#i watched eight episodes of resident alien today
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ethantheannus · 7 months ago
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ship of theseus
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shimmershae · 4 years ago
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Doing the nostalgia thing again.  Go figure, lol.  Anyway.  Today I’m lamenting the early departure of some shows that I watched once upon a time and there are so many.  Too many that (were) ended either right as they were getting good or just weren’t given a proper chance.  Oh what could have been.  Here are some of them, off the top of my head.  This is by no means a complete list because there have been just too many for me to remember.  Feel free to add your own.
I either follow actors/actresses that I have enjoyed in previous shows or get drawn in by the drama or fantasy or utter sci-fi-ness (lol) of it all.  
Bunheads
"Bunheads" tells the fish-out-of-water story of Michelle Simms, a once-promising classically trained professional dancer who was drawn to the lights of Las Vegas, where she became a showgirl. After she impulsively marries her persistent suitor, she moves to his sleepy California coastal town, where he lives with his mother, Fanny, herself a former dancer. Fanny now runs a local dance studio. Michelle ends up bonding with some of Fanny's students after meeting them. Among the students are sweet Boo, who struggles with her body type; rebellious Sasha, who has the talent to be a ballet dancer but doesn't have her heart in it because of family issues; shapely Ginny, who's not comfortable in her own skin; and fun-loving Melanie, ready for whatever life throws at her. The students benefit from Michelle's knowledge, but she also benefits from them as they help her adapt to small-town life.
Off the Map
Idealistic, young Dr. Lily Brenner lands at an understaffed medical clinic in a tiny town in the South American jungle. She is joined by other young doctors, all of whom are running away from personal demons. The clinic was founded by enigmatic Ben Keeton, who was formerly the youngest chief of surgery at UCLA. Keeton will teach the newcomers how to save lives in the most-challenging environment they have ever faced.
Defying Gravity
An international crew of eight astronauts -- four men and four women -- sets off on a mysterious, six-year mission covering billions of miles aboard a ship called the Antares. Inspired by the fictional docudrama "Space Odyssey: Voyage to the Planets," the show tells the story of both the astronauts as they explore Venus and the other planets in the solar system, and their supportive and dedicated ground crew. Episodes alternate between the present, on the current mission, and flashbacks to earlier years when the final eight were still in the grueling selection and training process.
Flashforward
Residents of Los Angeles go about their day unaware that a mysterious event is about to change their lives. FBI agents Mark Benford and Demetri Noh are in a car chase; Benford's physician wife is in the middle of surgery; and Benford's friend Aaron Stark works on power lines high above the ground. Suddenly, something causes everyone in the world to black out for just over two minutes. During that time, each person sees a series of events in his or her own future -- some good, some bad, some apparently nonexistent. As people begin to piece together their visions on a worldwide website, Mark and Demetri use the information to try to pinpoint the cause of the blackout, and people are still trying to determine whether destiny can be changed, and what effect those changes may have on others.
Invasion
What if natural disasters were alien smokescreens designed to mask something far more ominous? When a hurricane threatens a small town in Florida, park ranger Russell Poole's young daughter is the only one to see small lights floating towards the water, seemingly unaffected by the vicious winds. At the time, he thinks nothing of her claim, but begins to suspect something may be amiss when his missing ex-wife is found, with no memory of what happened during the storm. In the aftermath of the storm, water-based creatures infiltrate the town and take over the bodies of the town's residents through a cloning process.
V (2009)
Earth has its first encounter with an extraterrestrial race. Calling themselves the Visitors and promoting peace, they seem to be friendly, but their congeniality may be a cover for a malevolent agenda. Erica (Elizabeth Mitchell), an FBI agent, discovers a secret about the aliens that threatens the lives of Earthlings, including her teenage son, who sees them as a sign of hope. Meanwhile, Father Jack (Joel Gretsch), already questioning his faith when the Visitors arrive, seeks answers outside his church and finds other dissidents who believe the Vs are not what they claim to be. The ABC series is billed as a reimagining of a 1980s miniseries by the same name.
Hannibal
Gifted criminal profiler Will Graham has a unique way of thinking that allows him to empathize with anyone, including psychopaths. But while helping the FBI pursue a particularly complicated serial killer, he decides he could use some help and enlists the brilliant psychiatrist Hannibal Lecter. The two form a partnership and it seems that there is no villain they can't catch together, but Lecter harbors a dark secret. His own brilliant mind has gone to the dark side and he has more in common with the criminals they hunt than Will could possibly imagine.
