#the WORST part of being an ra is your residents hitting on you
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ONE OF MY RESIDENTS LIKED MY HINGE PROFILE
#I COULDVE SWORN I HAD ALL THEIR CONTACTS BLOCKED#the WORST part of being an ra is your residents hitting on you#I SEE THEM AS MY CHILDREN#ahonice speaks
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Prompt fill for @toosicktoocare – my typical party line of “sorry this took so long” definitely applies here. I am apparently incapable of writing a quick fic. It deviates a liiiiitle from the prompt, but hope you like it bb! Your fics always inspire me so I literally loved writing this for you.
⚠️: Brief mention of panic attacks, Alcohol mention (nothing crazy, Hunk just had Too Much Fun).
There’s an alarm going off. There’s an alarm going off and it’s getting louder and harder to ignore. Keith forces his eyes open - they’re gummy with sleep and he has to blink away blurriness. He reaches out to silence his phone, but accidentally knocks it to the floor instead. It clatters against the tile and he winces.
Keith’s never been more exhausted.
Every inch of him feels leaden and uncomfortable. He coughs weakly into his pillow. The alarm is still playing, and it’s making Keith’s skin crawl. He finally manages to reach down and turn it off.
He squints at the lock-screen. It’s 2am - officially time for rounds.
Keith pulls himself out of bed and dresses sloppily, throwing on a long sleeve and a sweatshirt over his leggings. All he has to do is check the halls, make sure no one is throwing up in the bathroom, and he can go back to sleep.
This was his always his favorite part of the night or, at least, it should have been: Keith loved walking through the empty dorm. The quiet never bothered him. He’d run his hands along the beige concrete walls which were textured and bumpy from too many coats of paint, and walk down each hall meticulously. Up and down the stairs, checking the bathrooms, and all the while knowing – this is safe. This is warm, and safe, and dry.
If someone was yelling, Keith could stop it. If someone was hurting, Keith could help.
Tonight though, tonight the concrete walls and empty stairwells only made him feel worse.
Please, Keith thinks, please don’t let there be an emergency tonight.
He starts his rounds on the first floor, like always. His footsteps scrape, but he doesn’t notice. All he can hear is the badum, badum, badum of his heartbeat. His head aches along with it.
He checks the first floor and then the second and the third, and on his final walkthrough on 4, he hears the stairwell doors slam shut. There’s a laugh, clear and familiar.
Keith groans and steps out into the stairwell himself. From below, he hears voices.
“Hunk, buddy, you have to help me out, I can’t carry you upstairs by myself.”
“Mmm well I always carry you.” Hunk is slurring a little. Keith’s surprised, he’s never had to worry about Hunk. In fact, Keith secretly thinks of Hunk as his favorite resident, the only responsible Sophomore on the 3rd floor (amidst what is a group of frequent, and often frantic, partiers).
You have to cut them some slack, Shiro always said, they’re learning their limits.
That’s exactly why Keith doesn’t drink. He knows that people never really learn their limits. Some people drink and drink and drink until they pass out on the grass, or vomit all over the bathroom floor. Some people drink until their blood boils - drink until their knuckles go numb enough to hit anything that moves or breathes or stares too long.
So, Keith doesn’t drink. He doesn’t understand the appeal, anyway, and the thought of going to parties makes his throat itch. He’s tried, but every time Shiro drags him out, Keith ends up in a corner, sipping water from a red solo cup and trying to ignore the heavy and familiar loneliness of being adrift in a room full of other people.
“Hunk!! Don’t - stop that - you can’t sleep on the stairs. You already have a bad back.”
Keith takes a deep breath in. Instead of settling his agitation, it wheezes through his chest and he ends up doubled over, hands on his knees with a cough that echoes through the stairwell.
“Well, that sounds terrible.” Lance says.
Keith takes a few shallow breaths and steels himself to move. And to deal with Lance. Mostly, to deal with Lance.
If Hunk is Keith’s favorite, Lance is Keith’s personal pain in the ass. He’s been written up twice this year already, mostly because he’s always loud and open about everything and never lets Keith look the other way.
Also, Lance has a way of being someplace at exactly the worst possible time. Like now.
Keith makes his way downstairs and crosses his arms when he gets to the landing right above Lance and Hunk.
“Step up. Perfect. Step up again. You got it!! Step…” Lance looks up and catches sight of Keith, who is standing ramrod straight and frowning.
