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Author: Debra Yeo (Page 19 of 29)

There’s a new villain and a new frontrunner on The Bachelorette

Katie Thurston with the survivors of the delayed rose ceremony on “The Bachelorette.”
PHOTO CREDIT: All photos, Craig Sjodin/ABC

It was story time on Monday’s episode of “The Bachelorette.”

One man told stories — fibs really — and got sent home. Other men told unflattering stories about themselves on a group date and gained Katie’s trust. One contestant shared a particularly sad story that brought him and Katie together. And another guy, well, it doesn’t matter what stories he tells. None of the other men believe a word that comes out of his mouth.

As the episode began, we picked up where we left off last week with Karl making up crap about other men not being there for the right reasons, the rest of the guys freaking out at him (Tre: “Is this ‘The Twilight Zone’ we’re in?”) and Katie adding to the commotion by saying she was too rattled to talk to anyone anymore and was going straight to the rose ceremony — which, of course she was because hello, producer manipulation much?

Would Katie call Karl Smith on his nonsense and send him home?

The only question was whether Karl would get to stick around to stir up more shit, which seemed possible given how these things usually roll.

And then Mike, bless his virgin heart, spoke up mid-rose ceremony and told Katie that all the other men thought Karl was lying, which sent Katie to seek the counsel of co-hosts Tayshia Adams and Kaitlyn Bristowe, whose very helpful advice amounted to “never mind the men, do whatever you want.”

It would have been disappointing albeit predictable if Katie, after making her name confronting bullies on Matt James’ season of “The Bachelor,” let Karl stay just to up the drama quotient. Luckily, she dumped him and the motivational speaker skulked out without saying a word to her or even giving an exit interview; at least that’s how it was edited.

Also getting the heave-ho were Kyle (admit it, you’re not even sure who that is) and fan favourite John.

One villain down and then it was group date time. And speaking of villains, there was Nick Viall, former “Bachelorette” villain and “Bachelor in Paradise” hero turned mediocre “Bachelor,” drafted as some sort of group therapy coach as Aaron, Quartney, James, Connor B, David, Justin, Thomas, Hunter and Brendan were made to sit in a circle and fess up to crappy things they’d done in their pasts.

Nick Viall popped up on “The Bachelorette” to help hold the men “accountable.”

Nick didn’t have to lead by example so there was no mention of, say, fornicating and telling by talking about the sex you had with the Bachelorette in the fantasy suite on national TV.

The confessions ranged from anticlimactic (David saying he put his career ahead of love) to kind of heartwrenching.

Hunter tearfully described how his marriage imploded because he was so busy working to make money to give his two kids “everything” that he and his wife drifted apart. And Connor, a.k.a. the Cat, recounted how he became an angry drunk while working as a musician in a piano bar and cheated on his girlfriend one night while he was loaded and high.

Katie even made a confession of her own, about a non-consensual sexual encounter, i.e. an assault, one New Year’s Eve that led to her having an unhealthy relationship with sex for a number of years.

But the revelation that made everyone’s Spidey senses tingle (except maybe Katie’s) was Thomas talking about how he initially came on “The Bachelorette” to build “a great platform” and even went on a date the week before he left for filming given his low expectations of actually finding romance. But now, he insisted to Katie, “the feelings I have for you are real.”

Some of the bloom came off Night 1 standout Thomas on Monday’s episode.

To her credit, Katie later pressed Thomas for details of the “red flags” he had mentioned earlier in the day. He didn’t answer her question, just babbled about their connection and how “every single day I’m here this gets realer and realer.”

Thomas seemed to be fixated on getting the date rose, so much so that he double dipped, interrupting Aaron’s time with Katie — while Aaron was talking about his father’s stroke, no less — to take another at-bat. And it was … very confusing.

“What I feel with you . . . is fear and love are two very, very similar things rooted in the same concept,” Thomas said. “And when I look at you and the things that I feel with you, I feel both of those so strongly at the same time.” Say what now?

Katie claimed to be impressed with Thomas’s passion, but I think she just wanted to kiss him.

The date rose went to Connor instead for showing “strength” and “courage” by telling his drunken cheating story.

Speaking of stories, Michael (not to be confused with Mike) had a very raw and real one to tell Katie on the week’s one-on-one date.

Single dad Michael leaped to front-runner status after Monday’s episode.

First there was off-roading in a dune buggy (which Katie managed to flip without Michael in it) and imbibing bubbly in a field, during which it was clear the two have some real chemistry. But let’s be honest, we’re all falling in love with Michael, especially after he said things like “I always hear this ends in an engagement, but it begins with an engagement” and “My life’s better because of you right now.” Swoon.

The big reveal — for Katie, viewers had already heard the story — came at dinner when Michael told her he was a widower, having lost his beloved wife Laura to breast cancer in January 2019.

“I know what it’s like to love,” Michael said. “I know what it’s like to give everything and I have finally gotten to this place where I’m ready to, like, open up my heart. The way I look at this is what a gift to be able to fall in love twice.”

Rather than feeling intimidated, Katie seemed smitten, telling Michael his love story with Laura was beautiful and would never make her feel insecure.

“My job is to make sure you feel the relationship we create is unique,” Michael reassured her. “I have no doubt we can do that.”

I suspect all over North America viewers were melting into little puddles. Michael and Katie ended the evening stargazing on a rooftop under blankets, sharing kisses.

But lest we get too swept up shipping Katie and Michael, there was more tension between Thomas and the rest of the house the next day.

Aaron declared Thomas a psycho (Aaron does get carried away in his confessionals, saying earlier that Karl should have been “exterminated”).

Hunter asked Thomas point blank if he wanted to be the next Bachelor. Twice Thomas avoided the question before finally saying, “Yes, coming into this one of the thoughts on my mind was potentially being the next Bachelor,” although he insisted he no longer felt that way.

Not that any of the men believed him. And thus, the Thomas drama will continue next week. And apparently interloper Blake Moynes will also make his first appearance.

You can tune in Mondays at 8 p.m. on Citytv. And you can comment here, visit my Facebook page or follow me on Twitter @realityeo

Watchable the week of June 21, 2021

SHOW OF THE WEEK: Epstein’s Shadow: Ghislaine Maxwell (June 25, Crave)

Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein in a poster image used at a news conference by the acting U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York. PHOTO CREDIT: John Minchillo/AP file photo

A Toronto filmmaker, Barbara Shearer, made this three-part docuseries about the woman accused of procuring young victims for notorious sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, and it’s a fascinating and horrifying tale.

Epstein died in 2019, his death ruled a suicide, although there are still some who theorize he was murdered to hide the identities of famous and powerful men who shared his taste for sex with teenagers.

Maxwell is currently in a Brooklyn jail awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges — a far cry from the life of luxury she lived as daughter of notorious U.K. newspaper magnate Robert Maxwell. Her father figures largely in Shearer’s portrait of Ghislaine, a 59-year-old, Oxford-educated, one-time British socialite.

More than one of the former friends and acquaintances interviewed in the series suggests the key to Maxwell’s identity lies in her relationship as a “daddy’s girl” to a demanding, terrifying father and that, when Robert died under mysterious circumstances in 1991, Epstein took his place as a father figure.

The doc also gives credence to that famous quote about the rich being “different from you and me.” In the milieu of enormous wealth and privilege that Maxwell grew up in, rules were for other people, as one interviewee notes. One gets the sense of billionaire Epstein ordering up schoolgirls to defile as casually as a meal or a bottle of Champagne.

But why would Maxwell, who’s accused of acting as a madam for Epstein —procuring girls from places like the New York Academy of Art and Central Park, or Mar-a-Lago when she and Epstein were in Palm Springs — take part in such vile debauchery? Speculation about daddy issues and codependency aside, no one can really say.

Maxwell refused to be interviewed for the series and her case won’t come to trial until November.

When it does, some observers believe Maxwell’s defence will be that she was just another victim of Epstein’s, but that strikes me as an inherently sexist view and also an offensive one. If Maxwell is guilty, surely she exercised some free will in what she did. It’s as hard to picture her as a victim as it was to view Karla Homolka as a victim of her serial killer and rapist husband, Paul Bernardo.

There is another entity painted in a damning light in “Epstein’s Shadow”: a justice system that treats the rich differently than other people. Epstein was given a slap on the wrist in 2008 despite copious evidence of his sexual activity with underage girls uncovered by police in Palm Beach. It wasn’t until 2019 that he was arrested on multiple sex trafficking charges after a Miami Herald investigation embarrassed the FBI into taking action.

Some believe the case against Maxwell will never make it to open court, either because she’ll be killed in jail or because she’ll be given a deal to prevent her giving evidence against public figures who were part of Epstein’s sordid world.

From Earth to Sky (June 21, 9 p.m., TVO/TVO.org)

Douglas Cardinal is one of the Indigenous architects featured in “From Earth to Sky.”
PHOTO CREDIT: Chapman Productions/TVO

On Monday, National Indigenous Peoples Day in Canada, attention will still naturally be focused on atrocities of the past, particularly the 215 children found buried at a former residential school site in Kamloops, B.C, but this documentary film offers a narrative of inspiration and hope without minimizing the pain of what came before.

In 2017, Toronto musician and concert promoter turned filmmaker Ron Chapman met Indigenous North American architects who were preparing an installation for the 2018 Venice Biennale. That lit the spark of “From Earth to Sky,” in which seven of those architects are profiled.

The film begins with Douglas Cardinal, who’s Siksika from the Blackfoot Nation in Calgary and credited as the the first Indigenous architect in Canada, if not North America. Among his buildings are the Canadian Museum of History and the National Museum of the American Indian, part of the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C. Not bad for someone who was told as a student it would be impossible for him to become an architect.