Anne with an E
This reimagining of the classic book and film is a coming-of-age story about a young orphan who is seeking love, acceptance and her place in the world. Amybeth McNulty stars as Anne, a 13-year-old who has endured an abusive childhood in orphanages and the homes of strangers. In the late 1890s, Anne is mistakenly sent to live with aging siblings, Marilla and Matthew Cuthbert, who live on Prince Edward Island. Anne, who proves to be uniquely spirited, imaginative and smart, transforms the lives of Marilla, Matthew and everyone else in their small town.
Pitch
Talented baseball pitcher Ginny Baker immediately rises to fame when she is called up by the San Diego Padres and becomes the first woman in Major League Baseball. She immediately sets in on the task of proving herself to her teammates, starting with team captain and catcher Mike Lawson. The two share an immediate chemistry, putting Mike in the middle of tensions between the beautiful new player and certain teammates who don't appreciate a woman out on the mound. Not all of her fellow Padres are so averse to change, with center fielder Blip Sanders providing support through her journey.
Colony
In the not-too-distant future, Los Angeles has been invaded and occupied by outside forces, causing a rift between the city's residents; some have collaborated with the occupation, while others are rebelling and suffering the consequences that come with that choice. Former FBI agent Will Bowman and his wife, Katie, must consider their familial obligations when making their decision because they were separated from their son, Bram, during the invasion. Proxy Snyder, a cunning and powerful leader within the occupational government, offers Will the opportunity to get Bram back if he works with the invading faction. Will's decision doesn't sit well with Katie, but the couple risk their lives -- and their relationship -- to protect their family.
Life Unexpected 
After 15 years of being with different families in Oregon's foster-care system, Lux decides to try her luck as an emancipated minor. As she navigates the legal system in pursuit of that goal, she encounters her birth father, bar owner Nate "Baze" Bazile, living like an aging frat boy with two slacker roommates. He is stunned to learn that he has a teenage daughter and introduces Lux to her mother, radio personality Cate Cassidy, who is sad to learn her daughter has grown up in foster care but thrilled to meet and get to know the girl. She has plenty of opportunity to get acquainted when the judge decides Lux isn't ready to be emancipated and grants temporary custody to her birth parents.
Crisis
A vengeful mastermind ambushes a schoolbus carrying the children of Washington, D.C.'s, elite, abducting the children and their chaperons, and creating a national crisis. The powerful parents -- including the president himself -- find themselves at the mercy of the abductor with nowhere to turn, creating an unthinkable situation that puts the entire nation at risk. As the authorities work to rescue the children, the parents discover how far they are willing to go to protect the people they love.
Emerald City
When a tornado transports Dorothy Gale from Lucas, Kansas, to the faraway land of Oz, her arrival sets in motion a prophecy about a disastrous event known as The Beast Forever and strikes fear into the land's almighty ruler, the Wizard. On her quest to meet the Wizard in Emerald City, Dorothy encounters witches, an amnesiac soldier, a sheltered little boy and many more mysterious beings who will ultimately shape the future of Oz and Dorothy's place in it.
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ruminativerabbi · 4 years ago
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To Boldly Go
I’ve lost track of how many times I’ve watched the video released by NASA last month of Perseverance         descending towards the surface of Mars and then gently landing on it. (Click here to watch. You won’t be sorry!) I don’t know much—or rather, anything—about the aerodynamics of space parachutes, but watching this spacecraft slow down from its initial descent speed of 1000 miles per hour and then gently plop down in the center of the thirty-mile-wide Jazero Crater is just riveting. The event itself was not unprecedented—an earlier visitor named Curiosity landed on the Martian surface in 2012, but it didn’t have any cameras aboard to record the landing. (It’s still there, by the way, completing today as I write its 3137th day on Mars.) Nor was Curiosity the first vehicle to set itself down on Mars—that would be the old Soviet Union’s Mars 3 probe that landed on Mars in 1971 but only managed to convey data to earth for 14.5 seconds before conking out. And there have been other attempts as well, most notably probably the Mars Exploration Rovers of 2003 and 2004.