“Fu–uuuck.”
“Bad word!” Hunk says gleefully. “You owe a dollar to the jar.”
“Uh, not right now buddy, we got company.”
Hunk looks up and sees Keith. He smiles widely and waves, stumbling on the next stair. “Keith! Hi Keith!”
“Hi Hunk,” Keith says. It’s the first time he’s spoken since dinner, and his voice is low and full of gravel. “Did you have fun tonight?”
“Yeah, it was so great. Lance is the best. I love him, he’s my best friend. Lance, you know you’re my best person right?”
“Yeah, of course, and you’re totally my best person too,” Lance says, because it’s Hunk, and because it’s true. “But also, shhhhhh.”
“Why shhhh? You said only shhhhh because we would wake up Keith but he’s already awake. He’s right here.”
“I’m right here,” Keith says. It’s hard to be annoyed with Hunk in general, but especially now. Keith wants to let them go, rules be damned. But he can’t make exceptions, not when Hunk is so clearly drunk, and not when Lance is so clearly…Lance.
“Oh boy.” Lance says. “Here we go.”
This is when Keith would normally offer up a dry response, Lance would come back with some sort of dumb insult, and they would volley back and forth until Keith got fed up and either gave a warning or walked away. Except Keith barely feels well enough to be standing, and he can’t find the strength (or the clarity of thought) to play that game tonight.
Instead, Keith just sighs. “I’m sorry Hunk, I’ll have to write you up.”
“It’s okay,” Hunk says. “I know everyone thinks you’re a jerk but you’re just trying to be the best RA, right? I think you’re the best.”
Keith’s throat goes tight.
“Thanks Hunk,” he says, quiet.
Lance doesn’t let it go so easily.
“Really? You can’t let him off with a warning? He never gets this drunk. It’s literally one time.”
Keith sighs. He agrees with Lance, actually, but he can’t bend the rules just because he likes someone. He goes to say just that but his chest seizes, and he has to lean against the railing while a few barking coughs claw their way out of his throat.
“Oh shit.” Lance says, eyes wide. “Are you okay?”
“Yes,” Keith pushes away from the railing, and blinks away black spots from the edges of his vision.
“Are you…sure?”
“Yes,” Keith says again, tone brittle.
“Okay, well. If you’re gunna write him up, can you at least help us back to our room?”
There’s one long, startling moment where Keith isn’t sure he has the strength.
You can do anything for a minute, Keith thinks. This is what Shiro says to him when everything gets too much, when he can’t breathe, when he finds himself at his brother’s door panting and pale and hopeless. You can do anything for a minute, and that minute builds into two minutes, then five, then 10 and on and on.
“Of course.” Keith says, walking downstairs and grabbing under Hunk’s other arm. “Ready?”
“Yup! Hunk, we’re on the move. You good?”
“So good,” Hunk says. And he is, with one person on each side, he’s good to finish most of the climb on his own. When they get to the third floor, Keith has to brace himself on the railing with his other hand.
He’s dizzy. It feels like the floor is tipping, just slightly, just enough to make him feel like he could stumble and fall.
“Uh, Keith?”
“What,” he snaps, blinking furiously, trying to clear his vision.
“You just - stopped.”
Fuck.
“Sorry. Let’s keep going.”
“Okay,” Lance says, drawing out the word like he’s lodging a complaint.
Keith let’s it pass, and they get Hunk down the hall. Lance pulls out his keys, and swings open the dorm door. There are a few neatly arranged clothes piles, and a garden of post it notes growing out behind Hunk’s bed like a makeshift headboard. They say things like, “ur the actual best!” and “hey sexy” and “bet u get 1 million percent on ur test tmw.”
Lance has polaroid pictures taped across the walls, big groups of people, all with wide, bright smiles. They look like Lance. Keith has never noticed the room before, not really. But it feels like theirs, not like any other dorm room. It feels like they’ve made it a home.
“Thanks guys,” Hunk says, crawling into bed and making a soft, contented noise as he burrows under the covers. “Is it gross I’m not brushing my teeth?”
“Nah,” Lance says, pulling out a bottle of water from the minifridge and placing it next to Hunk on the bed.
“Cool,” Hunk yawns.
“We can,” Keith clears his throat and does his best not to wince. “We can go over write up details in the morning, okay Hunk? But you should get some sleep”
“Okie dokie Keith,” Hunk says. He’s asleep almost immediately after.
