant inability to look like serious gangsters, the show keeps its absurd comedy while raising the stakes around trust, greed, and survival. “Deli Boys” (season 2) becomes a faster, sharper crime comedy about family legacy, laundering problems, wounded pride, and two spoiled brothers learning that being underestimated is only useful if you stop proving everyone right. (more…)
May
The Testaments (season 1)
10 episodes
“The Testaments” (season 1) — follows Agnes and Daisy, two teenage girls raised on opposite sides of Gilead’s borders, whose lives collide inside Aunt Lydia’s elite Wife School, a gilded institution where obedience is sculpted through ritual, fear, and the quiet brutality of indoctrination. As Agnes begins to question the foundations of the world she was taught to revere, Daisy’s arrival as an outsider—bearing a secret that links her directly to Gilead’s past—ignites fractures in the carefully curated hierarchy of the school. As the girls navigate the suffocating rituals of their new environment, the cracks in Gilead’s immaculate façade widen, revealing the quiet desperation simmering beneath its order. And every whispered conversation, every forbidden glance, becomes a small act of defiance that threatens to unravel the very system meant to contain them. Their uneasy bond grows into a catalyst for rebellion as they navigate the suffocating expectations of future wives, the manipulations of Aunt Lydia, and the hidden resistance threading its way through the regime’s most protected spaces. “The Testaments” (season 1) becomes a tense, emotionally charged coming‑of‑age dystopia about friendship, identity, and the dangerous spark of awakening inside a system built to extinguish it. (more…)
May
Everyone Is Doing Great (season 2)
8 episodes
“Everyone Is Doing Great” (season 2) follows Seth and Jeremy as they stumble deeper into the chaotic aftershocks of their once‑successful vampire show, trying to rebuild careers, relationships, and a sense of identity while navigating the absurdity of Hollywood’s expectations. Their attempts to reinvent themselves often clash with the lingering shadows of past fame, forcing them to confront the uncomfortable gap between who they were and who they want to become. Moments of progress are frequently undercut by self‑doubt, awkward missteps, and the unpredictable nature of the industry. As new opportunities emerge, so do fresh complications, testing their resilience in ways neither of them anticipated. Even their closest friendships are pushed into unfamiliar territory, revealing vulnerabilities they can no longer ignore. Their attempts at self‑improvement collide with old insecurities, new creative ambitions, and the uncomfortable truth that growing up doesn’t guarantee growing wiser. As friendships shift, opportunities backfire, and personal reinvention becomes both a necessity and a punchline, “Everyone Is Doing Great” (season 2) turns into a sharply funny, quietly vulnerable exploration of two men learning that success isn’t a destination — it’s a moving target. (more…)
May
The Bear (season 5)
Special episodes
“The Bear” (season 5) finds Carmy, Sydney, Richie, and the rest of the crew pushing their newly reborn restaurant into a higher, more punishing tier of fine dining, where every service becomes a test of ego, discipline, and the fragile bonds that hold a kitchen together. As the pressure mounts, the team begins to feel the widening gap between ambition and emotional stability, forcing them to confront the personal sacrifices their craft demands. The kitchen’s relentless pace exposes new fractures in their relationships, turning every misstep into a potential breaking point. The growing tension also sharpens the contrast between their public success and private unraveling, making every victory feel increasingly hollow. Even small moments of connection become rare and fragile, swallowed by the constant churn of expectation. As Carmy confronts the emotional fallout of past choices and Sydney fights to define her own creative authority, the team is forced to navigate rising expectations, shrinking margins, and the relentless pressure that threatens to break even the strongest among them. With relationships fraying and ambition burning hotter than ever, “The Bear” (season 5) becomes a fierce, intimate portrait of a kitchen chasing greatness at a cost none of them fully understand. (more…)
April
Malcolm in the Middle: Life’s Still Unfair (season 1)
4 episodes
“Malcolm in the Middle: Life’s Still Unfair” (season 1) — picks up nearly twenty years after the original series, with Malcolm now a grown man living a carefully structured life with his daughter Leah and girlfriend Tristan, having spent years keeping his chaotic family at arm’s length. His fragile equilibrium shatters when Hal and Lois demand his presence at their 40th wedding anniversary, dragging him, Tristan, and Leah back into the familiar hurricane of dysfunction he’s tried so hard to escape. As the reunion spirals into a minefield of unresolved grudges and accidental provocations, Malcolm finds himself slipping back into the defensive reflexes he thought he’d outgrown. And every attempt to maintain composure only exposes how deeply the old family gravity still pulls at him, no matter how far he’s tried to run. As old patterns resurface and long‑avoided truths close in, Malcolm is forced to confront the identity he built by running from his past and the emotional landmines buried in every interaction with his parents and brothers. “Malcolm in the Middle: Life’s Still Unfair” (season 1) becomes a sharp, nostalgic, emotionally messy revival about family gravity, personal reinvention, and the uncomfortable realization that growing up doesn’t mean outgrowing where you came from. (more…)
March
Paradise (season 2)
8 episodes
