Watch[Online]! NCIS: Los Angeles Season 12 Episode 11 Free Online TV Show Though the song is nearly 30 years old, Bruce Springsteen’s “57 Channels (And Nothin’ On)” encapsulates the struggle viewers face today. With hundreds of cable channels, dozens of streaming services, and countless on-demand titles, trying to decide what to watch can feel like an endless ordeal.
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That’s where we come in. Each month, recommends 10 must-watch movies and TV shows available on streaming platforms like Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime, Disney+, HBO Max, and more. It’s a wonder any of us were able to tear ourselves away from the news for long enough to watch anything else this month, which took America from insurrection to impeachment to the inauguration of our 46th President in the space of just two weeks.
Among the best televisual distractions to debut this month are two excellent foreign-language thrillers, two very different vehicles for two very different New York cult heroes and an imperfect but extremely worthwhile addition to the Masterpiece canon—plus, as a bonus, my favorite new-to-streaming dramedy that isn’t actually new. For more recommendations, here’s my list of the best shows of 2020.
Many recommendations are for new shows, while others are for under-the-radar releases you might have missed, or classics that are about to depart a streaming service at the end of the month. If you’d like to broaden your horizons, “Attack on Titan,” one of the most successful anime series of the last decade, is in the midst of its fourth and final season. In season one, the story begins with a group of pre-teens who must defend their city from Titans, giant bloodthirsty human-like monsters who crash through the city’s walls.
As the series progresses, “Attack on Titan” focuses less on the elegantly drawn aerial battles and begins asking bigger questions about humanity, isolationism, and the inevitability of conflict.It’s been almost a year since the first coronavirus lockdown first came into effect – and it’s safe to say that Netflix has been responsible for keeping a lot of people sane with a steady stream of films and TV shows in the last year. And there’s lots more to look forward to as we head into March, with the streamer adding several new documentary and drama series and debuting a handful of intriguing new films.
Amongst the highlights of this month’s film slate is the feature directorial debut of Parks and Recreation star Amy Poehler with new move Moxie, about a high school student who starts a zine calling out sexism, as well as family comedy Yes Day and a documentary film about the life and career of iconic rapper The notorious B.I.G..
As for TV shows, there’s the latest drama from the team behind Money Heist, titled Sky Rojo, a new psychological thriller called The One based on a book of the same name and a docuseries that looks at a spate of bombings that shocked Salt Lake City’s Mormon community in 1985. There’s also a new education series starring Michelle Obama and a pair of puppets, and a reality series that sees a real estate dealer and a wedding planner fight for the budgets of various couples to be.