Lance, on the other hand, watches Keith with narrowing eyes. “Are you alright?”
“What?”
“You’re sick.”
“I’m - fine.” Keith says.
“Well you sound really sick.”
“Go to bed, Lance.” Keith turns around and walks out into the hallway.
“Hey, wait up!” Lance follows him out.
“What.”
Now that they’ve gotten Hunk in bed, Keith feels everything acutely again. He leans back against the wall and tries to breathe. In through his nose, out through his mouth. It’s not working, and he wants Lance to leave him alone in case he has to sit down. Keith feels his heartbeat in his ears and his fingertips and his throat and his head.
“I just – hey, you’re really pale, are you –”
Keith is unmoored. The hallway tilts and his knees buckle and the ground rushes up.
“Woah!” Lance’s voice sounds tinny and far away. Keith suddenly and desperately misses the usual richness of Lance’s voice. Keith loves listening to Lance talk, he’ll pretend he’s not paying attention, but he always is. There’s something about the warmth, the clarity of Lance’s tone, that calms some of the anxiety roped in Keith’s chest.
“Keith! Keith?!” There are cool hands on his face and Keith’s vision snaps back to focus in one nauseating blink.
“Am I - on the floor?” It’s hard to string words together, but he knows something’s wrong, he knows he’s not where he’s supposed to be.
“You passed out for a second, you scared the hell out of me.” Lance feels for Keith’s pulse. “Jeez, you’re burning.”
“I’m…?”
Keith’s not burning, he’s cold. He’s freezing, actually. But Lance’s hands feel like heaven against his skin.
“Can you sit up?”
Sit up, Keith tells himself. But his limbs don’t listen. Something feels very strange and wrong and unreal. Like knowing you’re in a dream, Keith thinks.
Lance has to help Keith sit up against the hallway wall. In an instant he realizes where he is and what’s happened and Keith scrambles to his feet.
“Hey what are you, what are you doing?” Lance yelps, grabbing Keith’s arm.
“Sorry, I’m fine, just needed a - a second.”
“You’re not fine. Like, at all.”
“Lance, you should go to bed.” Keith says, and wants more than anything to be somewhere else.
“Are you insane? You just passed out in the hallway, I’m not going to leave you alone.”
“I can take care of myself.”
“I mean, maybe, but I’m not a monster.” Lance grabs Keith’s arm to steady him. Keith makes a noise – he hadn’t even realized he was listing to the side.
“I can’t believe you helped carry Hunk upstairs. I can’t believe you’re even out of bed. What are you doing?”
“I was doing my job,” Keith says.
“I know but that’s - someone else could’ve done this tonight, right?”
“Uhm,” Keith wishes he had a conversational map. He’s not quite sure how they got here or what he’s supposed to say.
Lance tugs at Keith’s arm until they’re walking back toward Keith’s room. The door isn’t locked, and Lance pulls Keith inside and presses on his shoulders until he sits on the edge of the bed.
“Have you taken anything?” Lance asks, looking around.
“For what?”
Lance squints down at Keith. “Are you fucking with me right now, or are you really this out of it?”
“I’m –” Keith puts his head in his hands, because he can’t make his eyes stay focused. “Just confused about what you’re doing here.”
“Making sure you don’t die, apparently. Do you know how high your fever is?”
“No.”
“You’re an idiot.” Lance says, mostly to himself. “How are you at the top of our class when you’re such an idiot?”
“Oh my god,” Keith groans into his hands. “Please shut up.”
“Do you even have a thermometer?” Lance doesn’t wait for an answer. “Nevermind, I should know better. Stay here.”
“Where ‘m I gunna go,” Keith mutters under his breath, but doesn’t move until Lance gets back.
“Don’t even try to argue with me,” Lance says, hands full with a thermometer and a packet of blue pills and a bottle of water. He holds out the thermometer. Keith just stares, so Lance shoves it under Keith’s tongue.
Keith feels like he’s completely lost control of the situation.
The thermometer beeps shrilly, and Lance takes it back with a sharp breath. “Keith, what the fuck. You have a crazy high fever.”
The numbers 103.5 blink up at him.
“Is there someone I can call?”
Keith’s gotten that question a lot: after a high school fight that left him with a split lip and an expulsion warning, after his first panic attack, gasping and clutching his chest at a bus stop. After the first time he ran away and woke up on a park bench with two cops peering over him.
