How an unexpected reality TV obsession fueled âThe Good Fightâsâ final season
Welcome to Screen Gab, the newsletter for everyone who got their J.D. at âThe Good Wifeâ University.
For more than a decade, the CBS legal drama and its Paramount+ spinoff, âThe Good Fight,â have tackled politics, tech, pop culture and more through courtroom antics, office romance and a wicked sense of satire â which means itâll be especially hard to say farewell when âThe Good Fightâ ends Nov. 10. In this weekâs Guest Spot, Yvonne Villarreal catches up with creators Robert and Michelle King about the final season, including the reality TV juggernaut that makes an important cameo.
Plus, a slew of staff and reader recommendations to keep you busy throughout the weekend, whether youâre making final preparations for Halloween or trying to avoid it. And, as always, weâd love to hear what youâre watching: 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.
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Recommendations from the film and TV experts at The Times
As a documented fan of watching extremely creative people doing what it is they do best, Netflixâs âDrink Mastersâ â in which top mixologists compete to create the best craft cocktails â was practically made to order for me. Itâs one part âTop Chefâ (bartenders prepare complex drinks using a full kitchen, pantry and liquor cabinet) and one part âGreat British Baking Showâ (think approachable explanations of traditional drinks and colorful illustrations onscreen), all served on a set that resembles a luxurious nightspot. The series, from the producers of Netflixâs âBlown Awayâ and âRestaurants on the Edgeâ and hosted by Tone Bell, describes cocktails as âliquid art,â and, while competitors go all in on glassware, garnishes, aromatics and table-side theatrics, the creation still has to taste great. If you didnât get into making your own drinks during the pandemic shutdowns, this show might inspire you to finally try it out ⌠or at least deviate from your âusualâ order during your next happy hour. âAshley Lee
The lovely âBig Shotâ (Disney+) returns for a second season, snatched from the jaws of cancellation by a long shot from John Stamos, who stars as Marvyn Korn, a former college basketball coach who throws a chair at a referee and finds himself coaching the team at a girlsâ high school. This year, the episodes run an economical (in multiple senses) half an hour, instead of an hour, which does the series no harm and, indeed, makes it feel more focused, free from filler, with increased emphasis on Kornâs relationship with daughter Emma (Sophia Mitri Schloss). The twist this season is the presence of boys, temporarily reassigned to the girlsâ school after a misfired prank closes theirs. Along with new adventures in coeducation, which is to say, flirting and dating and being dumb like boys can be, they bring their own basketball team, headed by Kornâs former assistant coach, Holly (Jessalyn Gilsig), competing for gym time and sucking up public attention. New to the team is Ava (Sara Echeagaray), a hotshot volleyball star in career recovery time after a display of temper, bringing a volatile new dynamic and holding up a mirror to Korn, who doesnât love what he sees there. âRobert Lloyd
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Everything you need to know about the film or TV series everyoneâs talking about
It would be all too easy to say that âThe U.S. and the Holocaustâ (PBS Passport), from Ken Burns, Lynn Novick and Sarah Botstein, is especially relevant this week, this month or this year. But as their unstinting six-hour docuseries is at pains to stress, antisemitism and other forms of bigotry are as American as baseball and apple pie: The subject is never not relevant. Indeed, though âThe U.S. and the Holocaustâ moves deftly across the Atlantic throughout the 1930s and â40s â toggling between nativism in the U.S. and Nazism in Germany; refugeesâ attempts to flee the Third Reich and American officialsâ efforts to keep them out; the murder of 6 million European Jews; and the Alliesâ failure to save them â its most important insight is contained in its 19th century preamble, which details the racist and xenophobic ideas we grew here, and that later inspired Hitler. Of all Burnsâ historical docuseries, from âBenjamin Franklinâ through âThe Vietnam War,â this might be the most astute, and in that astuteness the most shattering. Rooted deeply, ranging widely, arguing unapologetically, it presents Americans not only as paralyzed observers of the Holocaust but as its originators: We were the genocidaires, avant la lettre, and until we reckon with that truth we wonât prevent the next one, either. âMatt Brennan
Guest spot
A weekly chat with actors, writers, directors and more about what theyâre working on â and what theyâre watching
Across 13 years, husband-and-wife showrunners Robert and Michelle King created an eerily prescient, never dull legal drama universe with âThe Good Wifeâ and âThe Good Fightâ (Paramount+). Next month, it all comes to a close with the latterâs series finale, bringing a narrative conclusion to the journey of Diane Lockhart, the hard-charging attorney played by Christine Baranski. Hereâs what the Kings had to say about the final season and what current headlines they could have dug into if the show wasnât ending. âYvonne Villarreal
Civil unrest takes over the final season. Thereâs this looming threat of violence, thereâs chaos outside, everyoneâs on edge. And Diane is as easygoing as ever because of this hallucinogen treatment sheâs getting. What did you want out of this last season?