Also included in the doc are the first female Indigenous architect in America, Tammy Eagle Bull of Oglala Lakota Nation in South Dakota; Wanda Dalla Costa of Saddle Lake First Nation in Alberta; Alfred Waugh, who’s Chipweyan from the Fond du Lac Band in Saskatchewan; Brian Porter of the Six Nations of the Grand River in Ontario; Daniel Glenn of the Crow Nation in Montana; and Patrick Stewart of the Nisga’a Nation in British Columbia.

All of them have faced obstacles that white architects wouldn’t have to surmount. Cardinal is a residential school survivor; others have endured the generational trauma of residential schools and other fallout of colonialism. But there is an optimism in their work: a pride in traditions and hopefulness for the future that is expressed in the beauty and purpose of what they create.

Common themes emerge as the subjects discuss their practices: involving the communities the buildings will serve in the planning; incorporating traditional Indigenous designs and values in the construction; respecting the natural environment.

For Cardinal, these are practices that can benefit architecture as a whole, especially in the face of global warming.

“The Indigenous teachings can be the foundation for replanning and redesigning our cities,” he says. “We have the responsibility of set(ting) an example not only to our own nations, ultimately to the world as a whole.”

Short Takes

From left, Donald MacLean Jr., Sandy Sidhu, Jordan Johnson-Hinds, Natasha Calis and Tiera Skovbye
in Season 2 of “Nurses.” PHOTO CREDIT: Courtesy of Corus Entertainment

Nurses (June 21, 9 p.m., Global TV/StackTV)

The conceit of this Canadian drama is that it’s about, yes, nurses, rather than the doctors who are the usual heroes of medical dramas. Let’s not pretend it’s reinventing the wheel; the beats will be familiar to anyone who regularly consumes medical shows as the five lead cast members juggle patient care with personal issues and romantic entanglements. But they’re a generally likeable crew and you get to see familiar Canadian actors guest-starring as patients, including Jean Yoon of “Kim’s Convenience” in the first episode of the new season. A couple of new regulars join the cast, including Rachael Ancheril (“Rookie Blue,” “Killjoys”) as new boss Kate Faulkner and Jordan Connor (“Riverdale”) as nurse Matteo Rey, a potential love interest for Grace (Skovbye).

A teenaged Michelle McNamara as seen in a new special episode of “I’ll Be Gone in the Dark.”
PHOTO CREDIT: Courtesy of HBO

I’ll Be Gone in the Dark (June 21, 10 p.m., HBO/Crave)

This special episode of the popular true crime series is a postscript of sorts. It deals with the 2020 sentencing of Joseph DeAngelo, the Golden State Killer — whose identity writer Michelle McNamara relentlessly chased before her death in 2016 — and the victims finally venting their fury directly to the man whose rapes and murders irreparably altered their lives. That story is woven together with the one that set McNamara on her lifelong true crime obsession: the unsolved murder of Kathleen Lombardo in Oak Park, Ill., in August 1984. But the fact that killing is still unsolved, along with the possibly related stabbing of a neighbour of Kathleen’s who survived, Grace Puccetti, leaves the viewer without a sense of catharsis and makes the whole episode an awkward addition to the original series.

Odds and Ends

Adam Demos and Sarah Shahi in “Sex/Life.” PHOTO CREDIT: Amanda Matlovich/Netflix

I have seen a couple of episodes of the new Netflix drama “Sex/Life” (June 25), but reviews are embargoed so I’m not allowed to tell you what I think of them. It stars Sarah Shahi (“The L Word,” “Person of Interest”) as a wife and mother of two with a seemingly picture perfect life who suddenly starts lusting after her bad boy ex (Adam Demos, “UnREAL”).

Honestly, I think Helen Mirren could make reciting the phone book sound interesting, but I’ll have to reserve judgment on “When Nature Calls With Helen Mirren” (June 24, 8 p.m., Global TV) since I haven’t seen it yet and it looks kind of dumb in the trailer. Mirren narrates the “unscripted comedy,” in which humans give voice to animals.

Also arriving on June 25 is Season 7 of “Bosch” (Amazon Prime Video). Alas, the screeners I requested never materialized, but I recommend it on the strength of the other six seasons and the excellence of Titus Welliver in the title role. Amazon also has “September Mornings” (June 25), a Brazilian drama about a transgender woman whose new life is complicated when she learns she fathered a son in her previous life.

Disney Plus has “The Mysterious Benedict Society” (June 25), based on the kids’ books by Trenton Lee Stewart, about a group of orphaned children recruited for a secret mission inside a boarding school. Tony Hale (“Veep,” “Arrested Development”) stars as Mr. Benedict.

NOTE: The dates and times listed here reflect information provided to me and cross-checked where possible against broadcast and streaming schedules, but it’s always best to check listings for your own area. The selection of programs reviewed reflects what I’m given access to by networks and streamers, whether reviews are embargoed, how many shows I have time to watch and my own personal taste.

Mud gets slung, and wrestled in, on The Bachelorette

Co-hosts Tayshia Adams, Kaitlyn Bristowe and Bachelorette Katie Thurston oversee yet another potentially violent group date on “The Bachelorette.” PHOTO CREDIT: All photos, Craig Sjodin/ABC

Hey y’all, someone’s not here for the right reasons on Katie Thurston’s season of “The Bachelorette.” It might just be the producers.

Monday’s episode was a smorgasbord of the kind of drama that has little to do with Katie actually falling in love with and marrying someone, and everything to do with keeping ratings and social media mentions up.

There was a group date that seemed designed to make the virgin among the contestants as uncomfortable as possible; another group date that paired two men with a beef in a physical confrontation; and the grand finale was a contestant sowing so much doubt in Katie’s mind about whether the other men were there for the right reasons she was left shaking and crying.

Sure, she managed to deepen some connections in between the drama, but the cocktail party turned into a shit show and the rose ceremony was delayed until next episode.

Karl, centre, on the first, sex-themed group date with Justin, left, and Quartney.

At the centre of the brouhaha was Karl Smith, a motivational speaker from Florida. The word on the net is that Karl might be in this thing to gain social media followers and that could be true, but casting doesn’t happen in a vacuum. If Karl is indeed the type of jackass who’d prey on a woman’s insecurities just to get reality TV famous, you think producers didn’t know that going in?

I’ll be honest: I was ready to give Karl the benefit of the doubt after the first bit of tension between him and other men early in the episode, especially given the franchise’s shoddy record with its Black contestants, but by the end, yeah, he just seemed like a jerk.

Next week, we’re promised, the drama continues, with more antagonism between Karl and everyone else in the house, and bad blood between Aaron and Thomas. In the meantime, here’s what was up on Monday.

‘The Greatest Lover of All Time’

Much has been made of the fact that Katie is “sex positive,” so it was inevitable there would be a group date that involved the men talking about sex. It was also inevitable that Mike, the San Diego gym owner who’s saving it for marriage, would be on that date.

Guided by actor, comedian and podcaster Heather McDonald, Christian, Garrett, Tre, Quartney, James, Justin, Thomas, Connor B., Karl and Mike had to answer sex questions — stuff like their favourite sex positions (Mike’s answer was a question mark), a woman’s largest sex organ (nope, not the vagina, the brain) and what piece of clothing increases her chances of having an orgasm (really? socks?).

Tre demonstrated what he’d like to do with Katie using puppets. The safe word was “peaches.”

And then they had to do presentations on what made each of them the greatest lover. It was more about innuendo than raunch, unless you consider hand puppets making out triple X-rated.

When it was Mike’s turn, he read Katie a composition that climaxed with the line “I would wait another 31 years to have sex if it was what proved to you that I would sacrifice everything for you to feel loved and secure.”

Um, yay? Katie bought it, even wiping tears from her eyes, and it won Mike the trophy. But it was Thomas with whom she exchanged steamy smooches at the after-party and who got the date rose. Mike and Connor, who got a redo on his Night 1 kiss, sans cat costume this time, were given honourable mentions.

‘We did make out while he was sitting on a toilet’

First impression rose winner and fan favourite Greg Grippo also got the first one-on-one date, which involved pitching a tent (a real tent, get your mind out of the sex date), turning a bucket into a makeshift toilet, on which Greg sat while he and Katie kissed, and fishing in a river.

Greg and Katie, after they traded a seat on a “toilet” bucket for a log.

The rustic activities — they wore his and hers plaid shirts over hoodies, for gawd’s sake — stirred up lots of emotions in Katie because they reminded her of stuff she used to do with her dad, who died in 2012.

She picked Greg for the meaningful date because “I wanted someone here who I see this going far with,” she said, cementing Greg’s frontrunner status. But a couple of things bothered me. When Katie was struggling to hold back tears as she talked about her father, why didn’t Greg reach out and comfort her? And why did he wait until later at dinner to tell her he’d lost his own father two years before and also had fond memories of them fishing together? Is there some emotional blockage going on or am I reading too much into it?

Once Greg did open up, he couldn’t hold back tears of his own, for which he kept apologizing. But he and Katie ended the evening with fireworks, smooches and mutual admiration.

Katie’s Big Buckle Brawl

This group date started with co-hosts Tayshia Adams and Kaitlyn Bristowe sneaking into the men’s quarters while they were sleeping, waking them up by banging a pot and a cheese grater (?) with spoons and forcing the participants outside in whatever they had on. It appeared no one was sleeping commando.

And then John, Andrew S, Kyle, Josh, Aaron, Brendan, Hunter and Cody had to put on cowboy outfits and then take their shirts off again to mud wrestle each other, so why not just stay in their underwear?

Aaron is declared the winner in his mud-wrestling match with Cody.

The main event was Aaron vs. Cody. We already learned on Night 1 that Aaron had some kind of beef with Cody, whom he knew from San Diego, and obviously the producers knew that too or they would never have been put on the date together.