“No,” Keith says, prying the words from his throat. The answer is always no.
“What about Shiro?”
That get’s Keith’s attention. “How do you know Shiro?”
“Everyone knows Shiro.” Lance says. “And he’s your brother.”
“How did you - how do you know that?” Keith squeezes his eyes shut for a minute, trying to clear some of the haze in his head.
“It’s not exactly a secret, he talks about you a lot.”
“Oh,” Keith says, after a beat.
“Do you want me to call him?”
“No.” Keith says. “No. Don’t wake him up. I’m just gunna sleep.”
Lance rocks on his heels and frowns down at Keith. “I kind of feel like I can’t leave you alone.”
“You can,” Keith says, but his words are immediately thwarted by a deep, crackling cough.
“See! That sounds terrifying.”
“It’s just a cough.”
“You’re wheezing!”
“I am not.”
“You are, it sounds painful.”
“Lance…”
Lance bounces his weight from foot to foot. “What?”
“I’m supposed to be the one looking out for you, not the other way around.”
“Why not?!” Lance says, lips twisting. “You clearly need someone.”
“It’s unprofessional.”
“You’re my RA not my Professor, we’re the same age. And anyway who cares! You’re sick.”
Before Keith can argue, Lance shoves the packet of blue pills and the water at him. “Take these.”
“What is it?”
“NyQuil. Should knock you right out.”
At this point, Keith feels too terrible to argue. He claws the pills from the plastic packet and follows them with water. It stings to swallow at all, and swallowing the pills makes him gag. He manages to get them down, but he’s left panting.
He’s never felt this sick before. It’s an effort to even keep his eyes open. Each blink tugs him farther and farther into a fever fog. His thoughts dart like minnows, he can’t catch them all through the swamp in his head.
“Thanks Lance,” Keith says, his voice low and raspy.
“No problem.”
“You should go back to bed.”
“But –”
“I’m just going to pass out. You don’t have to watch me sleep.”
“But what if you get worse,” Lance asks, crossing his arms.
“I promise I’ll be fine.” Keith says, as evenly as he can. Lance can’t stand still. He’s worried, Keith thinks, he looks worried.
“Okay…” Lance says. “But I’m coming over to check on you first thing in the morning. Deal?”
“I have to talk to Hunk, so you’ll see me either way.”
“Oh my god, Keith!”
“I’m sorry,” Keith says, head spinning. “I have to.”
“Not about that, Hunk’ll be okay. But you shouldn’t be out of bed tomorrow! Like, at all”
Keith doesn’t know what to say.
“You look so sick, oh my god. Lay down.”
And Keith does. It’s about as surprising for Keith as it is for Lance.
Keith tugs his comforter up. It’s a silent, intimate moment. Lance watches with wide eyes.
Keith doesn’t have the energy to be ashamed.
“G’night,” he says, forcing his eyes back open. His eyelids are weighing him down. Each blink whispers sleep sleep sleep sleep.
“Night,” Lance says, voice low and gentle. “Feel better.”
Keith tries to answer, but he’s slipping deeper and deeper into the black, where it’s warm and quiet and still.
He feels someone push his hair back. Cool hands press against his face. It’s okay, he thinks, right before he fades to sleep. It’s okay.
#sick keith#keith kogane#lance mcclain#klance#i guess technically pre-klance????#hunk garrett#voltron#cait writes#sickfic#i love these fucking boys my god#i also love torturing keith so much#somebody Save Him
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Chalamet as ‘The King’; Colman in ‘The Crown’
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Netflix presents its November lineup. USA TODAY
By the time you get ready to relax in a tryptophan-induced slump on the couch this Thanksgiving, Netflix has many titles you can watch with the family.
What to choose? If you’re looking for drama about royalty, there’s new film “The King” and new episodes of “The Crown.” If comedy is a better genre for the fam, Seth Meyers, Mike Birbiglia and Iliza Shlesinger have new standup specials. Want a Martin Scorsese film? “The Irishman” is available at the end of the month, after a limited run in theaters. And if something set in Japan seems like a fit, look for new episodes of “Queer Eye” with Japanese heroes and the Tokyo-based Alicia Vikander love-triangle mystery “The Earthquake Bird.”
Read on for the full list of titles coming to Netflix in November. (Here’s the list of shows and movies that arrived in October.)
