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Image: Apple TV/Netflix/IMDB
Arts & CultureTelevision
Joe Hoover, S.J.
My heart is not large enough, my consciousness is not spacious enough for all the spot-on characters, the hectic energies, the ripping stories. I am not skillful, I think, at TV.
Jean-Luc Picard and Q in the second season finale of 'Picard’ (photo: Viacom/CBS)
Arts & CultureTelevision
Jim McDermott
While “Star Trek” has presented itself as a show about exploring strange new worlds, at its heart it has always been about elevating those whom society has ignored.
Bridget Everett and Jeff Hiller in “Somebody Somewhere” (HBO Max)
Arts & CultureTelevision
Jim McDermott
“Somebody Somewhere” is not a show about religion, but it is in its own way an exploration of what a truly religious community offers—namely, a space of radical acceptance.
HBO's “And Just Like That,” like "Sex and the City" before it, is an exaggerated funhouse mirror of its viewers’ world (photo: HBO Max).
Arts & CultureTelevision
Elizabeth Grace Matthew
HBO's “And Just Like That,” like "Sex and the City" before it, is an exaggerated funhouse mirror of its viewers’ world.
Arts & CultureTelevision
Sarah Vincent
Despite its first three seasons of ambitious, campy, violent fun, “Killing Eve” lost its way in its final season with a failed conversion subplot and problematic treatment of queer characters.
Volodymyr Zelensky in ‘Servant of the People’ (Kvartal 95)
Arts & CultureTelevision
Jim McDermott
Watching “Servant of the People,” I find myself called to gratitude, hope and mourning.