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Though we set aside our weekly TV recommendations feature to prepare for the Emmy nominations, which were dominated by HBOâs âWatchmenâ at the series level and Netflix overall, thereâs plenty of new material to keep you glued to the screen â even on a hot summer day.
The most high-profile new release is BeyoncĂŠâs Afrocentric visual album âBlack Is Kingâ (Disney+), riffing on everything from Nefertiti to âThe Lion Kingâ â though one imagines Miss Piggy, on a comeback tour with her fellow felt performers in âMuppets Nowâ (Disney+), having something to say about that. And Huluâs catalog now has its own spin on pop music with the British satire âMaxxx,â about an ex-boy bander striking out on his own.
Plus, itâs back to regularly scheduled programming for the Times TV team. Find our usual guide to the five TV shows weâre watching right now below.
The return of two very different unscripted series â âSupermarket Sweep,â now on Netflix, and CNNâs âUnited Shades of Americaâ lead this weekâs TV picks.
The title of Martha Stewartâs latest work of television does not indicate the subject, a gardening show produced under lockdown, though it does hint at the conditions sheâs living in, sheltering in style with housekeeper Elvira, driver Carlos and gardener Ryan in an ad hoc family on her sprawling Westchester County, N.Y., estate. (âSheâs the Bossâ might be an alternate, sitcom-derived title.) I donât know what the ârealâ Martha is like, and, of course, the very rich are (usually) different from you and me; but I suspect â as a fan, I hope â that she is as her Twitter bio says, a âcurious, inquisitive, experimental entrepreneur who cares about the world we live in.â Stewart manages to be both her age and timeless; she projects the capacity to work hard and play easy, an insouciance based on immense capability, practical knowledge, good manners and an attitude of not caring a whit what you make of her: a dame in the high and low sense of the word.
Technically, the show does bear some of the awkward hallmarks of having been produced under lockdown â are Carlos and Elvira running the cameras, while she and Ryan dig and till? â and the jokey title cards are never as amusing as Martha just throwing shade at her ex-husband. But she knows the difference between a shovel and a spade, is unruffled in a hen house, and scores again in this semivoyeuristic TV half-hour that packs in vegetable porn, a remote celebrity visit and calls to ordinary citizens surprised to be taking advice on their raised beds from a domestic goddess. âRobert Lloyd
âBNAâsâ biggest appeal is its stunning visuals â particularly its vibrant palette. Set in a world inhabited by both humans and âbeastmen,â âBNAâ follows the adventures of Michiru Kagemori, a human teenager who has mysteriously become an animal-person (a shape-shifting tanuki). The series opens with Michiru trying to make her way to Anima-City, a metropolitan area created specifically for beastmen, in search of a cure. Itâs clear from the opening moments of the show that there are tensions between humans and beastmen, and over the course of the first season âBNAâ touches on a number of more serious themes including systemic racism, prejudice, eugenics, antimiscegenation, celebrity culture and religion. While animation involving anthropomorphic/humanoid animal characters that attempts to tackle deeper social commentary is not new (see âZootopiaâ and âBeastarsâ), these topics canât be properly addressed by quick, allegorical takes and âBNAâsâ engagement with these issues falls a bit short. That said, âBNAâ features plenty of action and comedy to keep you entertained. âTracy Brown
Netflixâs âIndian Matchmakingâ gestures at, but rarely delves into, the social pressures of the arranged marriage system. Ask someone whoâs been through it.
Lately Iâve been craving shows that help me forget about our uncertain reality â not through wild fantasy or elaborate science fiction but through modest time travel and settings that are unfamiliar to me, if not exactly exotic. Call it modest escapism. âFrayed,â executive produced by Sharon Horgan, hits the mark on both levels. The dramedy opens in London in 1988, when Simone Burbeck (played by Sarah Kendall, who also wrote and created the series), a posh housewife with a Camilla Parker-Bowles haircut, learns that her husband has died of a massive, drug-and-alcohol-fueled heart attack during a bout of extremely kinky sex. Heâs also left their finances in ruin, giving Simone â nĂŠe Sammy Cooper â and her two teenagers no choice but to return to her hometown of Newcastle, Australia, a depressed port city with little in the way of jobs or culture. Back home, Sammy reunites with her estranged family and is forced to reconcile with the past she tried to leave behind decades earlier. While the riches-to-rags story in âFrayedâ may be familiar, the series is elevated by Kendallâs bone-dry performance and the specificity of the characters sheâs created, including Sammyâs dim-witted, âDynastyâ-quoting brother, Jim (Ben Mingay), and her co-worker, Abby (Alexandra Jensen), a Mancunian expat obsessed with World War II. â Meredith Blake
This charming British reality series features a team of furniture restorers with various expertise who help bring beloved family heirlooms back to life. At times, the half-hour series feels like the Calm app of reality TV, with soothing accents and tight camera work detailing the quiet and meticulous process of cleaning, fixing and sprucing up such retired treasures as old Gothic clocks, accordions and piano stools â I never knew how tranquilizing it was to watch car body filler being gingerly applied to a gape along the edge of a ceramic bowl. But what really gives the show the feeling that youâre being cradled in a comforting hug is the sentimental quality the objects possess and the special memories the owners share about them, which in turn create emotional reactions once the revived objects are revealed. â Yvonne Villarreal
âMo to the! E to the!â Oh, how long many have waited to hear the catchy theme song of the formative UPN series. With its whoâs-who of notable guest stars, all six seasons of the coming-of-age sitcom â starring â90s icon Brandy Norwood â were added to the streaming service over the weekend. The only thing that interrupted my binge is the fact that Brandy also dropped her first album in eight years. Attention must be paid. âMoeshaâ is the first of seven classic Black sitcomsâ along with âSister Sister,â âThe Parkers,â âGirlfriends,â âThe Game,â âOne on Oneâ and âHalf & Halfâ â that will debut on the service over the next few months. So even if new shows arenât coming out at the same rate because of the pandemic, we millennials will be plenty content with this jackpot of nostalgia. âAshley Lee
The complete guide to home viewing
Get Screen Gab for everything about the TV shows and streaming movies everyoneâs talking about.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.