Looking for a comedy as your next binge? Well I've got a somewhat classic sitcom that has its pros and cons and then a delicious horror comedy that is currently a critical darling. Pick your poison!
Not Suitable for Work: Created by Mindy Kaling, this is a very Kaling show about a group of twentysomething college graduates who are pursuing their dreams in New York City. AJ and Abby (Ella Hunt and Avantika Vandanapu) are best friends with very different ambitions - AJ is excited to be a high-powered investment banker, while Abby is pursuing a career as a celebrity stylist. Across the hall from them live three men - Davis, Josh, and Kel. Davis is a finance bro who happens to work with AJ at the exact same bank and on the exact same team - what are the odds?! Josh is a rich nepo baby with journalistic ideals who is trying to "make it on his own" with a job as a PA for a famous news anchor, but he certainly did not get that job without a little name-dropping. And Kel is a medical student who actually wants to be an actor...that's gonna be quite the pivot.
Over the course of nine episodes, you will follow the career drama and romantic entanglements of these five people, and while some of it is very fun and engaging, some of it definitely has a yikes, #MeToo factor that had me shaking my head. It's very clear that this show is being written by a bunch of TV people who haven't actually held a job in finance or most other industries, so their depictions of the workplace tend to be painted with a rather broad, stereotypical brush. And the romance plots are classically Austenian (there is actually a lot of discussion of Jane Austen's novels at one point, in typical Kaling fashion), where there's a supposedly handsome and perfect suitor, but of course, he's not the right one.
This show is frothy and bingeable, and the actors are very likable. There are plot twists galore, and it's a mindless romp if you want to unplug your brain for a weekend afternoon. Also, NYC has never looked more beautiful - the final two episodes set in Christmas in the city captured all of my favorite places and made me so happy. But if you're looking for substance over style, move on. There's nothing to see here.
Widow's Bay: If you're looking for both style and substance (and are not a scaredy-cat) start bingeing this show immediately. I had no idea what I was getting into when I began, but two days later I was watching the finale and telling everyone that this was the best show in the world. Created by Katie Dippold, this is the story of a quiet New England island called Widow's Bay, and its mayor, Tom Loftis (Matthew Rhys), who is desperately trying to sell this place to tourists and help the town prosper. Unfortunately, he has no help from the locals, a bunch of dour and pessimistic folk who also believe in ghost stories and think the island is a haunted and miserable place that no one can escape. Naturally, Tom thinks all these people are ridiculous, but then...creepy things start happening. And before long, even this skeptic has to acknowledge that maybe all those ghost stories had some truth to them after all.
Is this show scary? Sure. But is it also absolutely hilarious? My God, yes. After all, it did start out as a spec script for Parks & Recreation - Leslie Knope would absolutely adore this show. Rhys' face is comic perfection, veering from disdain to confusion to horror to miserable acceptance in the space of a minute. The supporting cast, featuring comic geniuses like Jeff Hiller, Dale Dickey, and Stephen Root are all people you will recognize from TV comedies over the years, and they are a murderer's row of talent in this show. Kate O'Flynn in particular, is amazing as Patricia, Tom's assistant who really wants to help him with his agenda but also has her own horror story from when she was a teenage girl on the island; watching her shine in the Episode 8 finale was delightful.
I never knew horror comedy was a genre I would be able to watch on TV - I assumed it was restricted to a few movies a year. The writing is incandescent, the performances are brilliant, the production design and cinematography is atmospheric and creepy - it's really firing on all cylinders. This show has been an absolute revelation; I ate it all up and am ready for seconds. More please!



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