Kerry Washington stars in “American Son,” Timothee Chalamet stars in “The King” and Olivia Colman stars in “The Crown” Season 3, which will all be available to stream on Netflix in November. (Photo: Netflix)
New to Netflix on Nov. 1: Kerry Washington, Timothée Chalamet
American Son (Netflix Event) Kerry Washington stars as the mother of a missing boy alongside Steven Pasquale, Jeremy Jordan and Eugene Lee, who reprise their roles in this filmed version of the Broadway play.
Atypical: Season 3(Netflix Original) Sam, a teenage boy with autism, heads into his first year of college.
Drive (Netflix Film) It looks like an Indian “Fast & Furious” movie.
Fire in Paradise (Netflix Documentary) A documentary short that chronicles the California Camp Fire tragedy that began on Nov. 8, 2018.
Hache (Netflix Original) A Spanish series set in 1960s Barcelona that tells the story of Helena, a prostitute who rises up the ranks of a heroin cartel.
Hello Ninja (Netflix Family) An animated Canadian show about best friends and their cat who transform into ninjas to save the day.
Holiday in the Wild (Netflix Family) Kristin Davis plays a Manhattanite who makes her way to Africa after her son leaves for college, and runs into a pilot (Rob Lowe).
The King (Netflix Film) Timothée Chalamet stars (with Joel Edgerton, Sean Harris, Ben Mendelsohn, Robert Pattinson and Lily-Rose Depp) as a reluctant heir to the English throne who rules after the death of his tyrannical father.
The Man Without Gravity (Netflix Film) In this Italian drama, a gravity-defying boy becomes an international celebrity, but longs for an ordinary life.
Antoni Porowski, Karamo Brown, Jonathan Van Ness, Bobby Berk and Tan France find heroes to help in Japan. (Photo: Netflix)
Queer Eye: We’re in Japan! (Netflix Original) The Fab Five returns – with an interpreter – to connect with four Japanese people in need of their style.
True: Grabbleapple Harvest (Netflix Family) In this special, the Canadian cartoon focuses on why change is good, and why True and her friends should embrace autumn and Grabbleapple harvest season.
We Are the Wave (Netflix Original) A new, mysterious classmate leads teenagers into a political revolt in this German series.
Billy on the Street: Seasons 2-5
Christmas Break-In
Christmas in the Heartlands
Christmas Survival
Elliot the Littlest Reindeer
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
Grease
Holly Star
How to Be a Latin Lover
Love Jones
Mars: Season 2
Mobile Suit Gundam: Iron-Blooded Orphans: Seasons 1-2
Paid in Full
Rosemary’s Baby
Rounders
Santa Girl
Step Brothers
The Christmas Candle
The Deep: Season 3
The Game
The Matrix Revolutions
Zombieland
Nov. 4
A Holiday Engagement
Christmas Crush
Dear Santa
The Devil Next Door (Netflix Documentary) A grandfather from Cleveland is brought to trial in Israel after he’s accused of being an infamous Nazi concentration camp guard known as Ivan the Terrible.
District 9
Nov. 5
The End of the F***ing World: Season 2 (Netflix Original) USA TODAY gave a three-star review to Season 1 of the batty-fun teen rom-com, which dropped as a surprise last year.
Seth Meyers performs standup in a Netflix comedy special streaming Nov. 5. (Photo: Netflix)
Seth Meyers: Lobby Baby (Netflix Original) The “Late Night” host and “SNL” alum has his first Netflix comedy special, focused on his family.
She-Ra and the Princesses of Power: Season 4 (Netflix Family) The reboot of the 1980s series continues as Catra vows to conquer Etheria before Horde Prime arrives.
Tune in for Love (Netflix Film) A romantic Korean movie about a student and a teen who meet at a bakery.
Undercover Brother 2
Nov. 6
Scams (Netflix Original) A Japanese TV series about a young man who joins a phone-scam operation.
Nov. 7
The Body Remembers When the World Broke Open
Nov. 8
Busted!: Season 2 (Netflix Original) Amateur detectives try to solve cases in this Korean series.
The Great British Baking Show: Holidays: Season 2 (Netflix Original) Judges and bakers return to the tent for holiday-themed desserts, but will the special be better than the show’s worst season?
