Why âWelcome to Flatchâ is the other docu-style network comedy you should be watching
Welcome to Screen Gab, the newsletter for everyone on the hunt for a laundromat photo opp before the Oscars this weekend.
We understand some of you may be trying to catch up on a few nominees before filmâs big night, and we wonât interfere, but Times TV critic Robert Lloyd also makes the case that Foxâs âWelcome to Flatch,â set in small-town Ohio, is worth your time if youâre in the market for comedy that isnât afraid to be moving.
Also in this weekâs Screen Gab, we ask an âAbbott Elementaryâ writer about that viral moment between Jacob and Gregory and offer streaming recommendations for your weekend. As always, we want to know what youâre watching. Pretend weâre at the water cooler and give us your review of a TV show or streaming movie youâve loved; it may be included in a future edition of Screen Gab. (Submissions should be approximately 100 to 150 words and sent to [email protected] with your name and location.)
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
âChicagoâ shouldnât have won best picture in 2003. Hereâs what should have: Times film critic Justin Chang and columnist Glenn Whipp discuss why the motion picture academyâs choices 20 years ago were far from heavenly.
Chris Rock slaps back at Will and Jada Pinkett Smith â hard â in live Netflix special: Nearly a year after Will Smithâs shocking assault at the 2022 Oscars, Rock broke his silence Saturday in the live Netflix special âSelective Outrage.â
âYouâ creator on Season 4 and having fewer sex scenes: âThereâs no morality panicâ: Sera Gamble, the showrunner of the Netflix thriller, opens up about Penn Badgleyâs reduced intimate scenes, Season 4âs twists and why writersâ contracts need a ârefresh.â
âHistory of the World, Part IIâ review: The school of Mel is in session: Mel Brooksâ 1981 film âHistory of the World, Part Iâ gets a TV series sequel with assists from Nick Kroll, Ike Barinholtz, Wanda Sykes and a cast of dozens.
Turn on
Recommendations from the film and TV experts at The Times
Iâm a sucker for a cult documentary and the morbid fascination that comes with watching people â often smart and accomplished â fall prey to obvious charlatans. But even I wasnât prepared for the sheer levels of WTF-ery on display in âStolen Youth: Inside the Cult at Sarah Lawrenceâ (Hulu), a three-part docuseries about Larry Ray, a middle-aged dad who moved into his daughterâs dorm, befriended her roommates and proceeded to coerce, abuse and extort money from several of them for the next decade. (Ray was convicted last year on federal charges of sex trafficking, extortion and racketeering.) In the first two episodes, director Zach Heinzerling uses extensive audio and video recordings to show how Ray cruelly manipulated his victims, while the final hour looks at the aftermath of his psychological reign of terror. âStolen Youthâ never really gets to the bottom of Rayâs allure, but it seems content in leaving that mystery unresolved â which ultimately makes it such an unforgettable and unsettling viewing experience. â Meredith Blake
For fans of âThe Challenge,â this is a golden era of the venerable reality competition series â and now the ever-expanding mega-franchise has its own âAvengersâ-style crossover event. Following the questionable outcome of âThe Challenge: USA,â the show has bounced back in a big way with entertaining iterations from Australia and the U.K. â its cycle through Argentina drops in April â to recruit top-level new players to pair with franchise legends in âThe Challenge: World Championshipâ (Paramount+). Linking up those international winners with big names such as Jordan, Tori, Jonna and â yes â Johnny Bananas has been a ripping good time thus far. The level of competitor is very high, daily challenges have been well-designed and the first elimination was a corker. âUSA,â âUKâ and âAustraliaâ are also streaming on Paramount+ now, so you can binge those heroesâ origins before diving into the tournament of champions (recommended â though you can pretty much skip through âUSAâ to its terrible finale). â Michael OrdoĂąa
Catch up
Everything you need to know about the film or TV series everyoneâs talking about
The American small town has long been a canvas for comedy, from Booth Tarkington to Preston Sturges, from Mayberry, N.C., to Pawnee, Ind. In that estimable tradition is Foxâs weirdly lovely âWelcome to Flatch,â whose second season recently concluded. (The first is currently available via Prime Video, while the second season streams on Hulu, with episodes also available via Fox.com.) Created by Jenny Bicks (âDivorce,â âMen in Treesâ), itâs farcical and funny, but unexpectedly can grow moving with just a look or remark. Its documentary framing and Midwestern setting might call to mind âParks & Recreationâ â not a bad thing to be reminded of, after all â but notwithstanding a âParksâ-like rivalry with a more prosperous neighboring town, the resemblance ends there. If anything, the seriesâ fictional Flatch, Ohio , is more âSchittâs Creekâ than Pawnee, and where âParksâ was a workplace comedy, âFlatchâ is rooted in the community.