“Paradise” (season 2) — follows Secret Service agent Xavier Collins and the insulated community of Paradise as the fallout from President Bradford’s assassination fractures the illusion of safety that once defined their bunker‑like town. While Sinatra struggles to impose a new order and contain the truth about the president’s death, the residents face rising paranoia, shifting loyalties, and the creeping realization that their sanctuary was built on layers of manipulation. As Xavier and Annie push beyond Paradise’s borders toward Atlanta, they encounter a changed, unstable world that challenges everything they believed about the catastrophe and exposes the broader conspiracy shaping their lives. Inside the community, Jane Driscoll and the remaining residents navigate a tightening atmosphere of surveillance and distrust, where every conversation, alliance, and secret becomes a potential threat. The season builds its tension through converging timelines, political intrigue, and the slow unmasking of the forces orchestrating Paradise’s creation, turning the town’s carefully curated calm into a battleground of truth and control. “Paradise” (season 2) positions itself as a political sci‑fi thriller where power, identity, and survival collide, and where every revelation pushes the characters closer to understanding who is truly pulling the strings — and what Paradise was ever meant to be. (more…)
February
Tell Me Lies (season 3)
8 episodes
“Tell Me Lies” (season 3) — unfolds as Lucy and Stephen are pulled back into each other’s gravity just when both are trying to rebuild lives that still carry the fractures of their toxic past, forcing them to confront the damage they’ve spent years pretending to outgrow. What begins as a seemingly controlled reunion quickly unravels into a volatile mix of unresolved desire, buried guilt, and the quiet manipulations they once mistook for love. New partners, new ambitions, and new lies collide with the ghosts of their college years, exposing how deeply their choices still shape the people they’ve become. Even the stability they’ve tried to build with others begins to crack, as old patterns resurface with a force neither of them is prepared to face. The emotional distance they’ve maintained for years collapses instantly, revealing how tightly their worst impulses are still intertwined. As the truth about old betrayals resurfaces and the emotional stakes sharpen, both are pushed toward a reckoning that blurs the line between closure and self‑destruction. “Tell Me Lies” (season 3) positions itself as an intimate, slow‑burn psychological drama about obsession, accountability, and the dangerous pull of the person you can’t seem to let go of — even when you know they’re the one who broke you. (more…)
February
Red Eye (season 2)
6 episodes
“Red Eye” (season 2) — unfolds as DC Hana Li, still reeling from the fallout of the Flight 357 conspiracy, is pulled into a new geopolitical nightmare when a high‑profile British tech executive vanishes in Beijing under circumstances that echo the cover‑ups she thought she’d left behind, forcing her back into the crosshairs of MI5, Chinese state security, and the shadow networks that profit from both. As Hana returns to China — this time not as a suspect but as the only person who understands the machinery of deception at play — the investigation drags her through surveillance‑soaked streets, corporate espionage rings, and diplomatic pressure cookers where every ally might be an informant and every truth is weaponised. With the British government desperate to avoid another international scandal and the Chinese authorities determined to control the narrative, Hana finds herself navigating a tightening maze of political theatre, personal betrayal, and buried trauma from her first ordeal, all while a new adversary emerges who seems to anticipate her every move. “Red Eye” (season 2) positions itself as a tense, escalating conspiracy thriller where borders blur, loyalties fracture, and Hana must decide how much of herself she’s willing to sacrifice to expose a truth that could ignite a global crisis. (more…)
December
All’s Fair (season 1)
9 episodes
“All’s Fair” (Season 1) — follows a team of elite female divorce attorneys in Los Angeles who leave a powerful, male-dominated firm to launch their own practice, navigating high-stakes breakups, scandalous secrets, and internal rivalries in the process. The season centers on Allura Grant, Liberty Ronson, and Emerald Greene as they build their new firm, Grant, Ronson, and Greene, while facing off against their former mentor Dina Standish and rival attorney Carrington Lane. Each episode explores a different divorce case — from billionaires to celebrities — revealing the emotional and legal complexities behind the scenes. The team takes on a high-profile client whose prenup may be forged, threatening to unravel a media empire. A paralegal named Milan, with ambitions of becoming a lawyer, uncovers a hidden clause that shifts a case’s outcome. Mid-season, Emerald’s personal life collides with her work when one of her triplet sons is accused of hacking a client’s phone. Meanwhile, Liberty’s relationship with her boyfriend, Dr. Reggie Ramirez, is tested when a custody battle exposes his past. The firm’s unity is shaken when Carrington attempts to poach Milan, and Dina files a lawsuit claiming intellectual property theft over their case strategy. The season builds toward a courtroom showdown that pits the new firm against their old one, with reputations, careers, and personal loyalties on the line. Stylish, dramatic, and emotionally charged, “All’s Fair” (Season 1) blends legal intrigue with personal drama, offering a glossy, fast-paced look at power, betrayal, and reinvention in the world of elite divorce law. (more…)