What intrigues me the most, I suppose, is that the point of sending Perseverance to Mars is not to collect soil samples or to chart the geography of the planet, but specifically to attempt to answer the question of whether there was ever life on Mars. It’s widely understood that Mars once flowed with water. So the question—way simpler to ask, apparently, than to answer—is whether we can find the chemical signatures of fossilized microbial life that could have flourished when Mars was wet. Perseverance, a rover the size of your average car, also has along for the ride a little helicopter named Ingenuity to fly overhead and attempt to see what would not be visible from the ground. I’m completely into it! But I have to stop thinking of Perseverance and Ingenuity as the Martian versions of Star Wars’ C-3PO and R2-D2. (That would be silly. Or would it be?)
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Like many people my age, I suppose, I grew up dreaming about the planets and about the possibility of human beings actually visiting them. Nor was I alone among my classmates at P.S. 196 to dream in that direction: space adventurism was just part of who we were back then. (I was eight years old when Alan Shepard became the first American in space, nine when John Glenn became the first American to orbit the planet.) I remember both those events clearly, but more than that I remember the specific way that neither felt like an end unto itself, but far more meaningfully as one more step forward on the great journey that would eventually bring us to Mars and beyond.
It may have been a generational thing. My parents, for example, did not dream of Mars. For them, in fact, the whole space thing was more of a contest than a science project and the specific point was not to do any specific thing at all, only to do it before the Russians got there and did it first.
But for me and my pals in fifth grade the whole space thing had nothing to do with beating the Soviets and everything to do with conquering new frontiers. Nor was this something we intuited on our own: when that disembodied voice opened every new episode of Star Trek (our favorite TV show, and by far) by referencing space as “the final frontier,” we all understood it to be saying almost clearly that our brave astronauts were merely the latter-day descendants of the brave settlers who risked everything to move west in their Conestoga wagons and establish an American presence in the western part of North America back in the nineteenth century. (That the parallel was not at all that exact—in that the crew of the Enterprise was not seeking out that “new life” and those “new civilizations” so that they could push them off their own soil and settle there themselves—did not dawn on me back then. Or at least as far as I can remember, it didn’t.)
I was on my way into twelfth grade when Neil Armstrong set foot on the surface of the moon and the sixteen-year-old me was still possessed of the same enthusiasm for our nation’s space program that the younger me felt so keenly. But I had evolved in other ways by then: I still dreamt of travel other planets, maybe eventually even to other solar systems, but an element of social justice had crept into my field of vision and part of the point of pursuing the exploration of space, my hip teenaged self thought, should be precisely to use each successive discovery as a way to combat the kind of parochialism and provincialism that allowed so many of our fellow earthlings—centuries after Copernicus—still to think of our home planet as the center of the universe.
By the 1970s, of course, no one would admit to actually thinking that. Everybody understood perfectly well that the planets were in orbit around the sun, that the solar system itself was part of a much larger galaxy that contained not some other stars, but about 400 billion of them. But although no normal person would have insisted that the sun and the stars travel around the earth, the world continued to behave as though that were the case, as though the earth were the center of all existence. The adolescent me saw in space exploration the ultimate way to combat that kind of self-serving provincialism…and, perhaps, in so doing to ween humanity away from the supposition that the universe exists to serve their needs.
By college, I had moved on in my space-fantasy-life to wonder more seriously about the search for extraterrestrial life and to wonder, given our endless interest in meeting the neighbors, if it could just possibly be the case that the neighbors were just as interested in meeting us as we were them. And if that were the case, then was it not just a matter of time before we actually would hear from them? And by “hear from them, “ I meant really hear from them, not via a momentary glimpse of a mysterious silver orb in the nighttime sky or an otherwise inexplicable blast of radio noise from somewhere out there in space—but in the specific way the residents of Hispaniola heard from Columbus on December 6, 1492, when he landed on their island—where Haiti and the Dominican Republic are today—and simultaneously changed the history of that island, this hemisphere, and the world utterly and forever in as long as it took him to step off his ship onto dry land. And yet those neighbors have never come a-calling. Or have they?
