John Singleton’s new FX series has all the trappings of a prestige drug drama, but can’t find the core of its characters.
Set for an English-language remake, the recently ended Skam was a wildly popular web show about Oslo high-schoolers that resonated for its realism.
The latest winner of RuPaul’s Drag Race is a politically engaged oddball—which is, in its way, pretty traditional.
The mercurial comedian, who plays the disruptive Erlich Bachman, departed the show under mysterious circumstances in Sunday’s season finale.
In its second season, the Ava DuVernay-helmed show confidently tackles the messy bonds of siblings and the trickledown effects of racial profiling.
The Netflix show about a short-lived ’80s wrestling league for women is smart, funny, and subversive.
A new Netflix documentary considers the dangerous ramifications of Bollea v. Gawker for the free press.
The tech giant just hired two industry heavy-hitters as it tries to move into a realm occupied by Netflix and Amazon: scripted television.
Spike’s new series, adapted from a Stephen King novella, is an absorbing supernatural thriller.
Seven hours into David Lynch’s much discussed TV revival, its overarching story is coming into focus.
The Netflix show’s sense of humor has never felt so out of place.
The Hulu show was at its best when it moved beyond the source material, which bodes well for a second season.
SyFy’s new grindhouse drama is a cornucopia of horrors, set in a dystopian world where humans are fuel.
John Mulaney and Nick Kroll’s Broadway revue about two embittered, aging Manhattanites has found an even bigger stage.
The Daily Show correspondent aired his first special ahead of a nightly show coming later this year. But can he stand out in a crowded field?
In its fifth season, the Netflix show digs deep into human nature, and the result is both intriguing and incoherent.
The superhero’s appearance has been shaped from the start by American culture’s ever-changing ideas of female independence and beauty.
The host of CBS’s Late Late Show paid tribute to the stoic nature of the city in the first of three shows filmed in the U.K. capital.
In If You’re Not in the Obit, Eat Breakfast, a new documentary airing on HBO, acclaimed nonagenarians including Carl Reiner and Betty White challenge stereotypes about life after 90.
The show’s co-creator discusses the writing of the third season, its relationship with religion, and the Wizard of Oz.