Greatest Events of WWII in HD Color (Netflix Original) Look out, Peter Jackson; this docuseries features colorized footage from pivotal events in World War II.
Green Eggs and Ham (Netflix Original) In this cartoon inspired by the Dr. Seuss classic, opposites Guy and Sam take a road trip to save an endangered animal.
Let It Snow (Netflix Film) A movie inspired by the best-selling book about a snowstorm that hits a small Midwestern town on Christmas Eve, starring Isabela Merced, Shameik Moore, Odeya Rush, Liv Hewson, Mitchell Hope, Kiernan Shipka, Jacob Batalon, and Joan Cusack.
Paradise Beach (Netflix Film) A man released from prison finds his gang living on a beach resort in Thailand in this French film.
Wild District: Season 2 (Netflix Original) The Latin American series follows JJ,, a man working as a hit man and trying to assimilate into civilian life.
Nov. 9
Little Things: Season 3 (Netflix Original) Indian couple Kavya and Dhruv see whether their relationship can handle long distance.
Nov. 10
Patriot Act with Hasan Minhaj: Volume 5 (Netflix Original) Minhaj’s weekly take on politics and culture is back for a second season, a year after it first aired.
Nov. 11
A Single Man
Nov. 12
Harvey Girls Forever!: Season 3 (Netflix Family) This season, the girls in the series based on the “Harvey Girls” comics give a tour to the newest resident, rich kid Richie Rich.
Jeff Garlin: Our Man In Chicago (Netflix Original) The “Curb Your Enthusiasm” and “The Goldbergs” star presents a comedy special filmed in his hometown.
Nov. 13
Maradona in Mexico (Netflix Documentary) A sports documentary about Diego Maradona, one of soccer’s greatest players.
Nov. 14
The Stranded (Netflix Original) Teenager Kraam and 36 of his classmates are stranded on a remote island after a tsunami.
Nov. 15
Avlu: Part 2 (Netflix Original) The drama about a devoted mom who goes to prison returns.
The Club (Netflix Original) Series about misfit rich kids in Mexico who find trouble selling drugs.
Alicia Vikander stars in the mysterious move “The Earthquake Bird,” based on the novel. (Photo: Murray Close)
Earthquake Bird (Netflix Film) Alicia Vikander plays a woman accused of killing her friend (Riley Keough) in this Ridley Scott-produced film set in 1980s Tokyo.
GO!: The Unforgettable Party (Netflix Family) Mia’s vacation with her dad is disrupted in this Argentinian movie.
House Arrest (Netflix Film) A fearful man locks himself in his home in this Indian film.
I’m with the Band: Nasty Cherry (Netflix Original) Charli XCX mentors an all-girl rock band in this docuseries.
Klaus (Netflix Film) Jason Schwartzman, Rashida Jones, J.K. Simmons, Joan Cusack, Will Sasso and Norm Macdonald voice characters in this Santa Claus origin story from the co-creator of “Despicable Me.”
Llama Llama: Season 2 (Netflix Family) Children’s book character Llama Llama learns new lessons and finds more adventures.
The Toys That Made Us: Season 3 (Netflix Original) The documentary continues with the histories of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Power Rangers and My Little Pony.
Nov. 16
Suffragette
Nov. 17
The Crown: Season 3 (Netflix Original) Olivia Colman (Elizabeth), Helena Bonham Carter (Princess Margaret) and Tobias Menzies (Prince Philip) lead a new cast in the third season of the British monarchy drama, set in the ’60s.
Nov. 19
Iliza: Unveiled (Netflix Original) Iliza Shlesigner stars in her fifth Netflix comedy special, and the first after her wedding.
No hay tiempo para la verguenza (There is No Time for Shame) (Netflix Documentary) A series following the life and work of provocateur fashion designer and influencer Santiago Artemis.
Nov. 20
Bikram: Yogi, Guru, Predator (Netflix Documentary) A searing look at the controversial hot yoga founder Bikram Choudhury.
Dream/Killer Lorena (Netflix Documentary) A film about Lorena Ramírez, an ultramarathon runner who dominates her races in sandals.
Nov. 21
The Knight Before Christmas (Netflix Film) “Princess Switch” star Vanessa Hudgens is back for another holiday-themed romantic film.
Nov. 22
Dino Girl Gauko (Netflix Family) In the animated series set in Japan, Naoko Watanabe is a teenager who turns into a fire-breathing dinosaur girl when she becomes angry.