Michelle King: We wanted to reflect the news as we were reading it, which is fear of terrible threats. And we wanted to show them, whether theyâd be civil unrest, possible civil war, racism, antisemitism â itâs right there, right outside the window.
Robert King: Thereâs two movie [references] that come to mind: One is [Jean-Luc] Godardâs âWeekend,â which is set in a violent France; bodies are beside the road. And itâs this couple setting out to figure out whether theyâre going to get an inheritance. And then Jacques Tati â oh, my God, Iâm talking about French â who moves through chaos and always maintains a balance. And I thought thatâs what the comedy of Christineâs character was. Diane is a liberal whoâs finding the countryâs falling apart around her and sheâs still trying to maintain a balance as she walks among the bodies.
Some time has passed since you filmed the finale. If there were one more plot line for Diane that youâd want to do, what would it be?
RK: Itâs probably about whatâs in the news right now. There was a Republican [candidate] who was caught masturbating in front of a grade school. The show was always inspired by whatever was happening in the news, so itâs that â it might be reaction to the midterms, eventually. We couldnât say based on the news at the moment, it would be news in a month or three weeks.
Before I let you go, I need to ask about the âBelow Deck Sailing Yachtâ moment from this season. Where did that come from? Robert, I am convinced you watch it.
MK: You nailed it.
RK: Our daughter, Sophia, told me to watch one. And I said, âOh, my God. I think this is the stupidest thing I could imagine.â But I watched one and I became obsessed. Gary, all of them. I cannot get enough. The thought of two people on opposite sides of politics having this connection over reality TV â and I think reality TV, by the way, gets a bad rap. âSurvivorâ has been kind of amazing in its commentary on the country and race relations and everything. âBelow Deckâ (Bravo, Peacock) is amazing about its satire of rich people. Itâs not stupid. Somebodyâs editing with a heavy hand to show what rich people are really like. Youâre always kind of stunned because there are some nice people and then there are just awful, awful people. And if youâve worked in retail or in restaurants, you recognize all of those types, you recognize how hard it was to work for people like that. If you want a recommendation, itâs one of those gold star recommendations of a show that may seem stupid to some people, but is not at all.
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Recommendations from Screen Gab readers
I liked âMr. Harriganâs Phoneâ (Netflix). It was thought-provoking and mysterious but not a horror film. Iâm also a Donald Sutherland fan. I hope many people enjoy, and that Stephen King keeps writing more stories that arenât in the horror category.
Susan Sawyer Allen
Whatâs next
Listings coordinator Matt Cooper highlights the TV shows and streaming movies to keep an eye on
Fri., Oct. 28
âAll Quiet on the Western Frontâ (Netflix): A young German soldier sees the horrors of World War I firsthand in this 2022 adaptation of Erich Maria Remarqueâs classic novel.
âThe Bastard Son and the Devil Himselfâ (Netflix): A supernaturally gifted teen comes of age in this new fantasy drama based on Sally Greenâs YA trilogy.
âBig Mouthâ (Netflix): This adult-themed animated series about the indignities of adolescence returns for Season 6.
âThe Devilâs Hourâ (Prime Video): Itâs 3:33 a.m. â do you know where your serial killer is? âDoctor Whoâsâ Peter Capaldi stars in this new six-part thriller.
âDrink Mastersâ (Netflix): Twelve top-shelf mixologists walk into a bar in this new competition hosted by comic Tone Bell.
âI Am a Stalkerâ (Netflix): This new true crime series features terrifying tales as told by stalking victims as well as the stalkers themselves.
âItâs the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brownâ (Apple TV+): The Peanuts gang gets its trick-or-treat on in the classic animated special.
âLouis Armstrongâs Black & Bluesâ (Apple TV+): The jazz great who almost single-handedly invented 20th century popular music is saluted in this new documentary.
âMilk Streetâs Cooking Schoolâ and âMilk Streetâs My Family Recipeâ (Roku): Celebrity chef Christopher Kimball co-hosts these new culinary series.
âResurrectionâ (Shudder): Rebecca Hall may be through with the past, but the past isnât through with her in this 2022 psychological thriller.
âRun Sweetheart Runâ (Prime Video): A single mother goes on the worst blind date ever in this 2020 thriller.
âWendell & Wildâ (Netflix): Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele lend their voices to this 2022 stop-motion-animated horror comedy.
2022 World Series (Fox, 5 p.m.; also Saturday): Baseballâs top two teams slug it out in the opening games of this yearâs Fall Classic.
âMonster Highâ (Nickelodeon, 7 p.m.): Theyâre too ghoul for school in this new animated series based on the toy franchise.
âA Cozy Christmas Innâ (Hallmark, 8 p.m.): A real estate executive reconnects with a former flame in this new TV movie. âFull Houseâsâ Jodie Sweetin stars.
âGhosts of Flight 401â (Travel, 8 p.m.): Paranormal investigators revisit a tragic 1972 air disaster in this new special.
