This Undersung Show Is Back For Its Final Season
Personal growth isn’t often linear. It usually comes in fits and starts.
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Personal growth isn’t often linear. It usually comes in fits and starts.
Watching the new FX series “Clipped” made me nostalgic for a particular era of the internet. 2014 was a boom time for digital media and the peak of the blogging era. Lots of websites were publishing smart and snarky reporting and writing. Twitter, though not without its faults, was a place where you could actually have some robust convers ations, rather than a pit latrine of conspiracy theories and sponsored content overseen by a manchild.
Growing up, “We Are Lady Parts” creator Nida Manzoor would have jam sessions with her sister, Sanya, and brother, Shez.
Before my interview with Dr. Orna Guralnik, I was a little more nervous than usual. Throughout the four seasons of the Showtime docuseries “Couples Therapy,” Guralnik — or simply Orna, as she is known to the show’s participants — has a commanding and authoritative presence. Each season follows Guralnik, a New York-based psychoanalyst, and several couples over a series of sessions. As the couples, who come from a wide range of backgrounds, work through impasses in their relationships, they uncover wrenching pasts and arrive at deep emotional truths. But for many viewers, the most captivating part of the show is Guralnik’s seemingly unflappable demeanor.
There’s a real go-big-or-go-home energy that crackles throughout the Peacock comedy series “We Are Lady Parts.”
On paper, “Hacks” could have been — excuse the pun — a hacky premise: a generational clash between a boomer comedian and a Gen Z comedy writer forced to work together. Insert some low-hanging jokes about their differences, and call it a day.
For months, we’ve been getting full court press (pun intended) for “Challengers.” Originally slated for a fall 2023 release but delayed when writers and actors went on strike for more equitable working conditions, at long last, we have arrived at what is probably the buzziest movie so far this year.
“What the hell have I done? Killed them all, of course.” Those jaw-dropping and bone-chilling two sentences at the end of HBO’s “The Jinx” gripped viewers in March 2015. It was one of those pop culture moments that if you were watching it, you might still remember where you were at the time.
Writer Rebecca Godfrey is trying to persuade the family of teenager Reena Virk to speak with her for a book she’s working on.