The Unrivaled Basketball League Season 2 tips off this week, featuring Breeze Basketball Club vs. Hive Basketball Club in this exciting 3-on-3 women’s basketball showdown. Oregon High School legend ...
Bella Hadid in "The Beauty," Zach Braff and Donald Faison in “Scrubs” and Grace Van Patten in "Tell Me Lies" (Credit: FX, Disney, Hulu) Though the era of peak television may be behind us, there are ...
Bye bye 2025. Hello to a helluva TV lineup in 2026. Starting a new year can be difficult. All the talk about New Year’s resolutions, starting fresh, or just going back to work after a few weeks of ...
The first month of 2026 includes the latest Harlan Coben adaptation and the return of “Bridgerton.” By Noel Murray Every month, Netflix adds movies and TV shows to its library. Here are our picks for ...
The streaming era has produced its share of pathologies, including bloated running times and narratives padded with filler. The best dramas of 2025, though, are a reminder that television has become ...
Throughout Pluribus‘ first season, I tried to convey why I find this strange sci-fi show so heartbreaking. I thought I had done a thorough job explaining myself. I was wrong. Pluribus‘ fantastic ...
We are allegedly beyond the namesake apex of peak TV, yet the television landscape remains far too vast for anyone to watch it all; there’s only so many hours in a day, let alone free ones. With so ...
Owen Cooper in "Adolescence," Skye P. Marshall in "Matlock" and Noah Wyle in "The Pitt" (Netflix, CBS, HBO) The TV landscape of today may be smaller than a few years ago, but its ability to captivate ...
Was it me or was it the medium? 2025 was not the greatest year for television, for me at least, and I felt myself let down more than once by both shows that I loved and new ones that I thought I would ...
Prime Video is one of those streamers that we're lucky to get one decent option from each month, but in December we're getting one of its best. Season 2 of the post-apocalyptic drama-comedy Fallout is ...
There’s something quietly radical about Pluribus. It doesn’t rush to explain itself, flatten its ideas into slogans, or reassure the audience that there’s a “right” way to feel about what’s happening.
Thanks to the revival of cozy-core aesthetics and a collective craving for soft, familiar joy, the bear trend has jumped across categories from apparel to home decor to giftables. The result? Teddy ...