Their wrestling match was strenuous enough that Katie noticed the tension between them and, after Aaron won the Big Buckle and got to hang out with her alone, she asked him what was up.

It was something about unspecified social media posts, Cody wanting “to become famous” and handling unspecified situations in a “malicious” way, according to Aaron. When Katie confronted Cody and he denied everything Aaron had said, she decided Cody was the one telling fibs and sent him home.

While Katie was off on her own brooding over Cody’s untrustworthiness at the after-party, Andrew made his move and brought her a glass of champagne. And then they bonded over the fact they both grew up poor, sealing their connection with kisses and the date rose. Better luck next time Aaron and Hunter, despite your handwritten letter.

‘I don’t know how tonight could be ruined’

The minute Katie uttered those words you just knew the cocktail party before the rose ceremony was going to hell in a hand basket.

First Karl mused to the other gents seemingly out of the blue that maybe Cody wasn’t the only dude who wasn’t there for the right reasons. Then he told Katie “there are some people who don’t have the best intentions,” but he wouldn’t give her names or examples, and had the nerve to tell her not to “stress about that.” As fucking if.

Of course she stressed. She stressed enough to give the men a teary speech telling them “if you are not here for me, if you are not here for an engagement, then get the fuck out.”

“I don’t know who is here for the wrong reasons, but from what I’ve been told there are multiple people I should be looking out for,” she added.

She even pulled Aaron aside, thinking that after he threw Cody under the bus he could out the other rats, but he was flummoxed. In the meantime, Karl confessed to the other men that he was the one who had sent Katie into a tailspin. “I heard some stuff circulating around,” he said vaguely. “I don’t know specifics 100 per cent.”

Perhaps that’s because there are no “specifics”? As far as I can tell he flat out lied when he claimed he only brought it up because Kate asked him about it first.

Things ended with the rest of the men rightfully pissed off and Katie in a room by herself crying. And we’ll have to wait till next week to see how it’s resolved and who’s getting roses.

You can tune in Mondays at 8 p.m. on Citytv. And you can comment here, visit my Facebook page or follow me on Twitter @realityeo

Watchable the week of June 14, 2021

SHOW OF THE WEEK (Kevin Can F**k Himself, June 20, 9 p.m., AMC)

From left, Brian Howe, Annie Murphy, Alex Bonifer, Eric Petersen and Mary Hollis Inboden
in “Kevin Can F**k Himself.” PHOTO CREDIT: Jojo Whilden/AMC

Toxic masculinity can come with a laugh track and a punch line.

That’s one of the takeaways from “Kevin Can F**k Himself,” an inventive new dramedy starring Annie Murphy in her first post-“Schitt’s Creek” role.

Murphy is Allison McRoberts, sitcom wife. She’s married to Kevin (Eric Petersen, “Kirstie”), a man child who’s more interested in beer and sports memorabilia than in anything his wife has to say.

In the parts of the series shot in brightly lit, multi-camera sitcom style, Allison is the butt of the jokes, trying unsuccessfully to rein in Kevin’s juvenile behaviour — which is abetted by his dim bulb best friend Neil (Alex Bonifer), his father Pete (Brian Howe) and Neil’s sister Patty (Mary Hollis Inboden) — while keeping the fresh beers and the scrambled eggs and hot dogs coming.

When the show switches into single camera mode we see the cost of Kevin’s selfishness. After 10 years of marriage, Allison feels like she has nothing to show for her life and that everything that was hers has been systematically taken away by Kevin, revealing an insidiousness to his pranks and his punch-line putdowns.

But Allison isn’t just mad; she plans to get her life back, hatching a deadly serious scheme of her own.

When Allison isn’t being minimized by Kevin’s buffoonery she comes across as intelligent and resourceful, which makes you wonder what she saw in Kevin all those years ago.

And in playing the role, Murphy, who gained fame as the ditzy Alexis on “Schitt’s Creek,” proves she’s not a one-trick pony.

Just as interesting as Allison’s journey from resignation to revenge is neighbour Patty’s transformation. She starts out being one of the boys, scoffing at Allison right along with them while denying the disappointment of her own dead-end life. By the end of the fourth episode, the only ones provided to critics for review, she’s become Allison’s friend and co-conspirator.

I’m curious to see, in the final four instalments, just how far Allison and Patty will go, and also how audiences will react given the show’s very unflattering portrait of male entitlement.

On the other hand, after a decade or two of Don Drapers and Tony Sopranos and Walter Whites, why shouldn’t we cheer when a woman gets mad as hell and decides she’s not going to take it anymore?

Penguin Town (June 16, Netflix)

A pair of African penguins on the hunt for a nesting site
in Simon’s Town, South Africa, in “Penguin Town.” PHOTO CREDIT: Netflix

We’re all used to earnest nature documentaries that seek to inspire our empathy by showing us the majesty of the animals that share our planet. Those are worthy programs, but there’s something to be said for treating members of one of the most beloved of bird species like reality TV stars.

“Penguin Town” anthropomorphizes the heck out of a particular group of African penguins spending their summer (our winter) in Simon’s Town, South Africa, but that doesn’t distract from the knowledge that these creatures are endangered. Arguably, the viewer’s sympathies are even more engaged by the series’ focus on specific birds, who are given names and storylines.

Narrator Patton Oswalt tells us that these penguins, also known as jackass penguins for their distinctive braying cry, arrive in Simon’s Town every November to mate and have babies: activities that are essential given that “if they get it wrong they face extinction.”

The birds are inherently comical as they waddle around town in their tuxedo-like plumage. The comedy is enhanced by the narration as we follow several couples, the middle-aged Bougainvilleas, the newlywed Culverts and “aristocrats” Lord and Lady Courtyard (named after the spots where they make their nests); a misfit named Junior and a group of disaffected singles called the Car Park Gang.

But there’s also tragedy to be found: a mother penguin who disappears while out catching fish for her chicks, possibly eaten by a Cape fur seal, or eggs that are swept away by the rushing waters of a storm.

The dangers are many, the quest to survive and reproduce daunting — Oswalt tells us one of every three chicks born here won’t live to adulthood — but that just makes the successes feel all the more important.

And the birds have some help from the “giants,” as humans are dubbed in “Penguin Town,” thanks to the work of SANCCOB, the Southern African Foundation for the Conservation of Coastal Birds. If you’d like to help too you can adopt a penguin here.

Netflix also has Season 2 of zombie apocalypse drama “Black Summer” (June 17) and Season 4 of Spanish teen drama “Elite” (June 18).

Catching Up

From left, Rebecca Benson, Anna Paquin and Lydia Wilson in “Flack” Season 2.
PHOTO CREDIT: Courtesy of Amazon Studios

I wasn’t allowed to share a review of “Flack” (Amazon Prime Video) last week because of an embargo, but I can tell you that I like this second season better than the first, which I found overly cynical despite the hits of humour. The female PR fixers that we met in Season 1 are still doing deals for monstrous celebrity clients and Robyn (Anna Paquin) is still spinning dangerously out of control in her personal life, but in Season 2 we learn something about the women’s backgrounds, which makes them more relatable. Sam Neill guest stars as the ex-husband of imperious boss Caroline (Sophie Okonedo) and Martha Plimpton as Robyn’s suicidal mother. We also meet the mother of Eve (Lydia Wilson) and the parents of Melody (Rebecca Benson). The professional world these women inhabit is still a sordid one, but now I see them more as canny survivors than as predators.

You can read my interview with Paquin and her husband Stephen Moyer, who directed two episodes of “Flack,” here.

Another show I couldn’t talk about was “Loki,” now on Disney Plus. Tom Hiddleston is reliably entertaining as the arrogant God of Mischief, and he and Owen Wilson, playing a civil servant at the Time Variance Authority, mesh well when they’re onscreen together. After the events of “Avengers: Endgame,” Loki gets scooped up by the TVA and is about to be sentenced for crimes against the “sacred timeline” when Wilson’s Mobius convinces the powers that be to lend him Loki for a mission. Variants of the god are wreaking havoc on the timeline and Mobius wants Loki to help him stop them. Naturally, with Loki involved, things don’t go quite as planned. The series will probably appeal most to viewers who are up on their Marvel lore.

Short Takes

Colin Sutton was a detective chief inspector with London’s Metropolitan Police. PHOTO CREDIT: Acorn

The Real Manhunter (June 14, Acorn TV)

I quite enjoyed the Acorn drama “Manhunt,” in which Martin Clunes played a fictional version of Colin Sutton, the real-life detective who solved a 2004 murder in London’s Twickenham neighbourhood and caught a serial killer in the process. If you liked how that miniseries showed the methodical way that Sutton and his team cracked the crime, there’s a good chance you’ll enjoy this companion series about Sutton and eight of his cases. The murder of Amelie Delagrange in Twickenham Green is covered in the second episode. The first — and the longest at almost two hours — details perhaps Sutton’s most famous case, the capture of a serial burglar and rapist known as the Night Stalker who terrorized senior citizens in Southeast London between 1992 and 2009.

Odds and Ends

“Rick and Morty” are back for Season 5. PHOTO CREDIT: Corus Entertainment

Adult Swim has Season 5 of animated comedy “Rick and Morty” (June 20, 11 p.m.) with sociopathic Rick (series co-creator Justin Roiland) dragging grandson Morty (also voiced by Roiland) and the rest of his family along on dangerous intergalactic adventures.

Family Channel has the new competition series “Baketopia” (June 14, 7:30 p.m.), hosted by YouTube star Rosanna Pansino, in which the competitors are tasked with creating Instagram-worthy desserts.

It’s finale time for Season 4 of “The Handmaid’s Tale” (June 16, Crave) and since past season finales have traditionally brought big, cliffhanger twists it’s anybody’s guess what this season ender will bring.