A streak of melancholy unusual for a broadcast sitcom runs through the series from the beginning â not all that surprising, if you remember executive producer Paul Feigâs âFreaks & Geeksâ â with the main focus on cousins and argumentative best friends Kelly (the singular, single-named Holmes) and Shrub (Sam Straley), underdeveloped young adults whose dreams run up against their limitations, but who succeed to the extent that they imagine themselves to be successful. Where Kelly fancies herself an entrepreneur, Shrub dreams of love, and both have father issues â Kelly is desperate to connect with hers, nearby but mostly out of her life, while Shrub, in the second season, is searching for his. Somehow they mistake their anger for righteousness. Other main characters include Father Joe (Seann William Scott), formerly of a Christian boy band; his off-on girlfriend, Cheryl (Aya Cash), who edits the local paper; the formidable Big Mandy (Krystal Smith) and, in Season 2, Jaime Pressley as Barb Flatch, who has returned home from a purportedly glamorous life in Miami and sets herself up as a Realtor â not the best business to start in this hamlet, maybe, but appropriately aspirational. â Robert Lloyd
Guest spot
A weekly chat with actors, writers, directors and more about what theyâre working on â and what theyâre watching
You know Brittani Nichols is making some serious noise in Hollywood because Cate Blanchett once sat on her lap and thatâs not even what sheâs best known for. After all, the âAbbott Elementaryâ (ABC, Hulu) writer and âA Black Lady Sketch Showâ (HBO Max) alum, who first discovered her creative ambitions while poking around on Tumblr, has trained at two of TVâs best comic laboratories, recently winning an NAACP Image Award for the âAbbottâ episode âStudent Transfer.â Nichols stopped by Screen Gab to discuss her connection to the field of education, one of Season 2âs standout moments and what sheâs watching. â Matt Brennan
What have you watched recently that you are recommending to everyone you know?
Not enough people have watched âHigh Schoolâ [Freevee] based on the Tegan and Sara book! I watched it right when it came out but I still donât see enough people talking about it so Iâm still bringing it up. Iâm not a big reality TV person but âPerfect Matchâ on Netflix has me in a choke hold. I also recently saw âOf An Ageâ in theaters and loved it.
Whatâs your go-to âcomfort watch,â the movie or TV show you go back to again and again?
Iâm constantly re-watching comedies so my comfort watch rotates. Sometimes it feels like a chore just to decide what to watch, so I pick a show I love so I can throw it on during those in-between moments or before bed without having to think. Iâve done this with âThe Office,â âParks and Recreation,â âHappy Endings,â â30 Rock,â âTogethernessâ and âNew Girl.â My latest comfort re-watch was âI Think You Should Leaveâ [Netflix], which is funny now that I think about it because so much of the comedy is built on awkwardness and discomfort.
The Times has spoken previously to creator and star Quinta Brunson about her personal connection to the material through her mother, a public schoolteacher. Are there any specific people or experiences in your life that particularly inform your writing on âAbbottâ?