A few years ago, I wrote to you all about Oumuamua, a cigar-shaped reddish rock about 2600 feet long that scientists noticed one day hurtling through the cosmos. (To read what I had to say then, click here.) I left the matter unresolved, but had it drawn back to my attention just recently with the publication of Avi Loeb’s Extraterrestrial: The First Sign of Intelligent Life Beyond Earth, published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt in January of this year. Loeb, a professor of science at Harvard and the chairman of its Department of Astronomy, has studied all the data and concluded that the most likely explanation for the existence of Oumuamua in the first place is that it is a kind of light sail, a spaceship that gets its energy from sunlight or starlight and that was either launched by some alien civilization in our direction or else set out in the cosmos as kind of in-place space buoy (in which case it would be more correct to say that it was we who ran into it). The book was reviewed both worshipfully and harshly—some of the reviews were respectful, while others were filled with the same kind of sarcasm born of ill ease and disbelief that once greeted the theories of Copernicus or Galileo. I read the book and enjoyed it, finding the argumentation plausible and the conclusions, if not fully convincing, then at least intriguing and challenging.
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The chances are excellent that we will never find out if Professor Loeb was right or wrong about Oumuamua. It—Oumuamua itself—is long gone into interstellar space; we’ll debate it for a while, then let it fade into the background among other unproven theories relating to the distant neighbors we feel certain must exist but have, at least as yet, been unable to find any clear trace of. But I continue to feel certain that the neighbors are out there…and that they day will come when they come to call and we on earth finally have no choice but to seize just how tiny a piece of God’s great universe our little planet actually does constitute. Will that happen anytime soon? There’s no way to know…but if Professor Loeb is right about Oumuamua, the doorbell could ring now any time. It’s clear that Perseverance is not going to find Mars filled with little green Martians eager and able to establish diplomatic (and every other kind of) relations with their counterparts on Earth. But each step we take towards exploring the cosmos makes it that much more likely that we will attract the attention of extraterrestrial space watchers gazing at the heavens and waiting for signs of life on a planet other than their own.
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cupcakeshakesnake · 8 years ago
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Watching Face The Raven for the first time
-Okaaayyyy... I’m slightly worried because apparently something big happens here.
-Twelve’s adorable little snort.
-It’s all fun and games until the phone rings...
-Wassup Rigsy, you, the artsy guy!
-Countdowns always make people nervous
-But what if it’s like the number of seconds left until your next fart
-Or the number of dust particles you have yet to accidentally consume today
-”Did you make this human?”
-”She’s better than that... She’s brilliant.”  Awwww
-”Bring the new human - No, don’t bring the new human, I’ll just get distracted.”
-Oh boy
-THE CARDS ARE BACK
-526 minutes would be about... 8 hours and 46 minutes.
-CLARA DON’T FALL OFF
-OH GREAT SHE’S IMITATING ELEVEN NOW
-Well at least she ain’t hanging by her ankles
-WTF Clara do you have safety frigidity
-Count what? Buildings?
-”Pick up all my most annoying stuff.”
-DUN DUN DUN
-wtf happened WTF DID SHE DIE IS THAT IT
-What’s Eddard Stark doing in DOctor Who
-AJSGFASDHK WTF
-WHAT THE FUCK IT’S ASHIELDA
-What? Why??
-Ashielda you douchebag
-STOP IT WITH THE EARRAPE BRICKS
-How did eight hours pass so quickly, why does he only have 50 minutes now
-The fuck’s with the Judoon and the Sontarans and the aliens
-That lamp looks uncannily like a memory worm’s inside it
-Clara please don’t get distracted...
-Aw, it’s an Ood fixing a Cyberman.
-That’s adorable.
-Wow, that’s creepy.
-Ashielda you douche.
-The raven...
-FORESHADOWING
-Wait, that guy was a Cyberman? Or is she just making a comparison?
-That’s a long scream...
-R.I.P. Random dude.
-He saved his wife (presumably).
-”I’m good cop, you’re bad cop.”  “No we don’t have-- Can I be the good cop?”  “Doctor, we’ve discussed this. Your face.”
-okay you two are acting like kids
-It’s an impressive feat considering one of you’s in her twenties and the other is a 2000 year old time traveling alien
-Ok thank goodness his family is somewhat okay
-Dammit Clara
-I have a bad feeling about this
-For every minute that passes by from now on, I will write the above sentence, only more and more emphasized to show Han’s accent, until I have somethnig else to remark upon.
-I have a bad feeling about this.
-I have a baaad feeling about this.
-I, have a baaad feelin’ about this.
-HOLY SHIT
-Magical tattoo transfer, sick beats included.
-Her collar splits at the back of the neck too?! That’s one of the biggest plot twists I’ve ever encountered.
-Wait, what?
-She literally has eyes on the back of her head.
-Okay, I’ll leave now...