NOTE: The dates and times listed here reflect information provided to me and cross-checked where possible against broadcast and streaming schedules, but it’s always best to check listings for your own area. The selection of programs reviewed reflects what I’m given access to by networks and streamers, whether reviews are embargoed, how many shows I have time to watch and my own personal taste.

Meet the new Bachelorette, same as the old Bachelorette

Katie Thurston and some of the dudes who endured quarantine to hang out
with her on “The Bachelorette,” PHOTO CREDIT: All photos, Craig Sjodin/ABC

So here we are again. After a disastrous season of “The Bachelor” that left a bad taste in plenty of mouths, sparked accusations of racism within the franchise and led to the departure of host Chris Harrison, a new season of “The Bachelorette” began Monday and it seems . . . exactly the same as every other season that came before it.

The star in what will be the first of two “Bachelorette” seasons to air this year is Katie Thurston, a 30-year-old marketing manager who became a fan favourite among Matt James’ group of contestants after she sparred with the bully-in-chief and tattled on a couple of the mean girls, but then got friend-zoned by Matt.

On her debut as the one handing out the roses, we had the same unwieldy group of some 30 men, same script about journeys, finding love and so on, same promises of conflict tinged with potential violence, same dumb shit-stirring production manipulations: I mean, hello, Blake Moynes from Clare’s and Tayshia’s combined season is coming back as a late contestant?

Roughly a third of the 23 fellows left standing Monday night were men of colour, but that doesn’t necessarily mean anything if they’re only there to give the franchise a sheen of diversity, as we’ve seen in past seasons.

Co-hosts Tayshia Adams, left, and Kaitlyn Bristowe greet Katie before the limos started pulling up.

The only real change was Harrison’s absence and I can’t say it was to the show’s detriment. The presence of past Bachelorettes Kaitlyn Bristowe and Tayshia Adams as co-hosts injected some positive go-girl energy into the proceedings. I mean, can you imagine Harrison munching on popcorn as he watched the limos pull up and shouting encouragement to Katie from a window as she met the men?

So yes, the men. There were 29 of them to start by my count, well, 28 and one half man, half cat.

Katie bonds with Connor B, a math teacher who showed up dressed as a cat.

Connor B, a math teacher and musician from Nashville, separated himself from the pack by showing up dressed as Katie’s favourite animal, although she left her beloved cat Tommy at home during filming. Connor was one of several men who got first-night smooches from Katie, although personally I thought Connor’s kisses looked a bit like my cat attacking a bowl of canned food. Still, he seems nice enough.

Businessman Michael from Ohio also tried to bond over beasts with Katie, in his case a dog named Tommy, although his real love is his 4-year-old son.

There were a few other sweethearts in the bunch, at least based on first impressions.

Thomas, a real estate broker from San Diego County, said he “felt like a third grader trying to talk to a cute girl for the first time” and made Katie blush with his compliments, although he also seems to feature in some of the drama to come.

Tre, a software engineer from Georgia, showed up in a pickup truck with a ball pit in the bed (because Katie’s “a pretty baller Bachelorette”) and they had fun later sitting in the balls sipping drinks.

Katie had chemistry with Justin, an investment sales consultant from Baltimore who painted her a picture of roses and leaned in for the first kiss.

And I got just a touch of Duke of Hastings from “Bridgerton” vibes when Andrew S, a charming pro football player from Chicago by way of Vienna, spoke with a fake British accent.

I also have to put in a word for the Canadian in the bunch, firefighter trainee Brendan from my hometown of Toronto. Just ask Astrid Loch, who’s expecting a baby with fiancé Kevin Wendt, what she thinks of firefighters from Toronto.

Katie pins the first impression rose on early fan favourite Greg.

But my hands down favourite — me and the rest of Bachelor nation — was Greg, the marketing sales rep from New Jersey who won over Katie with his nervous sincerity and a necklace made of pasta by his 3-year-old niece. I mean, come on, the end-of-episode promo showed he and Katie kissing in the rain. I have no idea if Greg makes it to the end (no spoilers please!), but him getting the first impression rose was a given.

Who’s not so great?

There was some weird unexplained beef between Aaron, an insurance agent from San Diego, and Cody, a “zipper sales manager” also from San Diego. Seemingly out of the blue, Aaron told Cody, “I don’t like you, bro. Like, I’ve never liked you.” I can only assume they have some history back home.

Otherwise, no villains emerged on Night 1. There wasn’t even any double dipping on Katie’s time and the snarkery was mild at best, a few digs at Connor’s cat costume and at James, the software salesman from La Jolla, Calif., who spent most of the night in a giant wrapped box so he could be “present” for Katie.

Personally, I was waiting for someone to show up with a vibrator, hearkening back to Katie’s entrance on Matt James’ “Bachelor” season. Cody brought a blow-up doll named Sandy and Miami motivational speaker Karl depicted Katie as a vibrator-wielding princess in the poster he drew for her, but that was it for sex toys.

There were also a couple of random pairs of gitch. Florida technical recruiter Kyle pulled some tighty whities out of his pants and surgical skin salesman Jeff, who drove his motorhome (a.k.a. “Breaking Bad” RV) from New Jersey, apparently left his boxer shorts lying around before inviting Katie in for a tour. Um, yeah, way to keep it classy.

Oh right and there’s a virgin, gym owner Mike, also from San Diego, because we all know how well having virgins on the show has worked out before. Plus, yeah, what a great choice for a Bachelorette who describes herself as “sex positive.”

When all was said and done Katie handed out roses to a few serious contenders and a bunch of group date fodder.

As for what’s ahead, same old it looks like. The promos showed verbal sparring, men knocking each other around on group date challenges, the obligatory call for the medics, men getting naked or nearly so, lots of tears, hints of betrayal, an angry Katie telling guys to “get the fuck out” if they’re not there for her, Katie herself threatening to go home. So all the usual nonsense, but we’re still watching, aren’t we?

You can tune in Mondays at 8 p.m. on Citytv. And you can comment here, visit my Facebook page or follow me on Twitter @realityeo

Edited because I said that Michael had a 4-year-old daughter rather than a son. Duh.

Watchable the week of June 7, 2021

SHOW OF THE WEEK: We Are Lady Parts (June 9, 9 p.m., Showcase/StackTV)

Lucie Shorthouse as Momtaz, Juliette Motamed as Ayesha, Anjana Vasan as Amina, Faith Omole as Bisma, Sarah Kameela Impey as Saira in “We Are Lady Parts.” PHOTO CREDIT: Saima Khalid/Peacock)

There are plenty of reasons to watch “We Are Lady Parts,” among them its feminist underpinnings and the fact it treats its Muslim protagonists as individuals rather than stereotypes, but the most persuasive reason I can give is that it’s so much fun.

It’s also smart, witty and coherent with characters that are written like real human beings instead of caricatures, and plotting that feels rewarding even when we can see where it’s going. 

And then there’s the music that the all-female band of the title plays, an assemblage of searing punk songs that series creator Nida Manzoor wrote with her siblings.

Our way into the story is through its narrator, Amina (Anjana Vasan), a PhD student in microbiology living in London’s Whitechapel district, whose main concern is to find a husband — contrary to the advice of her parents, who don’t understand her hurry. (Mom Seema suggests she look for a spouse who can fulfil her “feminine requirements, wink, wink, nudge, nudge.”)

It’s Amina’s man myopia that brings her into the orbit of Lady Parts when she swoons over the drummer’s brother, Ahsan (Zaqi Ismail), and his “lustrous facial hair indicating virility while maintaining boy-next-door adorableness with eyebrows you could hang onto” as he hands out flyers for a band audition.

The fact that accomplished guitarist Amina refuses to play in public, since it induces vomiting or diarrhea, is no obstacle for bull-headed lead singer Saira (Sarah Kameela Impey), who’s determined to bring Amina into the fold — over the objections of drummer Ayesha (Juliette Motamed), bassist Bisma (Faith Omole) and manager Momtaz (Lucie Shorthouse).

Amina’s own objections go beyond rogue bodily functions to the fact playing in a band could interfere with her matrimonial quest, particularly one whose songs have names like “Ain’t No One Gonna Honour Kill My Sister But Me” and “Voldemort Under My Head Scarf.”

But I don’t think it’s a spoiler to say a girl’s gotta rock, and Amina and Lady Parts do so to thrilling effect. 

(As an aside, the women singing along to the Proclaimers’ “I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles)” in Ayesha’s VW Golf is the best rocking-out-in-a-car scene since “Wayne’s World” and “Bohemian Rhapsody.”)

The members of Lady Parts play loud music and swear and make dick jokes; they also pray and, except for Saira, wear head scarves. And you’ve never seen a woman on TV in a niqab like the constantly vaping, joint-smoking Momtaz, who sells women’s undies when she’s not trying to get Lady Parts gigs.

Saira, meanwhile, who works in a butcher shop, is estranged from her family and in a casual relationship with her boyfriend; Bisma is an aspiring cartoonist (her series is about women who get homicidal on their periods) who’s happily married with a daughter; and perpetually angry Uber driver Ayesha is still exploring her sexuality.

The point is that there’s more than one way to be a Muslim woman, or just a woman for that matter.

Saira says Lady Parts’ music isn’t about getting famous but about “representation.” The series has that in spades, but it’s also just really good television that’s worth your time.

Short Takes

Joel Jackson as Detective James Steed and Geraldine Hakewill as Peregrine Fisher in “Ms Fisher’s Modern Murder Mysteries.” PHOTO CREDIT: Jackson Finter/AcornTV

Ms Fisher’s Modern Murder Mysteries (June 7, Acorn)

I was initially skeptical of this Australian spinoff because of my devotion to the original “Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries” about an unconventional female private detective in 1920s Melbourne; I couldn’t imagine anything else comparing. Luckily, I discovered that “Ms. Fisher” is its own delightful thing, with free spirit Peregrine Fisher (Geraldine Hakewill), niece of Phryne, solving her own cases with her own band of endearing sidekicks, her own policeman love interest and oodles of 1960s fashions to ogle. In Season 2, Peregrine tackles new murder investigations while navigating modern womanhood in a patriarchal society and her feelings for Detective James Steed (Joel Jackson).

