This new TV show is one of the best depictions of adolescence our critic has seen
Welcome to Screen Gab, the newsletter for everyone who loves âMy So-Called Life,â âFreaks and Geeksâ and âReservation Dogs.â
Those are the three TV series about adolescence to which TV critic Robert Lloyd favorably compares Amazon Freeveeâs âHigh School,â premiering Friday, in his recommendation this week. Plus, we look back on Angela Lansburyâs indelible performance in âThe Manchurian Candidate,â advise you to catch up on âThe Owl House,â gab with the cast of âRebootâ and more.
And, as always, weâd love to hear what youâre watching, too: Send your TV or streaming movie recommendations to [email protected] with your name and location. Submissions should be no longer than 200 words and are subject to editing for length and clarity.
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.
ICYMI
Must-read stories you might have missed
Amazonâs âThe Rings of Powerâ is a bona fide hit. Why doesnât it feel like it?: The Prime Video series, nearing 100 million viewers for its first season, exemplifies the evolving nature of the hit TV show in the age of streaming.
John Stamos once said he didnât care if he died. This is the story of how he decided to live: The veteran actor opens up about hitting rock bottom, saving âBig Shotâ from cancellation at Disney+, losing his virginity and more.
Making the radical case for SinĂŠad OâConnor: She was right all along: A new documentary, âNothing Compares,â reconsiders the Irish singerâs legacy 30 years after she blew up her career on âSNL.â
âHouse of the Dragonâsâ pacing has been a problem. Episode 8 might finally solve it: In âThe Lord of the Tides,â a drama thatâs often felt rushed finally appeared to settle in for the long haul.
Turn on
Recommendations from the film and TV experts at The Times
A few weeks ago, while watching âThe Long, Hot Summerâ (multiple platforms), I lunged for the pause button: Was that Angela Lansbury as Minnie Littlejohn, the mistress of the Mississippi plantation owner played by Orson Welles? Dumb question, really: Once she showed up, who else could she have been? Lansbury, who died this week at 96, wasnât the kind of actor you mistook for anyone else. Just four years after âThe Long, Hot Summer,â Lansbury would deliver her most indelible film performance in âThe Manchurian Candidateâ (multiple platforms). I remember watching John Frankenheimerâs great thriller as a teenager and feeling captivated and terrified; having known Lansbury mainly through her signature Disney âB&Bâ musical roles in âBedknobs and Broomsticksâ (multiple platforms) and âBeauty and the Beastâ (multiple platforms), it floored me that a sweet singing teapot could also become the murderous embodiment of political evil. Thatâs the magic of acting â and Lansbury was one of its most spellbinding practitioners. âJustin Chang
Based on the 2019 bunk-bed memoir by Canadian identical-twin singing sisters Tegan and Sara Quin, âHigh Schoolâ (Amazon Freevee) is a quietly beautiful series, as good a show about adolescence as Iâve ever seen. Television stories about teenagers tend toward the fantastic; they are most often soap operas, melodramas, sensationalistic and/or overstylized. (Indeed, naturalism is something most American television productions canât or donât care to achieve.) Executive produced by the Quins and Clea DuVall and anchored by terrific performances by twins Railey and Seazynn Gilliland, as Tegan and Sara respectively, Iâd place it alongside âMy So-Called Life,â âFreaks and Geeksâ and âReservation Dogsâ in its interest in and ability to capture authentically the experience of being young â not to mention being alive in a certain place (Calgary, where itâs cold) and time (the late 1990s, when nobody texts). Sympathetic to its characters (including Cobie Smulders, Kyle Bornheimer and Nate Corddry doing fine work as the related adults), it will show the same scene from different perspectives (as does the book). Itâs a queer coming-of-age story, but not specifically a queer coming-of-age story, and though itâs a period piece, its emotional details will be familiar to most anyone who has survived into their 20s. This is a show about family; about friendships and friendships that shade in and out of love; about following people who donât quite know where theyâre going either; and being ready for experiences before youâre quite able to understand them. Itâs also unusually accurate about loving music, learning to make it, and what itâs like to hang out with friends and strangers in a room where someone has a guitar. âRobert Lloyd
Catch up
Everything you need to know about the film or TV series everyoneâs talking about
Itâs a great week for fans of queer, horror-infused, YA-skewing animation. Following Thursdayâs release of âDead End: Paranormal Parkâ Season 2 on Netflix, Saturday will see the premiere of âThanks to Them,â the first of three âThe Owl Houseâ Season 3 specials, on Disney Channel. (Seasons 1 and 2 are available on Disney+). Created by Dana Terrace, âThe Owl Houseâ follows Luz Noceda, an excitable, optimistic, fantasy-loving human teen who accidentally stumbles through a portal to the demon realm, where she meets a witch named Eda and an adorable demon named King. Thus begins Luzâs life on the Boiling Isles â a chain of islands comprised of the decaying remains of a giant magical being called a titan â where she starts training to become a witch. Besides apprenticing with Eda, Luz eventually matriculates at a magic school where she befriends other teen witches, including her crush.
