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Wednesday, November 30, 2022

'Gossip Girl' Season 1: Recap And Ending - Things To Know Before Watching Season 2 | DMT - DMT

What was it that drew us to “Gossip Girl” all those years ago? It was the show that defined scandal for a whole generation and continues to do so to this date. Over the years, we have reevaluated our love and hate for the characters over and over again. From wanting to be Serena van der Woodsen to seeing that Blair Waldorf made better sense, we have grown up. We remember thinking that Nate Archibald was the hottest but maybe the most boring character of the series, and we couldn’t wait to have our very own Chuck Bass. But all these years later, if we met them, we would prefer the sorted nature of Nate over the dangerous charm of Chuck. Dan Humphrey has redeemed himself as Joe Goldberg, and we don’t want to think of him as anything else. 

When the news of the reboot dropped, we were so resistant to the idea of it. Because scandals that were exciting as teenagers feel tiresome as adults. We re-watched the original “Gossip Girl” for the guilty pleasure and nostalgia of it but watching a whole new set of characters make their story along similar lines felt like a different ballgame. Nevertheless, we tuned in, partly out of curiosity and partly because we got paid to do so. And we were pleasantly surprised. Our review would be that it lacks the zing of the old one. But the first season did hold up to a standard. Let us take a look at the events surrounding it.


The Upper East Side Of The Modern Era

The teenagers are rich and woke, and equally snooty in 2021. They have all just emerged from the COVID-19 pandemic and are ready to rule the world. On that note, there is a lot of talk about being on top and about a constant war of sorts, but we barely ever know what that means. The teachers are tired of being disregarded by the students, when they learn about Gossip Girl. They are told that she is what is used to keep them in check. Going through it all, a group of teachers, especially Kate Keller, Jordan Glassberg, and Wendy, come up with the idea to resurrect the online personality. Their first act as Gossip Girl is to reveal that Julien Calloway, the “it girl” and the “queen bee” of Constance, got her half-sister Zoya into the school by meddling with the scholarships. The two of them had been pretending not to be in touch with each other prior to this and found themselves in a difficult situation, Julien more so because Zoya had believed that she had gotten through on her own merit. Things get messier when Gossip Girl uploads a suggestive photograph of Obie and Zoya together. Triggered by all of this, Julien comes up with a plan to make it seem like she got back at Zoya. But it doesn’t work out as they planned because Julien’s minions send an inappropriate picture from Zoya’s phone to everyone in the audience, ultimately humiliating her. Zoya and Julien have an actual falling out over this due to the latter’s inaction. Even Obie breaks up with her, citing that she has changed. There is a bit of a love triangle that happens with Obie, Julien, and Zoya. It resolves itself when Julien realizes that she has indeed lost herself somewhere along the way, despite Obie’s attempts to reconnect with her. She decides not to interfere in Zoya and Obie’s blossoming relationship and, at the same time, stops Zoya from leaving the school, and they rekindle their friendship. You know, despite the optics of it, it was really insensitive to start dating your half-sister’s boyfriend the way Zoya did. But hey, it’s all in the interest of good gossip fodder.

In the meantime, Aki and Audrey, who are a resident couple of Constance, find their relationship tested by their growing attraction to Max, who is nothing if not Chuck Bass 2.0. But Chuck Bass was not just a guy who slept with anyone and everyone. He was intelligent and ruthless. Max is neither of those things. While the two are battling their attraction to Max and its effect on their relationship, Max is smitten by a teacher, Rafa Caparros. A wrench is thrown into his carefree life when he discovers and reveals that one of his dads is looking to have an affair outside of his marriage. Devastated, Max gets more and more reckless, but he is taken care of by Rafa with a strong guiding hand. Whatever we think of his actions after that, at that time, he did his duty as a teacher and an adult. After helping him get back home, Rafa and Max finally give in to their feelings and start their affair. By this time, Audrey has already slept with him, and Aki has kissed him. They know about this and are taking the time to figure out what it means for them. Meanwhile, Max comes to know that Rafa has a habit of dating minors, and realizing that he has, in fact, been untruthful to him, he breaks off their relationship. There is a lot more drama that happens, which is basically a series of times when Zoya and Julien get on each other’s nerves, the latter’s minions tell her to outsmart her at any cost, there being some major damage, and a public acknowledgment of feelings resolving it away. There is also a bit about Gossip Girl thinking over her responsibility in the wake of a mass shooting being triggered by her. But after some introspection, Kate decides that it isn’t her fault. She is not lying anywhere. It is the people who are not honest with each other, and hence, they create these situations for themselves. Going forward, she just decides to turn off the comments on her posts.

