Need a (TV) guide? We’re here to help.
Hold on a minute, isn’t summer a time for being outside? A time to emerge like pale-eyed mole-people from the comfort of our blanket forts, and to become reacquainted with a world without space heaters? What’s all this about “summer TV”?
Well, sometimes it’s too hot to be outside. Sometimes it’s so toasty your kneecaps sweat and exposure to the giant nuclear explosion in the sky becomes too much to bear. And what better way to combat heatstroke than indulging in the modern marvel of prestige television.
But you’re going to need a plan. Because boy oh boy is there a lot of televised and streamable content coming our way. In May and June at least. July and August are, as ever, lazy months.
To make the agony of choice a little more manageable we’ve assembled some highlights from this summer’s small screen offerings, as well as a big comprehensive overview of what’s to come in the next few months.
Caution: With some exceptions, we’ve left out reality TV and kids shows. Also, yes June and May are “spring” months but I choose to live in the reality where it’s already summer. Join me in my willful ignorance!
Onwards and upwards.
Between voicing the best new animated comedy of 2017, co-hosting the Independent Spirit Awards, mounting a Broadway two-hander, and touring Internationally with a whole new hour of material, beam of sunshine personified John Mulaney has been keeping busy. Filmed at Radio City Music Hall, and featuring brand spanking new material from Mulaney’s “Kid Gorgeous” tour, the Netflix special marks the comedian’s the third partnership with the streaming giant, with many more to come.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQh36eStMqk
Showtime’s adaptation of Edward St Aubyn’s literary meditation on the difficulty of carving emotional stability out of childhood trauma sees Benedict Cumberbatch as Patrick Melrose, a privileged but troubled man who wants to do (and be) better. Cumberbatch was first approached for the role after expressing his interest in a Reddit Q&A and has since described the show as a passion project. Of the story’s oscillating tone, one of the hallmarks of the books, executive producer Michael Jackson has said that the televised take has made it a priority to show how “the tragic and the comic sit side-by-side and are equally important.”
From the producers of The Babadook comes a Netflix not-zombie-zombie-movie that you definitely do not want to watch with your dad unless you have 100% made your peace with ugly sobbing in which case…proceed. Based off a 2013 short film of the same name, Cargo sees Freeman as a recently widowed (and recently infected) father with only a short amount of time to find a safe home for his baby daughter. Reports boast that Cargo is politically resonant, heartbreaking, and properly, apocalyptically, gritty without slipping into cynicism. Prep your tissues.
If ever there were a sequence of words to make me hyped as shit, “Michael B. Jordon and Michael Shannon star in a Ray Bradbury adaptation,” is as good as it gets. Boasting a big budget, a stellar cast, and a timely tale, the HBO adaptation sees HBO alum Kramer Morgenthau at the camera and boy, oh boy does Fahrenheit 451 look stunning. Bring on the neon anti-fascist reckoning and the fire! Shit’s lit!
In a glossier, more madcap reboot of Peter Weir’s 1975 Australian classic, Natalie Dormer heads up a six-part re-telling of the Joan Lindsay-penned mystery about the disappearance of three schoolgirls and a teacher on Valentine’s day in 1900. What’s been released of the show thus far has been praised as a goddamn feast for the senses, and the crème-de-la-crème of the recent wave of Oz-talgia. Unlike the hypnotic restraint of Weir’s original, Picnic at Hanging Rock looks wild, salacious, and downright juicy.
One of the biggest titles at this year’s Sundance Film Festival was “The Tale,” a film based on true events tackling the difficulties of grappling with sexual assault that held particular significance against the backdrop of the #MeToo movement. The Tale is based off the memoir of acclaimed filmmaker Jennifer Fox, and details the personal journey of a woman re-evaluating a “special” relationship she had with her two childhood mentors after reading a short story she wrote when she was 13.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FU4Xn__5Qjg
The bulletproof Defender is back, baby. And there’s a lot to look forward to: Lucy Liu directing the first episode? Check. A rebuilt, robot hand-wielding Misty Knight? Check. Luke Cage annihilating the NFL Combine? Check. Iron Fist showing up to pave the way for a live-action counterpart to Heroes for Hire? Check. The hero of Harlem has cleared his name, and become a local celebrity…the perfect time for a big bad to roll up and fuck shit up.
