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April
RJ Decker (season 1)
9 episodes
“RJ Decker” (season 1) — follows disgraced photojournalist and ex‑con R.J. Decker as he tries to rebuild his life in the chaotic, sun‑bleached underbelly of South Florida, where every case he takes as a newly minted private investigator drags him deeper into a world of corruption, eccentric criminals, and buried grudges that refuse to stay dead. Haunted by the assault conviction that derailed his career and the betrayal that sent him to prison, Decker navigates a landscape where favors come with strings, allies have shifting loyalties, and danger hides behind pastel colors and polite smiles. Each new job forces him to confront just how thin the line is between survival and self‑destruction in a place where everyone is running a hustle. And the deeper he sinks into this ecosystem, the more he realizes that the truth in South Florida is always filtered through someone’s agenda, including his own. With his journalist ex‑wife, her detective wife, and a mysterious benefactor from his past pulling him into increasingly bizarre investigations, Decker finds himself confronting not just the crimes he’s hired to solve but the ghosts of the choices that ruined him. “RJ Decker” (season 1) positions itself as a gritty, off‑kilter crime drama where reinvention collides with consequence, and a man trying to start over discovers that South Florida has a way of dragging every secret back into the light. More …
April
Imperfect Women (season 1)
8 episodes
“Imperfect Women” (season 1) — unfolds as a psychological thriller centered on a decades‑long friendship between Eleanor, Mary, and Nancy, which shatters after a devastating crime exposes the fault lines beneath their carefully curated lives. When Nancy is found dead near a bridge under violent, suspicious circumstances, Eleanor becomes the first to reveal that Nancy had been hiding a year‑long affair, triggering a chain of confessions, betrayals, and shifting loyalties that pull all these women into a tightening web of guilt and suspicion. As the investigation widens, the detectives begin uncovering inconsistencies in each woman’s story, suggesting that the truth has been edited and reshaped over years of buried resentment. And the more each of them tries to control the narrative, the clearer it becomes that their friendship has been held together by secrets rather than trust. As detectives dig deeper, buried secrets surface: Eleanor’s entanglement with Nancy’s husband, Mary’s unraveling marriage to Howard, and the hidden tensions that have shaped their friendship for years. Each episode reframes the same tragedy through a different woman’s perspective, revealing how love, resentment, and moral compromise collide in ways none of them can fully control. “Imperfect Women” (season 1) becomes a slow‑burn, character‑driven mystery where the truth is never clean, and every woman is forced to confront the parts of herself she hoped no one would ever see. More …
April
EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert (2026)
“EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert” (2026) — presents a reconstructed, hyper‑immersive stage experience built from remastered archival footage and isolated vocal tracks of Elvis Presley, weaving them into a narrative‑driven concert that traces his evolution from raw Memphis upstart to global icon. Using newly restored performances projected in lifelike scale and paired with a live orchestra, the production blurs the line between past and present, turning each song into a vignette about fame, reinvention, and the mythmaking machinery that shaped Elvis’s legacy. As the show shifts between eras, the staging folds in subtle thematic motifs that mirror the emotional undercurrents of each performance. And with each transition, the concert reframes familiar moments through a modern cinematic lens, giving Presley’s presence a renewed immediacy. As the show moves through eras — the early Sun Records swagger, the Hollywood sheen, the ’68 comeback fire, the Vegas grandeur — it frames his career as both a triumph of charisma and a meditation on the cost of cultural immortality. “EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert” (2026) becomes a stylized, emotionally charged resurrection of a performer whose voice and presence continue to echo long after the curtain should have fallen. More …
April
Matlock (season 2)
16 episodes
