top of page

New Season, New Series

Summer sadly has come to an end, and while it might be the end of long sunny days and beach weather, it is the start of a new season filled with colorful leaves, cozy sweaters, and brand-new television series.



First came OJ, then came Versace, now comes Bill Clinton. The third installment of FX’s award-winning limited series, American Crime Story, focuses around the impeachment of President Bill Clinton. The story is told through the eyes of three women at the center of the national crisis Monica Lewinsky, played by Beanie Feldstein, Linda Trip, played by Sarah Paulson, and Paula Jones, played by Annaleigh Ashford. The series follows the unraveling of an American Presidency wrapped in sexual politics, aggressive media tactics, and ever prominent power dynamics.



Healthcare, money, and addiction are all dangerously intertwined and inextricably linked. This miniseries based on the nonfiction book Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors and the Drug Company that Addicted America by Beth Macy, examines how one company’s greed fueled the worst drug epidemic in American history. Dopesick provides viewers with an eye-opening look at all sides of the opioid epidemic, from distressed communities, to government agencies, to Purdue Pharma.



A comedy mystery created by Steve Martin? Sign me up! Only Murders in the Building follows three neighbors living on the Upper West Side, played by Steve Martin, Martin Short, and Selena Gomez, who share an obsession with a true crime podcast. After a death occurs in their own luxury apartment building, they decide to start their own podcast to follow the investigation. Talk about some type of manifestation. Lies, clues, and danger all circle this trio as they dive deeper into the mystery.



Asking for help is hard, but what happens when you get the courage to ask for help, but you asked the wrong person and you listened to them for three decades? In this adaptation from the Wondery podcast by the same name, The Shrink Next Door explores the messed-up relationship between a psychiatrist, played by Paul Rudd, and his longtime patient, played by Will Ferrell. This dark miniseries follows these two men as their seemingly normal doctor-patient relationship morphs into a dangerous, corrupt one.



Comments


bottom of page