Dolly Parton’s Heartstrings (Netflix Original) An anthology series that showcases the inspirations behind Parton’s songs.
The Dragon Prince: Season 3 (Netflix Family) The show about princes and an elven assassin continues as Callum and Rayla cross into the magical realm of Xadia.
High Seas: Season 2 (Netflix Original) The mysterious Spanish series set in the 1940s continues on its path to Rio de Janeiro.
Meet the Adebanjos: Seasons 1-3
Mon frère (Netflix Film) A French film about a teenager thrust from a violent home.
Nailed It! Holiday!: Season 2 (Netflix Original) Another batch of episodes about botched Christmas cakes.
Narcoworld: Dope Stories (Netflix Original) A look at the drug business from the U.S. to Brazil and France.
Nobody’s Looking (Netflix Original) A Brazilian comedy about a guardian angel.
Singapore Social (Netflix Original) A peek into the lives of young Singaporeans.
Trolls: The Beat Goes On!: Season 8 (Netflix Family) Branch, Poppy and Biggie encounter more adventures in Troll Village.
Nov. 23
End of Watch
Nov. 24
Shot Caller
Nov. 25
Dirty John: Season 1
Nov. 26
Mike Birbiglia: The New One (Netflix Original) The comedian presents his Broadway show about parenthood.
Super Monsters Save Christmas (Netflix Family) The Super Monsters team up to find Santa’s missing reindeer.
True: Winter Wishes (Netflix Family) True must save her Rainbow Kingdom from freezing over.
Nov. 27
Broken (Netflix Documentary) An investigative series that looks at what makes products including cosmetics, e-cigarettes, furniture and plastics vulnerable to fraud.
“The Irishman” will be released in theaters Nov. 1 in New York and Los Angeles, before expanding wider. It will then debut on Netflix Nov. 27. (Photo: Netflix)
The Irishman (Netflix Film) Robert De Niro, Al Pacino and Joe Pesci star in Martin Scorsese’s 3½-hour movie about the unsolved disappearance of union boss Jimmy Hoffa, which premiered to raves at New York Film Festival.
Nov. 28
Holiday Rush (Netflix Film) Family movie about a single dad (Romany Malco) who loses his job and has to stop spoiling his children.
John Crist: I Ain’t Prayin’ For That (Netflix Original) The Christian comedian talks about millennial culture during his standup tour.
Merry Happy Whatever (Netflix Original) Dennis Quaid plays a stressed dad who meets the boyfriend his daughter brings home for the holidays.
Mytho (Netflix Original) A woman pretends to be gravely ill after she suspects her husband is having an affair.
Nov. 29
Atlantics (Netflix Film) A French movie about a a young woman who falls in love with a construction worker who disappears at sea.
Chip and Potato: Season 2 (Netflix Family) The pug Chip goes on more adventures with mouse-friend Potato.
I Lost My Body (Netflix Film) A critically acclaimed animated film set in Paris about a severed hand’s search to reconnect with its body.
La Reina del Sur: Season 2
The Movies That Made Us (Netflix Original) Documentary series that takes a deep dive into seminal blockbusters.
Sugar Rush Christmas (Netflix Original) More holiday-themed competitive baking.
Leaving Nov. 1
42
300
A Dog’s Life
As Good As It Gets
Caddyshack
Caddyshack 2
Chasing Liberty
Gran Torino
Groundhog Day
Little Women
Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa
Recess: Taking the Fifth Grade
Road House
Romeo Is Bleeding
Scary Movie 2
Scream
Seal Team Six: The Raid on Osama Bin Laden
Sex and the City: The Movie
Stardust
Stitches
Taking Lives
The American
The Bank Job
The Bishop’s Wife
The House Bunny
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
The Sixth Sense
Leaving Nov. 2
Last Tango in Halifax: Season 1-3
Leaving Nov. 3
Amazing Hotels: Life Beyond the Lobby: Season 1
Leaving Nov. 5
Blue Bloods: Season 1-8
Leaving Nov. 15
Continuum: Season 1-4
Leaving Nov. 16
Mamma Mia!
Leaving Nov. 22
Nikita: Season 1-4
Leaving Nov. 23
The Red Road: Season 1-2
Leaving Nov. 25
Boyhood
Leaving Nov. 29
Coco
Leaving Nov. 30
Life Unexpected: Seasons 1-2
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