Preacher-turned-criminal Jesse Custer is back at it again on his road trip across America to find God, who is MIA. Where last season saw Jesse fleeing to New Orleans, along with outlaw Tulip and vampire Cassidy, season three promises an adaptation of the “Until the End of the World” comic book arc, with the trio headed to the one place Jesse has been avoiding: home. And the Angel of Death is still hot on their trail. Natch.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wwVOmTImfLA
The Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling are back with more eyeshadow, more camp, and more pile drivers. The first season was perfectly binge-worthy, ending with the gut punch reveal of Justine’s identity, Ruth and Debbie’s friendship still being on the rocks, and more ringside drama than you can stake a stolen title crown at. Round two of the suplexing saga continues, with drama about airtime, Debbie wrestling for creative control behind the camera, and a heck of a lot of navigating through the complexities of female friendship.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lo0fqaIDUB4
I’m sorry but there’s nothing you can say to me that will get me off this hype train. Leslie Knope and Ron Swanson are going to be crafty best friends and we get to watch. NBC is toting Making It as a “lighthearted competition series reuniting two of pop culture’s biggest BFFs and celebrating the creativity and craftiness of all of us.” It sounds warm, fuzzy, and perfect for a lazy summer day.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DgljcMqPG98
Sharp Objects marks HBO’s second literary adaptation with director Jean-Marc Valle, who won an Emmy last year for his work on Big Little Lies. The Gillian Flynn-penned adaptation sees a crime reporter who’s recently been released from a psychiatric hospital return to her hometown to investigate the murders of two preteens. Another thrilling/harrowing HBO summer series? Yes, please. Throw a preemptive Emmy at it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fwmhiqUPa28&feature=youtu.be
Castle Rock, the crossroads of many a Stephen King yarn, is slated as the setting of an upcoming 10-part Hulu original, produced by the likes of JJ Abrams and King himself. We do not know what we’re dealing with yet specifically, but the promise of the bulk of the Stephen King universe connected in one town means some terrible shit is liable to pop off. After all, once summer’s done, Halloween is just around the corner.
Nazi Treasure Hunters (AHC)
John Mulaney: Kid Gorgeous at Radio City (Netflix)
Being Serena (HBO)
Colony, Season 3 (USA)
Close Black (CBS)
End Game (Netflix)
Manhunt (Netflix)
Dear White People, Season 2 (Netflix)
I’m Dying Up Here, Season 2 (Showtime)
Sweetbitter (Starz)
Vida (Starz)
Motherland (Sundance Now)
Safe (Netflix)
Kevin Smith: Silent But Deadly (Showtime)
Bill Nye Saves the World, Season 2 (Netflix)
Patrick Melrose (Showtime)
Abuse of Power (Oxygen)
Ali Wong: Hard Knock Wife (Netflix)
Little Women (PBS)
Cargo (Netflix)
Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story (PBS)
Fahrenheit 451 (HBO)
Red Nose Day (NBC)
Frauda (Netflix)
Picnic at Hanging Rock (Amazon)
My Last Days, Season 2 (The CW)
The Tale (HBO)
The Fourth Estate (Showtime)
100 Code (WGN America)
Queen Sugar (OWN)
The Chinese Exclusion Act (PBS)
The Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Season 4 (Netflix)
Reverie (NBC)
November 13 (Netflix)
C.B.Strike: The Cuckoo’s Calling (Cinemax)
FLCL: Progressive (Adult Swim)
Pose (FX)
Succession (HBO)
Condor (AT&T AUDIENCE Network)
American Woman (Paramount Network)
Marvel’s Cloak & Dagger (Freeform)
Sense8, series finale (Netflix)
Alex Strangelove (Netflix)
72nd Annual Tony Awards (CBS)
Claws (TNT)
The Bold Type, Season 2 (Freeform)
The Last Defense (ABC)
Strange Angel (CBS All Access)
The Affair, Season 4 (Showtime)
Deep State (Epix)
Shades of Blue, Season 3 (NBC)
Drunk History, Season 5 (Comedy Central)
Yellowstone (Paramount Network)
Queen of the South, Season 3 (USA)
Shooter, Season 3 (USA)
Marvel’s Luke Cage, Season 2 (Netflix)
Preacher, Season 3 (AMC)
GLOW, Season 2 (Netflix)
Power, Season 5 (Starz)
Sacred Games (Netflix)
The Outpost (The CW)
Harlots, Season 2 (Hulu)
Trial and Error: Lady Killer, Season 2 (NBC)
Casual, Season 4 (Hulu)
Making It (NBC)
The Innocents (Netflix)
Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan (Amazon)
Sharp Objects (HBO)
Castle Rock (Hulu)
Better Call Saul, Season 4 (Netflix)