Season 3 picks up directly after the events of Season 2, which saw Luz and her friends stand up against the Boiling Islesâ authoritarian ruler and accidentally unleash an even bigger threat before getting thrown back into the human world. The Peabody Award-winning series has made Disney animation history with its ensemble of LGBTQ characters and a central queer romance. But beyond its important representational milestones, âThe Owl Houseâ is a series full of humor and heart. Itâs a story about a found family of lovable weirdos who unconditionally support each other and stand up for their beliefs. While the return of âThe Owl Houseâ is exciting, itâs also a bit bittersweet: The seriesâ third and final season will be comprised of just three 44-minute episodes to wrap up its storyline. (The remaining two specials are expected to air next year.) But I still canât wait to see what kind of antics Luz and her friends get into in the human realm before figuring out how to save their world. âTracy Brown
Guest spot
A weekly chat with actors, writers, directors and more about what theyâre working on â and what theyâre watching
On the mockumentary spectrum, Steven Levitanâs âRebootâ (Hulu) â about the reboot of fictional early-2000s sitcom âStep Right Upâ â falls somewhere between Levitanâs own âModern Familyâ (occasionally saccharine) and HBOâs âThe Comebackâ (skin-crawlingly awkward). That deft balance between Hollywood satire and good-natured workplace comedy may explain why itâs so swiftly become one of my favorite new TV shows of the year. And itâs not just Judy Greerâs character calling herself âa sexual fluidâ after experimenting with a woman: As Zack Jackson, the original seriesâ former/perpetual child star, and Elaine Kim, an in-over-her-head studio executive brought in from the tech industry, Calum Worthy and Krista Marie Yu bring a distinctly millennial sensibility to âRebootâ that those of us who grew up on TGIF can empathize with. They stopped by Screen Gab to tell us what show they would reboot, what theyâre recommending and more. âMatt Brennan
What have you watched recently that you are recommending to everyone you know?
Krista Marie Yu: âPartner Trackâ on Netflix with Asian American badass actress Arden Cho; âA League of Their Ownâ on Prime Video with the amazing Molly Ephraim; and âAvenue 5â on HBO Max with my TV mom from âDr. Ken,â the incredible Suzy Nakamura! Girl power!
Calum Worthy: I just watched the docuseries âBlack Goldâ (Paramount+). It is an incredible series that explores the oil industryâs decades-long campaign to deny the dangers of climate change.
Whatâs your go-to âcomfort watch,â the movie or TV show you go back to again and again?
Worthy: âParks and Recreationâ (Peacock) always puts a smile on my face.
Yu: I love â13 Going on 30â (HBO Max), which is why working with Tom-Tom herself (Judy Greer) is unbelievable!
What sitcom from your childhood is ripe for a reboot â and what twist would you add to make it appeal to contemporary audiences?
Worthy: I used to watch âM.A.S.H.â reruns every day after school. It was such an innovative show. Remember the âInterviewâ episode?! I would love to reboot it and continue their tradition of experimenting with the sitcom format.
Yu: I know itâs not a sitcom, but I loved watching the classic movie musical âGypsyâ growing up, with Natalie Wood. I would love to play Louise one day with Jonathan Slavin (my cast mate and mentor from âDr. Kenâ) as Mama Rose. DREAMS!!!!
Whatâs next
Listings coordinator Matt Cooper highlights the TV shows and streaming movies to keep an eye on
Fri., Oct. 14
âThe Curse of Bridge Hollowâ (Netflix): Marlon Wayans and âStranger Thingsââ Priah Ferguson play father and daughter in this family-friendly 2022 comedy.
âHalloween Endsâ (Peacock): Donât bet on it in this 2022 entry in the long-lived horror franchise. Jamie Lee Curtis stars.
âHigh Schoolâ (Freevee): The youthful misadventures of sibling indie-pop duo Tegan and Sara serve as the stuff of this new coming-of-age comedy-drama.
âMartha Gardensâ (Roku): Ms. Stewart shows you how to get a thumb as green as hers in her latest series.
âRosalineâ (Hulu): Romeoâs ex-GF ainât gonna let that little hussy Juliet steal her man in this 2022 rom-com based on Shakespeareâs classic. âJustifiedâsâ Kaitlyn Dever stars.
âShantaramâ (Apple TV+): An Aussie fugitiveâs road to redemption runs through 1980s Bombay in this new drama based on the 2003 novel. âSons of Anarchyâsâ Charlie Hunnam stars.
âNext at the Kennedy Centerâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): Musicians of today give props to jazz legend Charles Mingus in the debut installment of this arts series.
âCMT Artists of the Yearâ (CMT, 9 p.m.): Country musicâs Alan Jackson is singled out for special honors at the annual ceremony.
Sat., Oct. 15
âAutumn in the Cityâ (Hallmark, 8 p.m.): If she can make it there, sheâll make it anywhere in this new rom-com set in NYC. With AimeĂŠ Teegarden.