-The bass beat sort of things in the music. That’s new. I don’t know what to call it, the deep thump-thump beneath the orchestra. But it’s new and not bad.
-DUN DUN DUUUUN the alien person is alive.
-Can’t he sonic the keyhole?
-ASHIELDA DAMMIT
-Well, whoever ‘they’ are, they don’t sound like Daleks for once.  Like seriously. Who stole the TARDIS? The Daleks! Who messed up the timeline? The Daleks! Who stole the cake? IT’S THE FRIGGING DALEKS OF COURSE, EVERY TIME!
-But can’t Ashielda just remove Clara’s chronolock?
-Maybe she can’t?
-I don’t know why but for a moment I pictured Clara going ‘okay lol’ and chilling out
-”I’ll bring the Daleks, I’ll bring the Cybermen-”  what
-Wow, he hasn’t been this desperate since Magician’s Apprentice.
-”The Doctor is no longer here, you are stuck with me!”  Oh boy.
-shit
-Is Clara gonna be the first companion to part by death
-”Maybe this is it, maybe this is why I kept taking all those risks, kept pushing it”  Breaking News: Clara Oswald Was Suicidal All Along
-shiiit
-shit
-Just look at the Doctor, he’s so devastated
-dammit
-Doesn’t Clara have a family, isn’t she a teacher, doesn’t she have friends, what will her family do, what would the class think?
-SHIT!
-SHIIT!
-SHIT!
-DON’T DO THIS TO ME
-THIS ISN’T EVEN MOFFAT
-shit
-Meanwhile the crow is like ‘Oh I see you’re making a farewell speech, guess I’ll just wait here on your doorstep’
-What if residents of that town just freaked out every time they saw a raven or a crow even if it was a common one from the streets
-shit shit shit shit shit
-shit
-wtf why
-why
-I wasn’t ready for that
-well shit
-she dead??
-she dead?!?!?!?!?
-REALLY BBC
-I WASN’T READY FOR THAT
-They just killed her off?? Just like that???
-Wtf BBC??
-Is she really dead?
-I refuse to believe it
-Okay, everything is fine, she is gonna come back next episode and say ‘what happened lol’
-e v e r y t h i n g i s p e r f e c t l y f i n e
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N O T   O K A Y
-”I’ll do my best... But I strongly advise you to keep out of my way. You’ll find that it’s a very small universe when I’m angry with you.”  Oh boi
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He pissed
-Even the end credits narrator sounds stressed
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That is beautiful...
-SHIT THE TRAILER
-THE HEAVEN SENT TRAILER
-SHIT
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ownerwhale0-blog · 6 years ago
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Most Anticipated TV Shows of 2019
New year, new me? More like new year, tons of new television to watch while procrastinating and ignoring the outside world. From such as Chilling Adventures of Sabrina and Charmed that brought us plenty of witchy escapades to the premiere of favorites including Legacies and She-Ra, 2018 brought a slew of new shows and reboots we couldn’t wait to binge-watch. In fact, the shows this past year were so good it might be a challenge to top them.
And yet with Pretty Little Liars spin-off The Perfectionists, Shrill, and a few Netflix originals set to debut, 2019 is looking like it’s going to be an even better year for curling up in front of the TV and becoming a bit too invested in new worlds and characters. We’ve already canceled all our plans and popped our popcorn, that’s how excited we are about watching these 2019 shows.
The Perfectionists
When Pretty Little Liars ended in 2017 it felt like nothing would ever be the same again — until Freeform announced their PLL spin-off series, The Perfectionists. Created by I. Marlene King, The Perfectionists will mark the return of both Mona Vanderwaal (played by Janel Parrish) and Alison DiLaurentis (Sasha Pieterse). It'll be set in the Pacific Northwest and in typical PLL style, will feature a murder mystery, and introduce a number of new characters, including Sofia Carson's Ava and Sydney Park's Caitlin. The show is rumored to be able to answer some unanswered questions from the PLL finale and bring loyal PLL fans a new show to obsess over.
Carmen Sandiego
You’re never too old to get excited about the premiere of an animated television series, especially when said TV series is a reboot of a classic '90s show. Set to premiere January 18 on Netflix, the newest version of Carmen Sandiego will include 20 episodes with Gina Rodriguez voicing the elusive woman in an iconic red hat. The show will follow Carmen Sandiego on new adventures and delve into how the woman in red became an international thief using her skills for good.