Toronto’s Afrim Pristine is the host of “Cheese: A Love Story.” PHOTO CREDIT: Corus Entertainment

Cheese: A Love Story (June 9, 8 p.m., Food Network Canada/StackTV)

This Corus original docuseries falls into the category of shows you should never watch on an empty stomach. In it, Afrim Pristine, owner of Toronto’s Cheese Boutique and the world’s youngest maitre fromager, travels Canada and the world, learning about and sampling various cheeses. He starts with Switzerland, where he delves into the making of Gruyere, raclette and Emmental, and samples the dishes at a couple of Michelin-starred restaurants. The cheese made with coal might not get your mouth watering, but I’ll wager you’ll be searching your cupboards for your old fondue pot. Future episodes include visits to France, Greece, Toronto, Quebec and British Columbia. 

Marine Vacth as Louise in “Moloch.” PHOTO CREDIT: Guillaume Van Laethem/Sundance Now

Moloch (June 10, Sundance Now)

Set in an unnamed seaside town in France, this thriller is a blend of crime, psychological and horror drama. Citizens start spontaneously combusting, flummoxing the police and intriguing newbie journalist Louise (Marine Vacth), who gets drawn into the story in dangerous ways. Also in the mix are psychiatrist Gabriel (Olivier Gourmet) and two of his patients: Jimmy (Marc Zinga), a deeply religious bus driver, and Stella (Alice Verset), a young girl whose life is severely circumscribed by an incurable skin disease. Moloch is the name of an ancient deity that’s found written wherever a death has occurred, so that’s your warning that you’ll have to suspend your disbelief at the series’ conclusion.

Odds and Ends

Anna Paquin as Robyn in Season 2 of “Flack.” PHOTO CREDIT: Amazon Studios

“Flack,” Amazon’s drama about women behaving badly in the public relations industry, returns on June 11. Reviews are embargoed, but I can tell you Anna Paquin is back as Robyn, the fixer extraordinaire whose personal life is a disaster, alongside quip machine Eve (Lydia Wilson), sweetly ambitious Melody (Rebecca Benson) and icy boss Caroline (Sophie Okonedo). Guest stars this season include Sam Neill, Daniel Dae Kim, Martha Plimpton and Jane Horrocks (Bubble on “Absolutely Fabulous”). Paquin’s husband, Stephen Moyer (“True Blood”), directed two episodes.

The latest Marvel Cinematic Universe TV series debuts with “Loki” on Disney Plus (June 9). Tom Hiddleston leads a cast that includes Owen Wilson, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Sophia Di Martino, Wunmi Mosaku and Richard E. Grant. The series is set after the events of “Avengers: Endgame” and, yes, reviews are embargoed.

Netflix has the second part of the hit French drama “Lupin” (June 11), with Omar Sy as master criminal Assane Diop, who’s modelled himself after literary gentleman thief Arsene Lupin. Since Season 1 ended with both Assane and his son Raoul (Etan Simon) in peril, fans will no doubt welcome the show back, although I’m sure Assane will find a way out of both predicaments.

How time flies. “The Bachelorette” returns June 7 at 8 p.m. on Citytv (and ABC), the first of two seasons this year, this one starring Katie Thurston (with Michelle Young’s to air in the fall). Will the producers have learned anything after the recent disastrous season of “The Bachelor”? I wouldn’t bet on it.

If you’d like to brush up on your history of the American gay rights movement during Pride Month, check out “Equal” on Hollywood Suite (June 7, 9 p.m.), which profiles unsung heroes of the movement using a combination of archival interviews and re-enactments starring Cheyenne Jackson, Anthony Rapp, Shannon Purser, Samira Wiley and other mostly gay or bisexual actors. Billy Porter of “Pose” narrates.

Watchable the week of May 31, 2021

SHOW OF THE WEEK: Sweet Tooth (June 4, Netflix)

Christian Convery as Gus in “Sweet Tooth.” PHOTO CREDIT: Kirsty Griffin/Netflix

Up until I watched “Sweet Tooth” I wouldn’t have thought a dystopian drama could be heartwarming, but this series based on the Jeff Lemire comic books is one of the most moving shows I’ve seen.

It’s not that there isn’t darkness here; the story is, after all, set 10 years after a virus has laid waste to the world as we know it, so there’s death and fear, cruelty and ignorance, but also goodness and innocence and, yes, sweetness and hope.

Most of that is down to the title character, a boy named Gus who’s part human and part deer, nicknamed Sweet Tooth for his love of candy. And he’s not the only hybrid, the term for children who began to be born with the physical features of animals at the same time the virus emerged. But Gus was raised in isolation so, when he finally emerges into what’s left of the world, he’s a naif: able to fend for himself in a practical sense but with no real idea of just how dangerous humans can be.

His protector and his teacher in that regard, reluctantly so, is a jaded ex-football player named Tommy Jepperd (Nonso Anozie) who has just enough humanity left in him not to turn his back on Gus.

There are others who seek to protect the hybrids, including an orphaned young woman who calls herself Bear (Stefania LaVie Owen) and Aimee (Dania Ramirez), a former therapist who has set up a sanctuary for hybrids at an abandoned zoo. But they’re up against a paramilitary force known as the Last Men who are intent on wiping out the hybrids, whom some blame for causing the virus.

The other key character is Dr. Singh (Adeel Akhtar), whose only concern is keeping his sick wife alive and her condition hidden from nosy and potentially murderous neighbours.

These character strands are pursued separately at first, but it’s obvious they’ll eventually be pulled into Gus’s orbit, which is a good thing. The series is at its best whenever Gus is onscreen. He is truly the heart of the story, and the casting gods were smiling on the production team (which includes actor Robert Downey Jr. and his wife Susan as executive producers, and Jim Mickle as showrunner and director) when they found Christian Convery to play him.

The young Canadian actor perfectly embodies Gus’s guileless innocence and his persistent faith that things will work out, even when everything around him suggests otherwise.

On the face of it, a postapocalyptic drama might not seem like the optimal entertainment for a pandemic-weary world, but “Sweet Tooth” reminds us of the human capacity for good even at the worst of times.

Netflix also has Season 2 of “Feel Good,” debuting May 28, the dramedy in which Canadian comedian Mae Martin plays a fictionalized version of herself. As the season begins, Mae returns to Canada and to rehab, leaving George (Charlotte Ritchie) behind in London.

Tulsa: The Fire and the Forgotten (May 31, 9 p.m., PBS)

Forensic archeologists excavate a suspected mass grave at Tulsa’s Oaklawn Cemetery in October 2020 in “Tulsa: The Fire and the Forgotten.” PHOTO CREDIT: Courtesy Jonathan Silvers/Saybrook Productions

Monday is Memorial Day in the U.S., which honours that country’s military. It’s also the 100th anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre, a confluence that lends a certain irony given that members of the National Guard were reportedly present when a white mob razed a Black neighbourhood in Tulsa, Oklahoma, from May 31 to June 1, 1921, murdering as many as 300 Black citizens, leaving thousands more homeless.

If you don’t know anything about the massacre, you’re not alone. This doc makes the point that even some Tulsa residents didn’t know about it until fairly recently. I personally had never heard of it before viewing the 2019 fantasy series “Watchmen.” 

But this film, directed by Jonathan Silvers and produced by Washington Post reporter DeNeen L. Brown, both recounts the history of the atrocity and draws a line from it to ongoing anti-Black racism, not just physical violence but mental, emotional and economic oppression of Black communities.

At the time, Tulsa’s Greenwood area was a thriving neighbourhood, known as the Black Wall Street for its wealth. In just 16 hours more than 35 square blocks were destroyed, a tragedy that was blamed on its victims. 

It began after a young Black man was falsely accused of assaulting a white woman in an elevator and other Black men went to the city’s jail, some with guns, to protect him from being lynched by the crowd of white men that had gathered. After a melee broke out and the Black men fled back to Greenwood, the attack began. 

The white mob was unimpeded by the city’s police, some of them even deputized by the force. None of those men, some of whom can be seen proudly posing in photographs, were ever held accountable.

And the story of what’s called one of the worst incidents of racial violence in U.S. history is still being written: the legal fight for reparations to survivors and descendants of victims is ongoing; and this summer, bodies that might belong to massacre victims will be exhumed from a mass grave in a city cemetery. 

Girls5eva (June 3, 9 p.m., W Network)

Paula Pell, Sara Bareilles, Renée Elise Goldsberry and Busy Philipps in “Girls5eva.”
PHOTO CREDIT: Heidi Gutman/Peacock)

Think of “Girls5eva” as the TV equivalent of a pop song: fun, a little frothy and catchy enough to get stuck in your head.

The latest from executive producers Tina Fey and Robert Carlock (“30 Rock”), created by Meredith Scardino, a writer on Fey’s and Carlock’s “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt,” “Girls5eva” lampoons 1990s and early 2000s girl groups, and the sexism and commercialism surrounding them. 

The group of the title is sort of a New York version of the Spice Girls . . . if the Spice Girls faded into obscurity after one hit.

When hip-hop star Lil Stinker (Jeremiah Craft) samples that hit, “Famous 5eva” (cuz 4eva’s too short), the four surviving “girls” get booked to back Stinker on “The Tonight Show,” leading to dreams of renewed stardom.

