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TV Shows
April
The Pitt (season 2)
15 episodes
“The Pitt” (Season 2) — unfolds over a single relentless Fourth of July shift, ten months after the events of the first season, as the Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center is slammed by a rising wave of holiday‑fueled emergencies — fireworks gone wrong, alcohol‑driven accidents, reckless celebrations spiraling into chaos — each case escalating the pressure inside an ER already stretched to breaking. Dr. Robby Robinavitch, steadier but still carrying the weight of past trauma, prepares for an impending sabbatical just as the return of Dr. Frank Langdon — newly sober, newly humbled, and stepping back into the hospital for the first time since rehab — detonates unresolved tensions that ripple through the staff. A sudden technological failure forces the entire department to abandon modern systems and operate fully analog, turning every decision into a test of instinct and endurance as the day grows darker and more volatile. Meanwhile, Dr. Melissa King faces the fallout of a malpractice lawsuit, Dr. Dennis Whitaker is pushed into unexpected leadership, and a new attending, Dr. Baran Al‑Hashimi, arrives with a sharp, uncompromising approach that immediately clashes with Robby’s. “The Pitt” (Season 2) positions itself as a high‑intensity, real‑time medical thriller where every hour tightens the vise, every relationship is strained by unspoken history, and survival — emotional and literal — depends on who can stay standing when the shift finally ends. (more…)
April
The Fall and Rise of Reggie Dinkins (season 1)
10 episodes
“The Fall and Rise of Reggie Dinkins” (Season 1) — follows disgraced NFL superstar Reggie Dinkins, once a two‑time MVP and the pride of the New York Jets, whose career imploded after a gambling scandal that included betting on his own team, leaving him banned for life and desperate to reclaim even a fragment of the respect he lost. Now, years later, Reggie launches a chaotic, self‑mythologizing comeback campaign by hiring award‑winning filmmaker Arthur Tobin to move into his mansion and document his “rise”, a decision that exposes every insecurity, delusion, and unresolved wound he’s tried to bury. As Arthur digs for truth while Reggie pushes for heroics, the people orbiting him — his sharp, long‑suffering ex‑wife and business manager Monica, his loyal but exasperated best friend Rusty, his fiancée Brina, and his son Carmelo — become unwilling participants in a redemption quest that veers between farce and genuine vulnerability. Rival coaches, aggressive agents, old enemies, and explosive family dynamics collide as Reggie attempts to rewrite his legacy, even as the ghosts of his past threaten to derail every step forward. “The Fall and Rise of Reggie Dinkins” (Season 1) positions itself as a sharp, character‑driven sports comedy where fame, ego, and second chances crash together in a story about a man trying to rebuild a life he never fully understood in the first place. (more…)
April
Scrubs (season 1)
9 episodes
“Scrubs” (season 1) — follows J.D. as he returns to a rebuilt Sacred Heart, stepping back into a hospital that looks familiar but operates with a sharper, faster, more chaotic rhythm shaped by a new generation of interns who treat medicine like a battlefield of ambition, burnout, and algorithm‑driven decision‑making. Turk remains his anchor, though even their legendary friendship strains under the weight of adulthood, shifting priorities, and the realization that the world moved on while they weren’t looking. The more they try to reconnect, the clearer it becomes that the easy camaraderie they once relied on now has to survive real‑world pressure instead of sitcom simplicity. And in the background, the interns watch them like living legends who can’t quite decide whether they’re returning to lead or simply to remember who they used to be. Elliot navigates the emotional fallout of high‑stakes cases and the impossible expectations placed on her, while Dr. Cox — older, angrier, and somehow even more unwilling to tolerate incompetence — becomes the brutal mentor the new recruits never asked for. As the interns stumble through their own crises, the returning doctors confront the uncomfortable truth that nostalgia can’t save anyone, and that healing — for patients and for themselves — demands a kind of honesty they’ve spent years avoiding. “Scrubs” (season 1) positions itself as a sharp, heartfelt revival where humor cuts through exhaustion, growth collides with memory, and the people who once defined Sacred Heart must decide whether they still belong in the place that made them. (more…)