âSaturday Night Liveâ (NBC, 8:29 and 11:29 p.m.) Hip-hopâs Megan Thee Stallion pulls double duty as host and performer in this new episode.
âLetâs Get Physicalâ (Lifetime, 8 p.m.): âThe Rookieâsâ Jenna Dewan plays a fitness instructor by day, suburban madam by night in this new fact-based thriller.
Sun., Oct. 16
âMiss Scarlet and the Dukeâ (KOCE, 8 p.m.): This mystery drama set in Victorian-era London returns with new episodes.
âChesapeake Shoresâ (Hallmark, 8 p.m.): The family drama ends its run after six seasons.
âMagpie Murdersâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): A book editor (âHarlotsââ Lesley Manville) has a mystery on her hands in this new decades-spanning drama.
âStep Upâ (Starz, 9:56 p.m.): This drama about a performing-arts high school in Atlanta steps up for a third season.
âAnnikaâ (KOCE, 10 p.m.): This detective drama set in Scotland also returns. Nicola Walker stars.
Mon., Oct. 17
âDoc Martinâ (Acorn TV): The veddy British comedy-drama returns for a 10th and final season. Martin Clunes stars.
âKids Baking Championshipâ (Food Network, 8 p.m.): Boo! The competition returns with a special one-off Halloween episode.
âRising Against Asian Hate: One Day in Marchâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): This new special explores the response to the mass shootings at three spas in Atlanta in 2021.
âThe Vowâ (HBO, 9 p.m.): This docuseries about the rise and fall of the self-improvement program turned bizarre sex cult known as NXIVM is back for Season 2.
âPOVâ (KOCE, 10 p.m.): Muslim Americans share their perspectives on life in these United States in the 2022 documentary âAn Act of Worship.â
Tue., Oct. 18
âGabriel Iglesias: Stadium Fluffy Live From Los Angelesâ (Netflix): The veteran comic holds court at Chavez Ravine in his latest stand-up special.
âSomebody Feed Philâ (Netflix): Mr. Rosenthalâs foodie travelogue tucks in for a sixth season.
âUnsolved Mysteriesâ (Netflix): The most recent reboot of the eerie docuseries unleashes a third season.
âBy Design: The Joe Caroff Storyâ (TCM, 5 p.m.): This new documentary salutes the influential graphic designer behind some of the most iconic movie logos of all time.
âThe Nine Lives of Vince McMahonâ (Vice, 8 p.m.): The controversial pro wrestling impresario is profiled in this new documentary.
âMamaâs Boyâ (HBO, 9 p.m.): Oscar-winning screenwriter and LGBTQ activist Dustin Lance Black (âMilk,â âUnder the Banner of Heavenâ) shares his journey in this new documentary.
Wed., Oct. 19
âLove Is Blindâ (Netflix): The contestants are out of sight but not out of mind as the competition returns for Season 3. Nick and Vanessa Lachey host.
âThe Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parksâ (Peacock): The legendary civil rights activist is celebrated in this new documentary.
âThe School for Good and Evilâ (Netflix): Would-be heroes and villains get educated at a Hogwarts-like academy in this star-studded 2022 fantasy tale. With Charlize Theron.
âNatureâ (KOCE, 8 p.m.): Catch up on all the latest gnus â and zebras, gazelles, etc. â in the new episode âRunning With the Beest.â
âKing Tut: A Century of Secretsâ (Discovery, 8 p.m.): Tomb it may concern, this new special marks the centenary of that famous find in Egypt in 1922.
âArtboundâ (KCET, 9 p.m.): A new episode surveys the contributions made to our fair city by the Works Progress Administration in the 1930s-40s.
âNovaâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): The efficacy of hallucinogens in treating anxiety, depression, PTSD, etc., is explored in the new episode âCan Psychedelics Cure?â
âYear One: A Political Odysseyâ (HBO, 9 p.m.): This new documentary goes behind the scenes of President Bidenâs first 365 days in office.
âSecrets of the Deadâ (KOCE, 10 p.m.): Visit the ancient Roman city buried when Mt. Vesuvius blew its top in AD 79 in the new episode âLast Days of Pompeii.â
âAfter Happily Ever Afterâ (BET, 10 p.m.): People help their exes find new love in this new dating series hosted by Bow Wow.
âAmerican Horror Storyâ (FX, 10 p.m.): The franchise is back with a new season set in the hellhole that was 1980s NYC. With Patti LuPone.
âDocumentary Now!â (IFC, 10 p.m.): Even more classic docs come in for a good spoofing as the anthology series returns.
Thu., Oct. 20
âInside Amy Schumerâ (Paramount+): The bawdy comic reboots her 2013-16 sketch show for a fifth season.
âOne of Us Is Lyingâ (Peacock): Truth be told, this teen-themed mystery drama is back for Season 2.
âV/H/S/99â (Shudder): Be kind, rewind â or else â in this 2022 entry in the found-footage horror franchise.
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.