“Matlock” (Season 2) — picks up after the season 1 cliffhanger, as Madeline “Matty” Matlock faces fallout from her covert investigation into the law firm’s ties to the opioid crisis. A man claiming to be the father of her grandson Alfie throws her personal life into chaos, while the team tackles a high-stakes arson case involving two teenage girls. Julian is forced to testify in a federal hearing, revealing cracks in his loyalty to the firm. Matty receives an anonymous tip about a hidden ledger that could expose decades of malpractice. A whistleblower from a rival firm reaches out with encrypted files that could shift the entire case. Meanwhile, Olympia begins working behind the scenes to secure her own future, even if it means betraying Matty. Alfie begins questioning his future in law, leading to a mentorship subplot with Billy. Matty’s strained alliance with Olympia fractures further as secrets about Julian’s role in the Wellbrexa cover-up resurface. As Matty navigates mounting pressure from powerful figures inside the firm, she must decide how far she’s willing to go to protect her family and expose the truth. With emotional stakes rising and courtroom battles intensifying, “Matlock” (Season 2) deepens its legal drama with personal twists and moral dilemmas. More …
April
Happy’s Place (season 2)
18 episodes
“Happy’s Place” (Season 2) — reopens the doors of the Knoxville tavern with fresh chaos, heartfelt revelations, and a long-buried secret that threatens to upend everything Bobbie thought she knew about her family. Bobbie McAllister continues to run Happy’s Place alongside her newly discovered half-sister Isabella, but tensions rise when a mysterious promise made to their late father resurfaces. The season kicks off with romantic sparks between Bobbie and Emmett, the tavern’s head chef, reaching a boiling point — only for Emmett to reject her, citing a secret vow to Happy. As the staff reels from the awkward fallout, Bobbie learns that Emmett’s real promise wasn’t about her, but about keeping Isabella’s existence hidden, a revelation that shakes their fragile trust. Meanwhile, the tavern faces new challenges: a no-nonsense health inspector, a social media campaign led by a local influencer, and a parade of eccentric guests including a free-spirited woman chasing justice and her forgetful husband. Each episode blends workplace comedy with emotional depth, exploring themes of loyalty, identity, and chosen family. Bobbie must remind her crew that family isn’t just who you’re born to — it’s who shows up for you, even in the messiest moments. “Happy’s Place” (Season 2) delivers laughs, romance, and surprises, proving that second chances and found families are worth fighting for. More …
April
Going Dutch (season 2)
12 episodes
“Going Dutch” (Season 2) — follows Colonel Patrick Quinn as he continues serving his “punishment posting” at the Stroopsdorf base in the Netherlands, a place with no tactical purpose but an absurd abundance of comforts — a Michelin‑star commissary, a bowling alley, and even the Army’s only fromagerie. Still determined to impose discipline on a unit of quirky underachievers, Quinn finds himself repeatedly undermined by the base’s former interim commander, his estranged daughter Maggie, whose leadership style clashes with his at every turn. The season expands the ensemble’s chaos with new dynamics, including the arrival of General Martin — a high‑ranking, confident NATO combat general whose presence complicates both Maggie’s ambitions and Quinn’s attempts to maintain authority, especially when unexpected sparks fly between the general and Quinn. With returning characters deepening their comedic rhythms and new guest stars adding fresh friction, Season 2 leans into workplace absurdity, family tension, and the culture‑clash humor of an American unit trying (and failing) to take itself seriously on the most comfortable base in Europe. “Going Dutch” (Season 2) positions itself as a character‑driven military comedy where ego, family, and bureaucracy collide in the least warlike outpost imaginable. More …
April
Animal Control (season 4)
12 episodes
“Animal Control” (Season 4) — follows Frank Shaw and the rest of the Seattle Animal Control team as they face a new year of unpredictable calls, bureaucratic headaches, and personal upheavals that test both their patience and their ability to function as a unit, beginning when a series of unusual animal‑related incidents exposes gaps in the department’s funding and forces them to operate with fewer resources than ever. As Frank attempts to maintain order despite his growing frustration with management, he finds himself reluctantly mentoring new recruits whose enthusiasm clashes with his cynical worldview, while long‑time colleagues navigate shifting responsibilities, workplace rivalries, and the emotional toll of dealing with distressed animals and distressed citizens in equal measure. The season interweaves comedic field calls — from escaped exotic pets to neighborhood disputes spiraling out of control — with the team’s evolving relationships, highlighting how their shared experiences create a dysfunctional but dependable support system. Meanwhile, a citywide initiative to modernize public services threatens to