April
Doc (season 2)
22 episodes
“Doc” (Season 2) deepens the emotional and psychological stakes of the medical drama as Dr. Amy Larsen continues her journey to reclaim the eight years of memory lost in a traumatic car accident. No longer Chief of Internal Medicine at Westside Hospital, Amy must start over as an intern, relearning medical advancements while confronting the personal and professional consequences of her missing years. Her relationships are strained — especially with her ex-husband Michael, now a father again with his new wife, and with Chief Resident Jake Heller, whose heart she once held but no longer remembers. Tensions rise as Amy’s former mentor Joan Ridley takes over her old position, harboring secrets that could reshape everything Amy thought she knew. The season opens with a gripping case involving a desperate father and a heart transplant, setting the tone for high-stakes medical emergencies and emotional reckonings. Amy’s best friend Gina Walker remains a steady presence, though even she begins to question loyalties as chaos unfolds. Meanwhile, Dr. Sonya Maitra navigates her own complicated feelings toward Jake and Amy, adding fuel to the simmering romantic and professional conflicts. As Amy begins to experience flashes of memory — triggered by a violent incident at the hospital — she’s forced to confront the truth about who she was, who she’s become, and whether she can ever truly bridge the gap between the two. “Doc” (Season 2) delivers a powerful blend of medical drama, character-driven storytelling, and psychological intrigue, exploring how memory shapes identity and how healing often begins with facing the past. (more…)
April
Saint-Pierre (season 2)
12 episodes
“Saint‑Pierre” (Season 2) — follows Arch and Fitz as they are thrown into the aftermath of the graveyard shootout that closed the first season, leaving them bruised, disoriented, and immediately pulled into a new investigation when a meticulously posed body is discovered in an abandoned warehouse, echoing the signature of a serial killer believed to have died fifteen years earlier and forcing them to question whether they are dealing with a resurrection, a copycat, or something far more personal. As the case expands across the islands, they confront a surge of strange crimes and unpredictable offenders shaped by Saint‑Pierre’s isolated jurisdiction, while the investigation drags their own buried histories to the surface — Arch’s real reason for coming to the archipelago and the dark roots of Fitz’s sleepwalking, which begins to intertwine disturbingly with the case. Their partnership deepens under pressure, built on shared secrets and the uneasy trust of two men who need each other more than they admit, even as the islands’ calm façade fractures under the weight of organized crime, old vendettas, and political tensions that complicate every step of their work. As they close in on the killer, the emotional fallout of the Season 1 kidnapping and the unresolved threat of Sean Gallagher tighten around them, pushing the investigation toward a confrontation that tests their instincts, loyalty, and the fragile balance between duty and survival. “Saint‑Pierre” (Season 2) positions itself as a tense, character‑driven crime drama where the beauty of the islands collides with the darkness its residents try to bury, and where every answer only exposes deeper shadows. (more…)
April
Universal Basic Guys (season 2)
18 episodes
“Universal Basic Guys” (Season 2) picks up with Mark and Hank Hoagies still riding the wave of their universal basic income pilot program, but now facing the existential dread of too much free time and not enough purpose. The season dives deeper into their misguided attempts at self-improvement and community engagement, from forming a chaotic amateur hockey team to entering a local magician’s duel that spirals into absurdity. Tammy chases a nursing award with questionable tactics, while Steve DelVecchio continues to antagonize Mark with his smug success and relentless gloating. Meanwhile, David Jinglebells and his wife Andrea return with a pyramid scheme disguised as a wellness retreat, dragging the brothers into yet another financial disaster. Episodes like “Machine Yearning” and “Golden Beans” explore the tension between automation and identity, as Mark briefly joins a startup selling AI-enhanced legumes and Hank tries to become a motivational speaker for unemployed dads. The show’s surreal humor and working-class satire remain intact, blending animated chaos with sharp commentary on economic displacement, masculinity, and the illusion of progress. “Universal Basic Guys” (Season 2) expands the world of South Jersey’s most aimless heroes, proving that even with a guaranteed income, life can still be a mess. (more…)
