The actors’ and writers’ strike may affect your new favorite show. Here’s what you can watch instead
Our TV critic offers some suggestions of substitutes for current favorites that won’t be back with new episodes anytime soon.
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Our TV critic offers some suggestions of substitutes for current favorites that won’t be back with new episodes anytime soon.
With “The Afterparty: Season 2,” Washington-raised Christopher Miller wants “to inspire people to be more empathetic.” The new season premieres July 12 on Apple TV+.
Ryan Seacrest will become the “Wheel of Fortune” host after Pat Sajak’s retirement next year.
These picks show how queer TV goes beyond one-off characters, and how valuable it is for LGBTQ+ people to be portrayed with nuance and care.
The Kirkland-raised actor behind the “Walking Dead” villain Negan talks about moving to L.A., future roles and how Negan and Maggie could ever work together.
Rachel Marsh, who first dreamed of becoming an actor while growing up in Seattle, stars alongside Rob Lowe and Fred Armisen in Netflix’s “Unstable.”
We talk with Chris Coulen, executive producer of “The Ultimatum,” about Pacific Northwest casting, reality dating shows and the power of ultimatums.
Ally Maki, who grew up around Seattle, found that fiction mirrored reality in her new show, “The Big Door Prize” on Apple TV+.
Shane Johnson has found great enjoyment in playing major antagonist Cooper Saxe on “Power Book” and its sequel “Power Book II: Ghost,” now in its third season.
We followed five couples throughout Season 4 of “Love Is Blind.” But they weren’t the only ones who found love on the reality dating show on Netflix.