âDia de los Muertosâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): Local favorites Los Lobos and Ozomatli perform in this new special exploring the roots of the beloved Mexican holiday.
âUrban Legendâ (Travel, 10 p.m.): There are things worse than alligators in the sewers lurking in this new horror anthology from Eli Roth.
Sat., Oct. 29
âAn Amish Sinâ (Lifetime, 8 p.m.): A teen tries to escape from her insular religious community in this new fact-based TV movie.
âJolly Good Christmasâ (Hallmark, 8 p.m.): An American architect in London meets a rather personable personal shopper in this new TV movie.
âSaturday Night Liveâ (NBC, 8:29 and 11:29 p.m.): Rapper Jack Harlow pulls double duty as host and performer in this new episode.
Sun., Oct. 30
âCoal Minerâs Daughter: A Celebration of the Life & Music of Loretta Lynnâ (CMT, 4 p.m.): The dearly departed country music legend is remembered in a star-studded concert live from Nashvilleâs Grand Old Opry.
âThe Simpsonsâ (Fox, 8 p.m.): The animated sitcom brings the Halloween scares with an all-new âTreehouse of Horror.â
âGhosts of Christmas Alwaysâ (Hallmark, 8 p.m.): A hunky modern-day Scrooge gets the Dickens scared out of him in this new rom-com.
âThe White Lotusâ (HBO, 9 p.m.): Your rooms are almost ready, just gonna be a few more minutes, as this satirical series returns for a second season set in Sicily. With Jennifer Coolidge.
Mon., Oct. 31
âInside Manâ (Netflix): A death row inmate (Stanley Tucci) lends his sinister expertise to help solve a missing persons case across the pond in this six-part thriller. With David Tennant.
2022 World Series (Fox, 5 p.m.; also Tuesday; and Wednesday, Friday and Saturday, if necessary): The Phillies battle the Astros as baseballâs Fall Classic continues.
Tue., Nov. 1
âGod Forbid: The Sex Scandal That Brought Down a Dynastyâ (Hulu): This new documentary retells the tale of disgraced evangelical leader Jerry Falwell Jr., his wife and a hotel pool attendant.
âFinding Your Roots With Henry Louis Gates, Jr.â (KOCE, 9 p.m.): Broadwayâs RaĂşl Esparza and restaurateur David Chang explore their family histories in this new episode.
âBelow Deck Adventureâ (Bravo, 9 p.m.): If you have to ask, you canât a-fjord it in this spinoff set aboard a luxury yacht cruising around Scandinavia.
âFrontlineâ (KOCE, 10 p.m.): The new episode âPutinâs War at Homeâ examines the resistance the Russian leader is facing in his own country over his actions in Ukraine.
âJordan Klepper Fingers the Midterms â America Unfollows Democracyâ (Comedy Central, 11:30 p.m.): The sometime âDaily Showâ correspondent surveys our divided political landscape in this pre-election special.
Wed., Nov. 2
âNatureâ (KOCE, 8 p.m.): A bird in the hand is worth two in the tree in the new episode âWoodpeckers: The Hole Story.â
âNovaâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): Weâre not saying it was aliens, but ... Who created those ancient geoglyphs in Peru? Find out in the new episode âNazca Desert Mystery.â
âSecrets of the Deadâ (KOCE, 10 p.m.): Itâs hard to tell the Eye of Ra from the Eye of Horus in the new episode âDecoding Hieroglyphics.â
Thu., Nov. 3
âBlockbusterâ (Netflix): Streaming killed the video store â almost â in this new workplace comedy. With Randall Park and Melissa Fumero.
âKiller Sallyâ (Netflix): This new true crime series revisits the 1995 murder of professional bodybuilder Ray McNeil by his bodybuilder wife Sally McNeil.
âLow Country: The Murdaugh Dynastyâ (HBO Max): This three-part docuseries investigates a series of scandals involving a once-prominent South Carolina family.
âThe Suspectâ (AMC+, Sundance Now): âPoldarkâsâ Aidan Turner plays a psychologist and family man caught up in a conspiracy in this five-part thriller.
âTitansâ (HBO Max): This YA-themed live-action series set in the DC Universe is back for Season 4.
âA Wesley Christmasâ (BET+): Thereâs no place like home for the holidays in this new TV movie. With Jasmine Guy.
âThe Really Loud Houseâ (Nickelodeon, 7 p.m.): No one uses their inside voice in this new live-action sitcom based on the animated series.
âRehab Addict Lake House Rescueâ (HGTV, 9 p.m.): Nicole Curtis takes on the mother of all renovation projects in her latest series.
âHip Hop Homicidesâ (WE, 9 p.m.): The murders of XXXtentacion, Pop Smoke and other rappers cut down in their prime are examined in this new docuseries.
âMountain Men: Ultimate Marksmanâ (History, 9:30 p.m.): Competitors must demonstrate their prowess with frontier-era weaponry in this new spinoff.
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.