privatize parts of Animal Control, pushing the team to prove their value even as they struggle with internal miscommunications and personal challenges that spill into their work. Themes of resilience, workplace identity, community responsibility, and the quiet dignity of unglamorous public service shape the narrative, while the story builds toward a departmental evaluation that forces Frank and his colleagues to confront what the job means to them and whether they can adapt to a system that seems determined to change without their input. “Animal Control” (Season 4) positions itself as a grounded, character‑driven continuation that blends humor with everyday chaos, reaffirming the team’s messy but heartfelt commitment to the animals — and people — who rely on them. More …
April
Project Hail Mary (2026)
“Project Hail Mary” (2026) — follows Ryland Grace, a middle‑school science teacher who awakens alone on an interstellar spacecraft with no memory of who he is or why he’s drifting light‑years from Earth, only to discover that he is the sole survivor of a desperate mission to stop a mysterious alien microorganism from draining the Sun’s energy and triggering planetary extinction. As fragments of his past return, Grace uncovers the scale of the crisis and the scientific puzzle at its core, forcing him to rely on ingenuity, isolation‑honed resilience, and an unexpected ally whose existence reshapes everything he thought he understood about survival. As the ship’s systems reveal clues he doesn’t remember programming, Grace begins to suspect that the mission was built on sacrifices far greater than he ever agreed to. And with each recovered memory, the line between duty and desperation blurs, pushing him toward choices that could redefine humanity’s place in the cosmos. The film tracks his race against cosmic deadlines as he navigates impossible physics, moral dilemmas, and the crushing weight of being humanity’s last hope. “Project Hail Mary” (2026) becomes an expansive, emotionally charged sci‑fi odyssey about sacrifice, discovery, and the fragile brilliance of connection across the void. More …
April
Wild Rose (season 1)
7 episodes
“Wild Rose” (season 1) — follows Rose, a charming hitman raised inside a family of assassins who operate a nonprofit as a front, whose life fractures when his wife and daughter mysteriously vanish, forcing him to question everything he thought he understood about loyalty, identity, and the organization that shaped him. As Rose takes on a high‑profile assignment protecting superstar singer Somaya, he’s pulled deeper into a maze of family tensions, criminal politics, and buried truths that threaten to expose the rot beneath Civil’s polished façade. As the pressure mounts, Rose begins to sense that every ally carries a hidden agenda, and every gesture of help may be a calculated trap. And the closer he gets to the truth, the more he realizes that the disappearance of his family is tied to forces far more personal — and far more dangerous — than he ever imagined. The season tracks Rose’s increasingly dangerous search for answers — from tense confrontations with his brother Chase to unraveling the motives of powerful figures who may know more than they admit — while Somaya’s own battles with harassment and industry manipulation intertwine with his unraveling world. “Wild Rose” (season 1) becomes a sleek, character‑driven crime thriller about fractured loyalties, hidden agendas, and the cost of discovering that the people you trust most may be the ones who built your cage. More …
April
Invincible (season 4)
8 episodes
“Invincible” (season 4) — picks up with a darker, guilt‑driven Mark Grayson pushing himself past exhaustion as he and Atom Eve run Invincible Inc., trying to repair a world still reeling from Conquest’s near‑apocalyptic assault and the devastation left by the Viltrumites, while Cecil monitors him closely as Mark’s trauma makes him increasingly willing to use lethal force. His controversial killing of Rus — a civilian overtaken by Sequids moments before a non‑lethal solution arrived — becomes the season’s moral fracture line, exposing how unstable Mark has become and how thin the boundary is between heroism and fear. As the Viltrumite War erupts across planets, Nolan’s past, the empire’s collapse from the Scourge Virus, and Thragg’s rise converge into a conflict that drags Mark from Earth into deep‑space battles that threaten humanity’s survival. Meanwhile, the Guardians struggle to rebuild, the Sequids resurface, and Mark’s relationships — with Eve, Oliver, and even Omni‑Man — strain under the weight of cosmic warfare and personal guilt. “Invincible” (season 4) becomes the show’s most brutal, expansive chapter yet, where every choice pushes Mark closer to becoming either the protector Earth needs or the threat it fears. More …























