Clarice Recap: Episode 6 explores hidden traumas
by Emily Maesar, Staff Writer
“You got the gold in manipulation.”
by Emily Maesar, Staff Writer
“You got the gold in manipulation.”
by Rosalie Kicks, Old Sport
“Screw you, Steven King.”
by Audrey Callerstrom, Staff Writer
With an ensemble cast mostly of unknowns, the workplace comedy Superstore, which ended its six-season run on March 25th on NBC, never found a dedicated mass audience.
by Emily Maesar, Staff Writer
“Sometimes remembering old wounds can feel like a warm bath.”
by Ryan Silberstein, Managing Editor, The Red Herring
As a whole, this season emphasizes the nature of relationships within the sport.
by Emily Maesar, Staff Writer
Sneaking away from desk duty!
by Ryan Silberstein, Managing Editor, The Red Herring
With mind-based powers, Wanda’s magic included, that often involves things that are even more morally and ethically tense.
by Emily Maesar, Staff Writer
“Everybody’s got a game, honey.”
by Rosalie Kicks, Old Sport
When will their past lives catch up to their present lives?
by Ryan Silberstein, Managing Editor, The Red Herring
Seeing Wanda’s grief through her own eyes is probably the best justification for this series existing.
by Ian Hrabe, Staff Writer
No matter how well Playing with Power presses on those nostalgic pleasure centers, once you strip away the viewer’s personal attachments its flaws become clear.
by Emily Maesar, Staff Writer
What’s unfortunate, at least for me, is that the show is sticking to its “case-of-the-week” style of storytelling.
by Emily Maesar, Staff Writer
“What do you do with all your rage?”
by Ryan Silberstein, Managing Editor, The Red Herring
To me, the highest compliment I can give WandaVision so far is that it is leaning into the episodic nature of television.
by Rosalie Kicks, Old Sport
First stop? Pop’s.
by Rosalie Kicks, Old Sport
Well, my fellow Riverdale devotees, I hope you brought your tissues for this one ‘cause you are going to need them.
by Rosalie Kicks, Old Sport
When one coffin closes another opens…
by Ryan Silberstein, Managing Editor, The Red Herring
Wandavision...now in color! With its third episode, the show moves along the sitcom timeline into the late 1960s and early 1970s, more Here’s Lucy than I Love Lucy.
by Emily Maesar, Staff Writer
Produced by the Duplass Brothers, The Lady and the Dale is the story of Liz Carmichael and the car that never was.
by Rosalie Kicks, Old Sport
Between VARCHIE (Veronica + Archie) in danger of imploding, the mysterious case of the cryptic VHS tapes and the gang’s Prom, chapter seventy-seven did not disappoint