Easier said than done, of course, for a group of 40somethings in an industry in which, as their sleazy former manager Larry (Jonathan Hadary) says, “For ladies, 35 is checkout time. That’s a quote from our greatest president.” (The point is made in an even  funnier way by legendary producer Alf Musik, played by Stephen Colbert, who writes Girls5Eva a song called “Invisible Woman.”)

But “chill one” Dawn (Sara Bareilles), “hot one” Summer (Busy Philipps), “fierce one” Wickie (Renee Elise Goldsberry) and gay one Gloria (Paula Pell) persevere through others’ indifference and their own self-doubt, learning to write their own songs (with the help of a fantasy Dolly Parton, played by Fey) and to think outside the boxes they were put in by the music biz.

The first season culminates in a snatched moment of glory that is preposterous, predictable and emotionally satisfying all at once.

It took me a few episodes to warm up to “Girls5eva” but, once I did, I was fully invested in the group making good, even narcissistic Wickie (Goldsberry), who gets the best lines.

Speaking of lines, the jokes fly by fast so best pay attention. Same goes for the clever lyrics of the songs, written mainly by Scardino and composer Jeff Richmond, with real life singer/songwriter Bareilles pitching in on a couple of them. (My favourite, though it’s not a Girls5eva tune, is “New York Lonely Boy,” which pokes fun at Gen X parents and their fedora-wearing, sushi-eating only children: “The Strand is his Disneyland.”)

“Girls5eva” isn’t particularly deep or envelope-pushing but, like an earworm, it doesn’t have to be to grab your attention.

Short Takes

Mary Galloway and Kaitlyn Yott as Abe and Daka in “Querencia.” PHOTO CREDIT: APTN lumi

Querencia (June 1, 11 p.m., APTN lumi)

This is the first original series for APTN lumi, the streaming service of the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network. It’s about the relationship between two Indigenous queer women, winningly played by series creator and director Mary Galloway and Kaitlyn Yott. Daka (Yott) has come to Vancouver to try her luck as a dancer, despite her misgivings and those of her family. Abe (Galloway), a musician, has been on her own for a while and, unlike Yott, is out of touch with her Indigenous traditions. A misunderstanding on the part of Daka’s new roommate brings them together, even though Daka has previously identified as straight, and a spark is struck. The series, a clear-eyed and compassionate look at two young women growing into the people they want to be, will be part of the Inside Out Festival, screening virtually beginning June 2 at noon. There will also be a premiere event June 1 hosted by imagineNATIVE with musical performances and a Q&A.

Ballerina Boys (June 4, 9 p.m., PBS)

Josh Thake, left, and Duane Gosa perform with Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo.
PHOTO CREDIT: Laura Nespola/Courtesy of Merrywidow Films LLC

Anything that brings together the art forms of ballet and drag seems like a good thing to me, which would seem to be proven by the fact Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo has been in existence for some 47 years. This documentary, a Pride Month offering from PBS’s “American Masters,” makes it clear that behind the comedic aspect of men in tutus with faux Russian names there is serious discipline and respect for ballet tradition. Started in New York in the years following the Stonewall riots as “kind of a lark,” in the words of co-founder Peter Anastos, the Trocks grew into a genuine ballet company, one that tours all over the world when it’s not locked down. Despite early disapproval by what Anastos calls “the muckety muck dance establishment,” the company persevered, quite a feat in the ’90s when it lost half its dancers to AIDS. It brings ballet to audiences who wouldn’t know a plie from a pirouette, and to places that aren’t exactly gay-friendly. And it’s clear the dancers love what they do, despite the pain of pointe shoes; they talk in the doc about how performing in drag makes them feel like themselves. The film ends fittingly with a 2019 performance in Central Park of George Balanchine’s “Stars and Stripes” commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall riots.

Odds and Ends

I didn’t get an advance look at “Lisey’s Story” (June 4), the Apple TV Plus series that Stephen King adapted from his own novel, although reviews I’ve read suggest that’s not a bad thing. You’ll have to judge for yourself. The cast is certainly top notch, including Julianne Moore, Clive Owen, Joan Allen and Jennifer Jason Leigh.

Amazon debuts “Dom” (June 4), a crime series based in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and based on a true story about a man who’s part of the drug trade and his police officer father.

The Smithsonian Channel has the original series “Searching for Secrets” (June 6), which digs into hidden history in “the world’s most iconic cities.” The list includes New York, London, San Francisco, Berlin, Paris and Singapore. Sorry Toronto.

Watchable the week of May 24, 2021

SHOW OF THE WEEK: Oslo (May 29, 8 p.m., Crave)

Salim Daw, Andrew Scott, Ruth Wilson, Jeff Wilbusch, Dov Glickman and Rotem Keinan in “Oslo.” PHOTO CREDIT: Larry D. Horricks/HBO

I imagine it’s pure coincidence that this TV movie about the secret talks that led to the 1990s Middle East peace process is debuting just a couple of weeks after another outbreak of violence between Israelis and Palestinians.

The latest conflict makes “Oslo” seem like pure fiction when it’s actually a fictionalized version of real-life events, secret back-channel negotiations that took place in Norway and led to the signing of the Oslo I Accord between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization in 1993.

If you know your Middle East history you know the accord fell apart after Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated in 1995 by an extremist opposed to the peace process, that an attempt to reach a new deal at the 2000 Camp David Summit failed and that the Second Intifada of anti-Israel violence began shortly thereafter.

Today, a solution to the issue feels farther away than ever, which makes the events portrayed in “Oslo” seem almost miraculous: intransigent enemies sitting across a table from each other in a mansion in the Norwegian countryside and coming to see each other as human beings worthy of being spared suffering.

The film distills the three-hour, Tony Award-winning play by J.T. Rogers into just under two hours. Skilled performances and frequent scene changes — including flashbacks to the visit to Gaza that inspired the two Norwegians who instigated and shepherded the negotiations — keep the talky movie from becoming a slog.

In particular, Brit Ruth Wilson (“Luther,” “The Affair”) and Irishman Andrew Scott (“Sherlock,” “Fleabag”) stand out, playing diplomat Mona Juul and her sociologist husband, Terje Rod-Larsen. Among the actors playing the negotiators, Israel’s Salim Dau, as Palestinian official Ahmed Qurie, and Israeli-German actor Jeff Wilbusch, as Israeli official Uri Savir, do a particularly affecting job of taking their characters from mistrust to acceptance and even regard.

Sure, it’s a sentimentalized version of the facts, but “Oslo” makes the stakes feel high and the breakthroughs feel rewarding, even knowing what we do about how it all turned out.

Whitstable Pearl (May 24, Acorn)

Kerry Godliman as Pearl Nolan in “Whitstable Pearl.” PHOTO CREDIT: Mark Bourdillon/AcornTV

This new detective drama goes down as easily as one of the oysters on the half shell that Pearl Nolan (Kerry Godliman) serves at her restaurant, the Whitstable Pearl.

You may recognize actor and comedian Godliman from the Ricky Gervais series “Derek” and “After Life,” as well as the Lennie James-created “Save Me.” Here she’s an unassuming but whip-smart former cop and single mother who moonlights as a private detective when she’s not running her restaurant in the small seaside town of Whitstable.

It’s always nice to see a woman of a certain age (Godliman is 47) leading a crime drama. It’s also a nice change to see crimes that don’t involve the standard sexual assault and murder of young female victims. In the two episodes made available for review, the victims were male and not all the crimes were murders.

“EastEnders” writer Julie Wassmer created “Whitstable Pearl” based on her own mystery novels.

This is a kindler, gentler kind of crime drama, less plot twist shockers and lurid crime scenes, more ordinary folks getting caught up in bad situations, which doesn’t make it any less satisfying.

Howard Charles (“The Musketeers,” “Shadow and Bone”) plays Pearl’s foil, transplanted big city cop Mike McGuire, who starts off as a cynical antagonist but comes to trust Pearl’s judgment.

Short Takes

Christopher Mark Doyon, a.k.a. Commander X, in “The Face of Anonymous.” PHOTO CREDIT: TVO

The Face of Anonymous (May 25, 9 p.m., TVO)

This documentary is not so much about the hacktivist collective known as Anonymous as it is about one man, Christopher Doyon, an aging hippie affiliated with the movement who calls himself Commander X. Doyon was a young man who made his living selling LSD at rock shows in Massachusetts when he got swept up in the protest movement, first anti-apartheid, later animal rights and other causes. His interests in protests and computers coalesced in Anonymous, the faceless hackers who became famous for cyberattacks against governments and corporations as well as their involvement in movements such as Occupy Wall Street and the Arab Spring. Opinions vary as to how influential X was within Anonymous, but he was certainly considered important enough for the FBI to arrest him in 2011. Doyon fled the U.S. soon after, ending up homeless in Toronto, which is where director Gary Lang and co-producer Ian Thornton met him. Thornton eventually helped Doyon escape to Mexico, where he remains in exile and, in his own words, still very much committed to the Anonymous cause.

Jocelyne Immaroitok as Ailla and Benjamin Kunuk as Kuanana in “Maliglutit Searchers.”
PHOTO CREDIT: Kingulliit Productions

Maliglutit Searchers (May 28, CBC Gem)

This film, an Inuit take on the John Wayne western “The Searchers,” was part of Canada’s Top Ten film list in 2016. It’s co-directed by Zacharius Kunuk, whose 2001 film “Atanarjuat: The Fast Runner” won the Camera d’Or at Cannes, and Natar Ungalaaq, who starred in “Atanarjuat.” Set in Nunavut around 1913, it mixes mundane domesticity and austere beauty with violence and revenge when a group of outcasts kidnap the wife and daughter of Kuanana (Benjamin Kunuk) while he’s out caribou hunting. He pursues them, guided by the spirit of a loon called Kallulik. The dialogue is in Inkuktitut with subtitles.

