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The New Republic
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TV
May 11, 2017
Graham Vyse
It’s time to stop making
Apprentice
references.
May 1, 2017
Magazine
Rachel Syme
The Liberating Obsessiveness of
I Love Dick
Jill Soloway’s new show explores the tangled lives of women in the desert.
April 28, 2017
Sarah Jones
American Gods
Is a Dark Fairytale of a Country in Crisis
Starz's new production is a brilliant, despairing look at a fracturing national myth.
April 27, 2017
Emily Atkin
Bill Nye Is Not the Right Guy to Lead the Climate Fight
He's become too jaded and political to be the face of the movement.
April 20, 2017
Magazine
Sarah Jones
The Handmaid’s Tale
Is a Warning to Conservative Women
Hulu’s adaptation of Margaret Atwood’s novel lays bare the horrors of collusion with the patriarchy.
April 11, 2017
Lovia Gyarkye
The Comedic Genius of Netflix’s
Chewing Gum
The second season of this brilliant British comedy presents a refreshing interrogation of normality.
April 10, 2017
Jo Livingstone
After Netflix: Where the Best Television Online is Hiding
Niche streaming services like AMC’s ‘Shudder’ celebrate the genres mainstream providers neglect.
April 7, 2017
Juliet Kleber
Better Call Saul
: When a Spinoff Surpasses Its Origin Story
The third season of the Bob Odenkirk-helmed show reveals a depth and pathos missing from ‘Breaking Bad.’
April 5, 2017
Graham Vyse
The Fox News workplace is as cancerous as its news coverage.
April 4, 2017
Rachel Syme
The Complicated Californian Dream of
Big Little Lies
The finale showed women who wanted more, uniting to fight for their land.
April 3, 2017
Alex Shephard
Why does Bill O’Reilly still have a job?
March 30, 2017
Juliet Kleber
Homeland
’s Guilt Trip
The show started out exploiting fears of Islamic terror. The latest season represents an awkward transition to a new political era.
March 30, 2017
Juliet Kleber
Elena Ferrante’s
My Brilliant Friend
is coming to HBO, which could be a very good thing.
March 28, 2017
Magazine
Michelle Dean
Voices of America
Can podcasts tell us more than stories of individual obsession?
March 21, 2017
Magazine
Sarah Marshall
Girls, Interrupted
How Lena Dunham defied expectations and remade TV.
March 17, 2017
Eric Armstrong
The Existential Hokiness of
Rick & Morty
The Adult Swim cartoon is steeped in cynicism and horror. It also has a bleeding heart.
March 14, 2017
Magazine
Sam Sacks
They Could Be Heroes
Today's biggest novelists are throwbacks to a simpler time.
March 7, 2017
Jeet Heer
The Worst Boss in America
Donald Trump isn't a shrewd executive. He's a workplace bully—and it's undermining his policy agenda.
March 6, 2017
Phoebe Maltz Bovy
The Perils of “Privilege”
Privilege is best understood not as a real trait, but a construction: Anyone can be “privileged” if it suits someone else’s argument.
March 2, 2017
Alex Shephard
Republican ad attacks congressional candidate for... going to college.
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