What should I watch next? It’s a question that just keeps getting asked, despite — or maybe because of — how many new television shows are constantly being released. With so many options, shouldn’t it be easy to find something to watch? Sure, you can scroll through Netflix’s home page for hours, but what should
Hannibal
What should I watch next? It’s a question that gets asked over and over again despite all the new television shows coming out, a phenomenon that seems counter intuitive. With so many options, shouldn’t it be easy to find something to watch? Sure, you can scroll through the home page of Netflix for hours, but
Many of us have spent more time with The X-Files‘ Mulder (David Duchovny) and Scully (Gillian Anderson) this year than we have with our flesh-and-blood friends. This is fine. Times are hard! Rewatch those comfort TV shows! But maybe your family, loved ones, roommates, or neighbors with thin walls are getting tired of hearing the X-Files theme.
June is visible off in the distance, so it’s time to start planning out your Netflix queue for the next month. You plan what you’re going to watch a month in advance, right? It’s not just us? Good. Save these titles for when they release, so you have something to look forward to. Highlights among
June is on the horizon, so it’s time to start organizing your Netflix queue. Save these titles for when they release, so you have something to look forward to. Highlights on Netflix this month include the return of The Silence of the Lambs to the streaming service, Spike Lee’s Vietnam heist movie Da 5 Bloods,
You might be tired of hearing the phrase “Peak TV,” but that is absolutely what defined the latest decade for TV audiences. From 2010-2019, TV was stacked with quality series across broadcast, cable, and streaming services. It wasn’t just the highbrow dramas that gave us exceptional, layered character development, either. Comedies made us think while
TV changed more this decade than it had any time since it switched from black and white to color. From who we watched (people from communities that had never gotten the chance to tell their stories on TV before) to how we watched it (on our phones and via streaming platforms), every part of the