Also on May 28, CBC Gem debuts Zacharius Kunuk’s “One Day in the Life of Noah Piugattuk,” in which a white man interrupts Noah’s (Apayata Kotierk) seal hunt in an attempt to persuade him and his community to move to a settlement in Igloolik. Also debuting that day is “Sagawaay K’uuna” (“Edge of the Knife”), the first film made entirely in the Haida language.

Finally, CBC Gem has “Deep in Vogue,” a look at the queer ballroom scene in northern England communities like Liverpool and Manchester. It’s no surprise that behind the costumes, the bravado and the dance moves are people seeking community and acceptance.

Odds and Ends

James Corden with the cast of “Friends” on the “Reunion Special.”
PHOTO CREDIT: Terence Patrick/HBO Max

Probably the most hyped cast reunion in the history of cast reunions can be seen on Crave May 27 at 10 p.m., “Friends: The Reunion.” Yes, Rachel (Jennifer Aniston), Monica (Courteney Cox), Phoebe (Lisa Kudrow), Ross (David Schwimmer), Chandler (Matthew Perry) and Joey (Matt LeBlanc) reunite on Stage 24 at Warner Bros. Studios, the original “Friends” soundstage, to relive old times. There were no advance screeners for this one.

Riding high on the success of “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm,” Sacha Baron Cohen has turned bits of the flick that hit the cutting room floor into “Borat Supplemental Reportings Retrieved From Floor of Stable Containing Editing Machine” (May 25, Amazon Prime Video). The “multi-part special” includes unseen “Moviefilm” footage, something called “Borat’s American Lockdown,” and six documentary shorts debunking theories like “Vaccine Microchip,” “Mail-in Ballots Scam” and “China Virus.” No word on whether there are any Rudy Giuliani cameos.

Amazon also has a YA series called “Panic” (May 28), which I gather is about teenagers in a small Texas town doing dangerous things.

Netflix has Season 3 of “The Kominsky Method” (May 28), which has lost Alan Arkin but gained Kathleen Turner, reuniting with her old “Romancing the Stone” co-star Michael Douglas.

Disney Plus debuts “Launchpad” (May 28), a collection of live action shorts from filmmakers from under-represented backgrounds.

Sundance Now has the documentary series “Between Black and Blue” (May 25), about a real-life 1975 case in which two New York City police officers were accused of killing a Denver businessman and then fought to clear their names.

This post was edited to add the “Friends” reunion.

NOTE: The dates and times listed here reflect information provided to me and cross-checked where possible against broadcast and streaming schedules, but it’s always best to check listings for your own area. The selection of programs reviewed reflects what I’m given access to by networks and streamers, whether reviews are embargoed, how many shows I have time to watch and my own personal taste.

Watchable the week of May 17, 2021

SHOW OF THE WEEK: In Treatment (May 23, 9 p.m., HBO/Crave)

Uzo Aduba as Dr. Brooke Taylor in “In Treatment.” PHOTO CREDIT: HBO/Bell Media

I approached this new iteration of the beloved HBO series a bit like one of Dr. Brooke Taylor’s new patients: warily.

It’s been just over a decade since Gabriel Byrne sat in the chair as Dr. Paul Weston, doling out psychotherapy in his New York (and before that Baltimore) office, working through his patients’ knotty problems and, in his off hours, on his own.

It didn’t take long for Dr. Taylor, played by Uzo Aduba, to win my trust. Aduba, who came to prominence playing a mentally ill inmate in “Orange Is the New Black,” ably fills the therapist’s seat. 

I had forgotten the pleasure of this two-hander of a show, of watching a pair of actors simply talk to each other and, in doing so, reveal interesting things about the human condition.

It’s rewarding to watch as Brooke kindly but firmly peels back the layers of self-deception and prods the walls of her patients’ resistance — with insight she doesn’t always extend to herself and her own issues.

Speaking to the Television Critics Association earlier this year, Aduba called the role “one of the hardest jobs I’ve ever had in my life” and “also one of the most satisfying, fulfilling experiences,” for which she credited her fellow actors.

The diverse ensemble is indeed a capable one. It includes Anthony Ramos (“Hamilton”) as a young Hispanic man employed as a caregiver to a young white disabled man; Quintessa Swindell as a young Black woman trying to figure out her future; and John Benjamin Hickey (“The Big C”) as a white-collar ex-con whose therapy is mandated as part of his release.

Executive producers Jennifer Schuur and Joshua Allen have deliberately positioned this update as a fourth season of the original “In Treatment” rather than a new version. 

So, for instance, Paul Weston is still out there, unseen other than as a name on a computer or phone screen, as Brooke’s supervisor and “America’s therapist” during the pandemic.

Updating the series — moving it to Los Angeles and to the present day — allows timely issues to be part of the give-and-take between Brooke and her patients.

Besides the pandemic — Brooke works out of her home because her office building is still closed and treats one patient via video — the show also touches on topics like being Black in America, class differences and white male rage, but not in ways that feels intrusive or forced.

Truthfully, arriving at this point in our collective unease, “In Treatment” feels a little like a dose of TV therapy.

Line of Duty (May 18, BritBox)

Adrian Dunbar as Superintendent Ted Hastings and Martin Compston as DS Steve Arnott
in “Line of Duty.” PHOTO CREDIT: Steffan Hill/World Productions

Season 6 of this fan favourite crime show was never going to be just another instalment. It comes amid two years of pent-up demand and suggestions that there won’t be a Season 7.

And in the U.K., where the season has already aired, it was a ratings blockbuster for the BBC.

So does it live up to the hype? Mostly yes with a teaspoon of no.

First off, if you don’t know your OCG (organized crime group) from your CHIS (covert human intelligence source) I’d advise getting up to speed on past seasons before you dive into this one.

As the season begins, things could be better for Anti-Corruption Unit 12. Kate Fleming (Vicky McClure) has moved on to Hillside Lane Station and doesn’t seem eager to maintain ties with AC-12; Steve Arnott (Martin Compston) is still popping painkillers like M&Ms for his back pain (from being attacked in Season 4); and Ted Hastings (Adrian Dunbar) is on thin ice with the police brass (although when is he ever not?).

Steve and his new partner, Chloe Bishop (Shalom Brune-Franklin), are investigating potential corruption in Hillside’s probe of the murder of a high-profile journalist. The main antagonist is DCI Jo Davidson (guest star Kelly Macdonald of “Trainspotting,” “Boardwalk Empire,” “No Country for Old Men” and more), who’s working under DS Ian Buckells (Nigel Boyle), an AC-12 detractor whom we first met in Season 1. 

Buckles is just one of the past characters who turns up this season, which is full of callbacks and name checks that fans will appreciate.

Also to be appreciated is the committed work of the main trio of actors. Without Arnott, Fleming and Hastings, a.k.a. the Gaffer, and their dogged dedication to outing “bent coppers,” “Line of Duty” would never have inspired the devotion that it has.

My one quibble is that I found the finale anticlimactic, which is all the more reason to hope for a Season 7.

Short Takes

Pop star Cher with Asian elephant Kaavan. PHOTO CREDIT: Zoobs Ansari

Cher & The Loneliest Elephant (May 19, 8 p.m., Smithsonian Channel)

Celine Dion sang that “Love Can Move Mountains”; another world famous pop star used her passion to help move a multi-ton bull elephant. This doc tells the story of the rescue of Kaavan, an Asian elephant who was kept for 35 years in deplorable conditions at the now mercifully closed Islamabad Zoo in Pakistan until three women started a campaign to free him: Cher, American vet trainee Samar Khan and Anika Sleem, a Pakistani expat living in Toronto. It took five years, a court verdict and the dedication of a virtual village of animal experts and others to carry out the difficult task of moving the massive, and at the time potentially dangerous, animal to a sanctuary in Cambodia — in the midst of a pandemic no less. In his new home, Kaavan will be able to roam free with his own kind, as elephants are meant to do, instead of being shackled in a tiny enclosure. Keep tissues handy as you watch; I’m certain you’ll need them.

The Hindenburg exploding over the Lakehurst Naval Air Station in Lakehurst, N.J., on May 6, 1937. PHOTO CREDIT: The Associated Press file photo

Hindenburg: New Evidence (May 19, 9 p.m., PBS)

The science series “Nova” has one for the history buffs: an episode that re-examines the Hindenburg disaster of 1937. The footage of the German airship exploding over an airfield in Lakehurst, N.J., is among the indelible images of the 20th century, so it’s fitting that an old reel of film unseen by investigators at the time is what spurs re-examination of the cause of the fire that brought the Hindenburg down, killing 36 (amazingly, 62 passengers and crew lived). Lt. Col Jason O. Harris and author Dan Grossman find an answer to the mystery of what sparked the flames with the help of Germany’s Zeppelin Museum and a Caltech professor of chemical engineering, but I won’t spoil things by telling you what they discovered.

Odds and Ends

As usual, Netflix has several new offerings, including second seasons of Spanish murder mystery “Who Killed Sara?” (May 19) and autobiographical comedy “Special” (May 20), Season 3 of Aziz Ansari’s “Master of None” (May 23) and the Zack Snyder zombie film “Army of the Dead (May 21), which I did not review (hey, I already took one for the team by watching all four hours of “Justice League”).

A show I previously recommended when it debuted on BritBox is available on Hollywood Suite as of May 20. “The Pembrokeshire Murders” dramatizes how a team of detectives in Wales solved two murders two decades old by re-examining the forensic evidence. Luke Evans stars.

Amazon Prime Video has the anthology series “Solos” (May 21) from David Weil, the man behind the high-profile Nazis-in-America show “Hunters.” This one is packed with some big name actors essentially performing monologues, among them Helen Mirren, Morgan Freeman and Anne Hathaway. I’d love to tell you what I think, but reviews are embargoed.