Looking for Alaska
Hulu is about to bring the John Green novel Looking for Alaska to life with an eight-episode live-action mini-series. The show will follow the life of Miles Halter (played by Charlie Plummer) as he arrives at a new boarding school. There he'll meet the mysterious and unpredictable Alaska Young (Kristine Froseth) who will change his life forever. Whether or not the mini-series will stick strictly to the book’s plot is yet to be seen, but the show is set to be a must-watch for beloved fans of the book and those that have yet to read it.
The Umbrella Academy
Christos Kalohoridis/Netflix
The live-action television adaptation of Gerard Way’s graphic novel series The Umbrella Academy is nearly upon us. Set to premiere on Netflix on February 15, The Umbrella Academy will follow a group of misfit superheroes as they band together to solve their adoptive father’s death and prevent an impending apocalypse from destroying the world. The star-studded cast includes Aidan Gallagher, Cameron Britton, Ellen Page, and Tom Hopper among many other recognizable faces.
Deadly Class
Lara Jean Covey, is that you? Nope. But, it is Lana Condor playing a deadly assassin in Syfy’s upcoming series Deadly Class. Set to debut on January 16, Deadly Class will follow Marcus Lopez (played by Benjamin Wadsworth) as he becomes acquainted with the world of assassins at his new home, King's Dominion. Based on the Rick Remender comic books, Deadly Class is an '80s-throwback that will bring together counterculture, fight scenes, and high school dynamics under one roof. The pilot is already available to stream.
Shrill
Aidy Bryant is giving us six reasons to get excited about 2019 and they all have to do with her 6-episode series Shrill. Set to premiere March 15 on Hulu, Shrill is a comedy based on the memoir Shrill: Notes From a Loud Woman by Lindy West. The show will follow Annie (played by Aidy) as she attempts to change her life, not her body, and slowly finds the confidence to love and believe in herself. Executive produced by Saturday Night Live producer Lorne Michaels and Pitch Perfect’s Elizabeth Banks, Shrill is set to be the body positive TV series we all needed in our lives.
Euphoria
HBO is also jumping into the young adult drama game. Executive produced by Drake, the show will follow a group of high school students as they navigate love and friendships in today's world of social media. And the series boasts an all-star cast: Zendaya, Sydney Sweeney (Handmaid’s Tale), Maude Apatow (Girls), Jacob Elordi (Kissing Booth), Algee Smith (The Hate U Give), Storm Reid (A Wrinkle in Time) Alexa Demi (Mid90’s), Barbie Ferreira, and Hunter Schafer.
Sex Education
Let’s be honest, there are never enough coming-of-age comedy series on television and Netflix knows it. This U.K. series from Netflix will follow Otis Thompson, a teenager who is a virgin whose mother (played by Gillian Anderson) happens to be a sex therapist. According to Variety, when Otis’s classmates find out his mother’s occupation, they persuade him and Maeve (played by Emma Mackey) to start their own underground therapy clinic. What could go wrong?
Roswell, New Mexico
We've seen plenty of great stuff from The CW this past year. After debuting the teen vampire series Legacies, rebooting Charmed, and breathing life into another season of Riverdale in 2018, fans can expect even more drama from the network in 2019 — starting with the reboot of cult classic Roswell. Set to air in January, Roswell, New Mexico is reimagining the infamous town known for its alien encounters. The show itself will focus on a relationship between Rosewell resident Liz Ortecho (Jeanine Mason) and extraterrestrial Max (Nathan Parsons) — and he might not be the only alien living among humans in this town. This version of Roswell will see the characters a bit more grown up than their high school portrayals in the original, with the first episode of the reboot including a 10-year high school reunion.
Watchmen
It looks like 2019 is going to be a big year for comics-turn television series. Watchmen, as many fans already know, was a major motion picture in 2009 that is now being re-adapted for TV. Set for a 10-episode run on HBO, the Watchmen series will reportedly be “set in an alternate history where 'superheroes' are treated as outlaws,” The Verge reported. The cast will include major stars such as Jeremy Irons (Justice League), Regina King (If Beale Street Could Talk), and Adelaide Clemens (*The Great Gatsby), among many others.
Related: 7 Spring 2019 Trends You'll See Everywhere Next Season
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Source: https://www.teenvogue.com/story/most-anticipated-tv-shows-2019
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