I have a lot of family members that work in education. The one that I keep in mind the most is my stepmom who is a Chicago Public School teacher. I donât really pull specific story lines as much as I keep in mind her approach and dedication to the craft. Especially her frustration with all of the systems and forces that complicate teachersâ ability to do their jobs.
This is kind of niche, but I have to ask: Please talk about the origins of this seasonâs viral âstop or Iâll screamâ moment, where Jacob discovers Gregoryâs feelings for Janine. I laugh every time I watch it. Which is a lot.
Randall Einhornâs direction of the scene perfectly encapsulates the power dynamic switch in the middle of the conversation and I think Jacob uncharacteristically being in the driverâs seat helped grab peopleâs attention. I think Jacob lives in constant fear of making a misstep and that allows him to fundamentally understand what social faux pas would terrify other people. So he knows that causing a scene is the last thing Gregory wants and thatâs how I got to âStop or Iâll scream.â Itâs an efficient threat and if thereâs anything Gregory respects, itâs efficiency. Everybody knows Tyler James Williams is incredible but Chris Perfetti is also a powerhouse. Not everyone can pull off, âOh my God is a woman.â I love when people that donât yet watch the show see clips out of context and are like, âOK, thatâs funny.â But then for people that watch every episode, scenes like this, that are building off of dynamics weâve been developing over time, really seem to hit. Jacob has always been a lubricant for the Gregory and Janine machine but I think people didnât realize just how much until this scene.
Whatâs next
Listings coordinator Matt Cooper highlights the TV shows and streaming movies to keep an eye on
Fri., March 10
âChang Can Dunkâ (Disney+): An Asian American teen chases his hoop dreams in this new coming-of-age comedy. Bloom Li stars.
âCorsageâ (AMC+): âThe Phantom Threadâsâ Vicky Krieps is dressed to empress in this stylish 2022 historical drama set in 19th century Austria.
âLuther: The Fallen Sunâ (Netflix): Idris Elba reprises his 2010-19 TV series role as the brilliant but troubled London detective in this 2023 thriller.
âMoonshineâ (Freevee): Thereâs a whole mess of fussinâ, feudinâ and fightinâ goinâ on in this Canadian-made dysfunctional-family comedy-drama.
âMost Dangerous Gameâ (Roku): The hunt is on â again! â in a second season of this action drama. With Christoph Waltz.
âOutlastâ (Netflix): Better pack a parka! Sixteen rugged individualists brave the Alaskan wilderness in this new competition.
âUnPrisonedâ (Hulu): âScandalâsâ Kerry Washington plays a single mom sharing a roof with her recently paroled pops (Delroy Lindo) in this new sitcom.
âKiffâ (Disney, 8 and 8:30 p.m.): A spunky squirrel and her bunny BFF have a series of misadventures in this new animated series.
âA Lifeguardâs Obsessionâ (Lifetime, 8 p.m.): He saves her life, but then he goes off the deep end in this new thriller. With Amanda Jones.
âThe New York Times Presentsâ (FX, 10 and 11:30 p.m.): A new two-part episode retells the twisted tale of notorious private eye and fixer-to-the-stars Anthony Pellicano.
Sat., March 11
âGame of Loveâ (Hallmark, 8 p.m.): A board game designer hooks up with a hunky marketing consultant in this new TV movie. With Kimberley Sustad.
âGirl in the Closetâ (Lifetime, 8 p.m.): A young girl falls into the clutches of a disturbed relative in this new fact-based TV movie. With Remy Ma.
âSaturday Night Liveâ (NBC, 8:29 and 11:29 p.m.): âWednesdayâsâ Jenna Ortega hosts and English rockers the 1975 perform.
Sun., March 12
âThe 95th Academy Awardsâ (ABC, 5 p.m.): The mind-bending 2022 multiverse fable âEverything Everywhere All at Onceâ leads the field with 11 nominations at this yearâs ceremony. Jimmy Kimmel hosts.
âThe Surrogate Scandalâ (Lifetime, 8 p.m.): A young woman agrees to carry a celebrity coupleâs child in this new thriller. With Catherine Dyer.