NOTE: The dates and times listed here reflect information provided to me and cross-checked where possible against broadcast and streaming schedules, but it’s always best to check listings for your own area. The selection of series reviewed reflects what I’m given access to by networks and streamers, whether reviews are embargoed, how many shows I have time to watch and my own personal taste.

Watchable the week of May 10, 2021

SHOW OF THE WEEK: The Underground Railroad (May 14, Amazon)

Thuso Mbedu as Cora in “The Underground Railroad.” PHOTO CREDIT: Courtesy of Amazon

It feels strange to describe something that deals with the abomination of slavery as beautiful, but “The Underground Railroad” is a gorgeous piece of television, grandly cinematic, even when it’s laying bare ugliness.

That seems fitting given that it’s the debut TV project of Barry Jenkins, renowned as the director and co-writer of Oscar-winning films “Moonlight” and “If Beale Street Could Talk.”

He couldn’t have taken on a more ambitious task: a 10-episode adaptation of the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of the same name by Colson Whitehead.

Jenkins has created an epic that envelops you with its sights and sounds and feelings, with images that seep into your consciousness like fragments of vivid dreams.

He’s aided brilliantly by cinematographer James Laxton and composer Nicholas Britell, who also collaborated on his movies. Thanks to them, the look and sound of the series are truly striking. But none of that would matter if the performances didn’t live up to the esthetics.

Thuso Mbedu, a South African actor who’s unknown in North America — but presumably not for long — imbues Cora, the teenage slave whose journey we follow, with fierce intelligence and profound spirit. Cora navigates myriad emotions and states of being along with the many miles she travels and Mbedu dynamically conveys them all, often using just her face and her large, expressive eyes.

Praise is also due to Aaron Pierre as Cora’s fellow plantation slave Caesar; Sheila Atim as her mother, Mabel; William Jackson Harper as Royal, a free Black man who aids Cora; Joel Edgerton as slave catcher Ridgeway and, especially, Chase Dillon as Homer, the young Black boy who helps Ridgeway do his dirty work.

When we first meet Cora she’s picking cotton in Georgia, marked by the abandonment of her mother, who left the plantation years before.

Cora flees on the Underground Railroad, which, in the show as in the book, is an actual subterranean train system. (Some of the most haunting parts of the soundscape are heard waiting for trains underground; the Earth itself seems to be moaning.) From there we follow Cora from state to state and from one type of white treachery to another.

The series deals more in the psychic wounds of slavery than the physical ones, although the first episode features graphic violence that put me in mind of “12 Years a Slave.” It’s clear that even for the Black men and women we meet who aren’t enslaved, freedom is fragile and requires constant vigilance.

Ridgeway, who’s the most fully formed character besides Cora, chases her relentlessly, obsessed with the daughter since the mother was the only slave he couldn’t catch.

Cora must elude not only Ridgeway, but her own image of herself as someone so unworthy of love that her own mother abandoned her. When she finally breaks through the anger, her joy is short-lived, quashed by a brutal betrayal that is both shocking and predictable.

But Cora is a survivor, even when she doesn’t want to be. As she makes yet another escape, it’s not clear where she’ll end up and whether she’ll be safe there; we can only hope she’ll find true freedom, in both mind and spirit, a hope that extends to her descendants and the descendants of all those enslaved.

The Crime of the Century (May 10 and 11, 9 p.m., HBO/Crave)

A graveyard scene underscores the cost of the opioid crisis in “The Crime of the Century.”
PHOTO CREDIT: Courtesy of HBO

Infuriating and depressing: that’s how I would describe this two-part documentary by Alex Gibney, the Oscar- and Emmy-winning filmmaker behind docs like “Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room” and “Going Clear: Scientology & the Prison of Belief.”

But it’s also worth watching for a lucid and detailed explanation of the American opioid crisis.

There are villains galore here, everyone from profit-obsessed drug company executives and sales reps, to doctors and pharmacists who take bribes to dispense ridiculously powerful pills to patients, to the corrupt Federal Drug Administration officer who allowed oxycontin to be declared safe for chronic pain relief, to the politicians who push big pharma interests in exchange for campaign contributions, to the justice department officials who buried evidence of drug company wrongdoing in exchange for guilty pleas and slap-on-the-wrist fines.

What is abundantly clear is that the opioid epidemic, which has killed some 500,000 Americans in the last 20 years, is also an epidemic of greed.

Opium — from which drugs like morphine, heroin and oxycodone are derived — has been cultivated since the reign of King Tut and has fuelled western profit and addiction for at least a couple of centuries, but Gibney pins the origins of the current epidemic on three brothers from Brooklyn and their pharmaceutical company.

It was the Sackler brothers, whom Gibney describes as “some of the world’s most successful drug pushers,” and Purdue Pharma who came up with OxyContin, a continuous-release form of Oxycodone.

But the drug’s original use, end-of-life cancer pain, wasn’t lucrative enough so the FDA was convinced to allow a claim that the drug’s delayed absorption mechanism reduced the likelihood of addiction — and Purdue and other drug-makers that followed its lead were off to the races.

Evidence began to mount not long after that Oxy was being used as a street drug, crushed and snorted, or dissolved and injected, but Purdue’s line was that the addicts were at fault, not the pills.

And then there’s fentanyl, another powerful drug initially meant for cancer patients, which is the subject of much of the second episode of the doc.

The resulting carnage is assessed by journalists (the Washington Post is a partner in the series), concerned doctors, drug company whistleblowers, people who’ve seen the deaths firsthand and crusaders like Joe Rannazzisi, who lost his Drug Enforcement Administration job for speaking out against a U.S. law that makes it harder to crack down on drug distributors who supply the so-called “pill mills” that flourish in Florida and elsewhere.

Gibney piles outrage upon outrage, more than I can do justice to here. Your best bet is to watch for yourself.

Extra Life: A Short History of Living Longer (May 11, 8 p.m., PBS)

Author Steven Johnson and broadcaster David Olusoga guide viewers through “Extra Life.”
PHOTO CREDIT: Courtesy of Nutopia

What could be more timely than a history of vaccination as we line up for our COVID-19 shots? Personally, I had no idea that the forerunner of today’s inoculations was a practice known as variolation — making a small incision in the arm and smearing it with smallpox fluid— that was imported to the United States in the 1700s via an African slave named Onesimus.

Engaging hosts Steven Johnson and David Olusoga take us through that history, including the development of the world’s first vaccine by British doctor Edward Jenner in the late 1700s, to the eventual eradication of smallpox, a disease that killed many millions of people going back centuries. It was vanquished by 73 countries working together in the 1960s and ’70s to vaccinate everyone on the planet, an achievement that holds a measure of hope for today’s pandemic battle.

As epidemiologist Larry Brilliant says, “People forget what human beings can do when we’re unencumbered by divisiveness and hate, and that we stand up to the moment in time.”

Obviously, the current vaccination push against COVID is part of the discussion, with nods to vaccine hesitancy and the need to vaccinate in every country in the world, especially the poorest ones, to avoid prolonging the pandemic.

All this is part of a look at how science and medical innovations have lengthened life expectancy. It’s shocking to think that a person born in 1900 could expect to live an average of just 32 years whereas, today, the average Canadian can expect to live to at least 80.

The series, presented by TV production company Nutopia, also includes episodes about the use of data, medical inventions and public behaviour. If that sounds dry, I expect them to be highly watchable if they’re anything like the first.

For a look at the very start of the human life span, PBS also has “Fighting for Fertility” (“Nova,” May 12, 9 p.m.), about how science and technology are helping people who are struggling to have children.

Short Takes

From left, Kim Fields, Mike Epps and Gabrielle Dennis in “The Upshaws.”
PHOTO CREDIT: Lara Solanki/Netflix

The Upshaws (May 12, Netflix)

This sitcom, co-created by Regina Y. Hicks (“Insecure”) and comedian Wanda Sykes, is about a Black working class family in Indiana. The family dynamics are complex: Bennie (Mike Epp, “Uncle Buck”) has four kids, three with his wife and former high school sweetheart, Regina (Kim Fields, a.k.a. Tootie from “The Facts of Life”), one with his high school “baby mama” Tasha (Gabrielle Dennis, “Rosewood”). From what I can tell from the episode I watched it’s got the pacing and the non-stop punchlines of your standard sitcom. The best lines come from the animosity between Bennie and his sister-in-law Lucretia, played by Sykes.

Netflix also has the movie “The Woman in the Window,” about an agoraphobic in New York City who may or may not have witnessed a crime. It’s from director Joe Wright (“Darkest Hour”) and has a crazy stacked cast, led by Amy Adams alongside Julianne Moore, Gary Oldman, Anthony Mackie and Wyatt Russell. Also debuting on May 14 are “Halston,” the latest from Ryan Murphy, with Ewan McGregor starring as the famous fashion designer, and Season 2 of animated series “Love, Death & Robots.”

Odds and Ends

I didn’t get a chance to check out “Blinded — Those Who Kill” on Acorn (May 10), but it’s headlined by Natalie Madueno as criminal profiler Louise Bergstein, who also starred in the absorbing Danish crime drama “Darkness — Those Who Kill.” Acorn also has “Amber” (May 10), a Dublin-set drama about a teenage girl who goes missing.

If you haven’t had enough of Britney Spears docs yet, BBC Select has “The Battle for Britney: Fans, Cash and a Conservatorship” (May 11), in which journalist Mobeen Azhar looks into the pop star’s legal issues by talking to everyone but Britney. I understand Britney herself is not a fan of the show.

NOTE: The dates and times listed here reflect information provided to me and cross-checked where possible against broadcast and streaming schedules, but it’s always best to check listings for your own area. The selection of series reviewed reflects what I’m given access to by networks and streamers, whether reviews are embargoed, how many shows I have time to watch and my own personal taste.

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