April
The Capture (season 3)
6 episodes
“The Capture” (season 3) — follows DCI Rachel Carey as she is thrust deeper into a world where truth is a fragile commodity and digital manipulation has become a weapon capable of rewriting reality itself, forcing her to navigate a landscape where every image, every recording, every piece of evidence may be engineered to deceive. As political forces tighten their grip and the machinery behind Correction evolves into something even more insidious, Carey finds herself pulled into a conspiracy that no longer targets others but places her directly at its center, blurring the line between investigator and pawn. The more she pushes forward, the more she senses that every move she makes is being anticipated, as if the system itself is studying her in real time. Each new layer she uncovers feels less like an investigation and more like a test designed to measure how far she’s willing to go to expose the truth. The deeper she pushes, the more she uncovers fractures within the institutions meant to protect the public, discovering that the battle for truth is no longer fought in courtrooms or interrogation rooms but in the invisible architecture of data, surveillance, and influence. “The Capture” (season 3) positions itself as a tense, high‑stakes techno‑thriller where certainty fractures under pressure, reality becomes negotiable, and Carey must confront a system designed to control not just what people believe — but what they see. (more…)
April
Murdoch Mysteries (season 19)
21 episodes
“Murdoch Mysteries” (Season 19) picks up after a dramatic cliffhanger, plunging Detective William Murdoch and his team into a new wave of complex cases, political corruption, and personal reckonings in early 1900s Toronto. Following the shutdown of Station House 4 by corrupt Mayor Chadwick Vaughan, Murdoch is left standing in the street, uncertain of his future. The season begins with Murdoch and his colleagues — including George Crabtree, Violet Hart, Llewellyn Watts, and Henry Higgins — regrouping to continue their work despite being declared redundant. Murdoch’s use of cutting-edge forensic techniques like fingerprinting, ballistics, and blood analysis remains central to solving crimes that range from gruesome murders to high-stakes political conspiracies. Chief Constable Thomas Brackenreid and Inspector Albert Choi provide support as Murdoch investigates the mayor’s criminal ties to an Irish gang from Montreal. The season explores the fallout of Vaughan’s crackdown and the team’s efforts to expose his corruption. Meanwhile, personal relationships evolve: Crabtree faces romantic dilemmas, Violet Hart navigates professional ambition, and Watts continues to wrestle with his past. Guest stars and historical references add depth to the narrative, blending steampunk aesthetics with real-world issues of the time. “Murdoch Mysteries” (Season 19) delivers a mix of suspense, humor, and emotional stakes, reaffirming its place as a fan-favorite detective drama. (more…)
April
American Classic (season 1)
8 episodes
“American Classic” (season 1) — follows Richard Bean, a narcissistic Broadway star whose spectacular public meltdown forces him back to his tiny hometown and the family‑run theater where his ego was first born, dragging decades of unresolved resentment behind him. His return detonates the fragile equilibrium of the Bean family: his ex‑girlfriend is now the town’s mayor and married to his brother, his niece dreams of escaping into the world he abandoned, and every old wound he left behind begins to reopen. As Richard inserts himself into local politics and community events, his presence becomes a catalyst for long‑buried rivalries to flare back to life. And with each rehearsal, his attempts to reclaim artistic authority only deepen the fractures between the people who once supported him and the man he has become. As Richard attempts to “save” the theater by directing and starring in a production of a great American classic, his volatile behavior triggers a cascade of crises that expose buried secrets, fraying loyalties, and the emotional collateral of his lifelong self‑mythologizing. “American Classic” (season 1) becomes a sharp, character‑driven comedy about fame, family, and the chaos unleashed when a man who always needed an audience is finally forced to face the people who know him best. (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…)