âThe Last of Usâ (HBO, 9 p.m.): You havenât seen the last of Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey as this post-apocalyptic drama ends its first season already renewed for a second.
âNaked and Afraid: Soloâ (Discovery, 10 p.m.): Theyâre alone again, naturally, in this new spinoff of the outdoor survival series.
âA Spy Among Friendsâ (MGM+, 10 p.m.): Guy Pearce portrays MI6 officer/Soviet double agent Kim Philby and Damian Lewis plays his bereft BFF in this new fact-based drama.
âAlien Abduction: Travis Waltonâ (Travel, 9 p.m.): An Arizona manâs close encounter of the worst kind in 1975 is revisited in this new special.
Mon., March 13
âJussie Smollett: Anatomy of a Hoaxâ (Fox Nation): This new special explores the case of the former âEmpireâ star who falsely claimed to have been the victim of a hate crime in 2019.
âGreat Performancesâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): David Strathairn portrays Jan Karski, a Polish resistance fighter who bore witness to the horrors of the Holocaust, in the fact-based solo drama âRemember This.â
âMean Girl Murdersâ and âKiller Cheerâ (Investigation Discovery, 9 and 10 p.m.): And when they were bad, they were horrid in these two new true crime series.
âThe Daily Showâ (Comedy Central, 11 p.m.; also Tuesday-Thursday): âHarold & Kumarâsâ Kal Penn is this weekâs guest host.
Tue., March 14
âBert Kreischer: Razzle Dazzleâ (Netflix): No shoes, no shirt? No problem! The bare-chested comic is back in an all-new stand-up special.
NHL Big City Greens Classic (ESPN and Disney+, 4 p.m.): You can watch the Rangers play the Capitals the normal way or supplemented with kid-friendly live animation. Your call.
âSuperman & Loisâ (The CW, 8 p.m.): The Man of Steel and his main squeeze are back for a third season. With Tyler Hoechlin and Elizabeth Tulloch.
âThe Bachelorâ (ABC, 8 p.m.): âThe Women Tell All,â as is their wont, in this special episode of the dating competition.
âGotham Knightsâ (The CW, 9 p.m.): Batmanâs gone but his legacy lives on in a new generation of young heroes in this new drama.
âFrontlineâ (KOCE, 10 p.m.): The new episode âAge of Easy Moneyâ examines the sway the Federal Reserve, a.k.a. the Fed, has over the American economy.
Wed., March 15
âMoney Shot: The Pornhub Storyâ (Netflix): Everything you always wanted to know about the controversial adult entertainment site but were afraid to ask is revealed in this new documentary.
âTed Lassoâ (Apple TV+): The feel-good comedy starring Jason Sudeikis as an American soccer coach in London kicks off a third season.
âTurning the Tables With Robin Robertsâ (Disney+): Brooke Shields and Dionne Warwick are among the journalistâs guests for Season 2.
Thu., March 16
âQueens Courtâ (Peacock): Tamar Braxton, Evelyn Lozada and R&B singer Nivea are single and looking to mingle in this new dating competition.
âShadow and Boneâ (Netflix): This dark YA fantasy drama about an orphan (Jessie Mei Li) with magical powers is back for Season 2.
NCAA Menâs Basketball Tournament (CBS, TBS, TNT and TruTV; various times.): March Madness gets underway in earnest with a weekendâs worth of matchups.
âButchers of the Bayouâ (A&E, 9 and 10 p.m.; also Friday): This new four-part series recalls a sinister rivalry between two serial killers in 1990s Baton Rouge, La.
âGrown & Gospelâ (WE tv, 9 p.m.): Five friends try to make their names in the gospel music game in this new reality series.
âGood Troubleâ (Freeform, 10 p.m.): This spinoff of âThe Fostersâ returns for a fifth season. With Cierra Ramirez and Maia Mitchell.
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.