The next obstacles for the group include Audrey and Aki sleeping with Max and then struggling to find themselves as a couple. Zoya doesn’t get along with Obie’s parents, and he sleeps with Julien because he still has feelings for her. He also admits to loving Zoya. Such an unremarkable derivation of Nate Archibald, who actually happened to be a far more sorted person than this. Meanwhile, Max sends proof of his affair with Rafa to Gossip Girl, but Rafa deletes it. However, the teachers have already seen it. To protect himself, Rafa locks them out of the account. But Max confesses anyway, in front of everyone, causing Rafa to quit his job. Also, Zoya tells Julien that their relationship cannot recover from the betrayal of her having slept with Obie. But these were just the wishy-washy scandals so far. It’s time for the real ones, which happen when Davis, who is Julien’s father, is accused of sexual assault by Gossip Girl. Julien is initially reluctant to believe it, and even Kate is ousted from the account by the other teachers as they believe that she has lost her reason for it and is just causing a lot of damage. Eventually, Julien finds proof that her father had taken advantage of women when they were in an inebriated state. This prompts her to start seeking justice for them, but her efforts are constantly misinterpreted by Gossip Girl and everyone else as trying to silence the victims.

Things blow over with Max rejecting Aki and Audrey and Zoya losing her scholarship. Obie is also firmly rejected by Julien, and things are just a big mess with Davis also breaking up with Lola. Davis signs the major chunk of his wealth over to Julien, and there is some serious drama that follows with her guardianship, which jeopardizes both her and Zoya’s position in the school and the city. However, Kate, Jordan, and Wendy have regained control over Gossip Girl, and they post a list of all the sources they have received tips from all this time. This causes chaos to break out, with people refusing to engage with Gossip Girl anymore. Also, Obie has a new girlfriend, so Monet and Luna scheme to break them up, which ends with Obie firing at Julien that they have ended without any chance of turning things around. Davis gives Nick a loan so that he can stay back in the city. This would benefit both him and Julien. Nick is hesitant to do this but seeing no other way, he agrees. Kate criticizes him for it, but there is not much she can do. Max agrees to try a three-way relationship with Aki and Audrey, with some encouragement from Luna. “Gossip Girl” Season 1 ends with Julien entering a partnership with Gossip Girl, where she agrees to send her the occasional tip-off so that she can be relevant again. Kate, aka Gossip Girl, agrees, but she has learned from her experiences. She would collaborate with Julien, however, with a condition of her own.


Final Thoughts: What Works For ‘Gossip Girl’ Season 1?

We would say that while it was a good season, it is better viewed without the shadow of the original series. Yes, that is a ridiculous expectation since what is the point otherwise? But that is just how it is. There is a whole thing about Julien being the “queen,” but she just doesn’t feel like it. Is it the actor, or is it the way she is written? And why is she the queen? Is she a popular influencer, or for some other reason? Some clarity would have spiced it all up, which is exactly what we wanted when we tuned into the show. A lot of it we could still digest, but we just can’t handle the watered-down Chuck Bass that is Max Wolfe. Also, does anybody else feel that this series keeps missing the opportunity to discuss the politics of “class passing”? It is just touching on the topic, but there is so much to explore there that it just won’t do. Either way, we are waiting for the second season just to see if it can live up to something from the original. Until then, rewatching the original “Gossip Girl” seems like the best idea.


See More: ‘Gossip Girl’ Season 2: Review – Social Wars With Spiritless Scandals


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November 30, 2022 at 06:46PM
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'Gossip Girl' Season 1: Recap And Ending - Things To Know Before Watching Season 2 | DMT - DMT
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In season 2, the Gossip Girl reboot realizes it's good to be bad - The A.V. Club

Jordan Alexander, Grace Duah, Zion Moreno, Whitney Peak, Eli Brown, Evan Mock, Emily Alyn Lind, and Thomas Doherty in Gossip Girl
Jordan Alexander, Grace Duah, Zion Moreno, Whitney Peak, Eli Brown, Evan Mock, Emily Alyn Lind, and Thomas Doherty in Gossip Girl
Photo: HBO Max

Welcome back, Upper East Siders. We hope you enjoyed your Thanksgiving gatherings (as we all know, Gossip Girl invented Thanksgiving in the late aughts) because it’s time to return to your favorite set of rich kids. Gossip Girl is unveiling her sophomore season, and it’s good. Okay, well, maybe not good— but it’s significantly better than season one.

A reboot of the iconic CW teen drama, HBO Max’s Gossip Girl had a first season with a confusing thesis. It wanted its teens to revolutionize the original, to be socially and politically conscious Gen Z bots. But we don’t want to watch these kids check their privilege; we want to watch them scheme and backstab and hook up and spend obscene amounts of money on stupid things. Gossip Girl is an escape, not a reality check. Thankfully, the writers seem to have figured that out for season two.

We begin where we left off, with the characters returning from their New Year’s romp in Hudson. Julien (Jordan Alexander) and Zoya (Whitney Peak) are living with Zoya’s dad Nick (Johnathan Fernandez), unaware that their apartment is being financed by Julien’s sex offender father (Luke Kirby). Their conflicts, thank god, have started to actually make sense for two half-sisters, with them bickering about who gets the shower first or feeling resentful over who’s getting more attention from Nick. The writers quickly undo Julien’s nonsensical deal with Gossip Girl from the end of last year’s finale but keep her on the path of trying to turn over a new leaf—that is, until Monet (Savannah Lee Smith) declares herself the new queen of Constance.

To our eyes, Monet was the missing link all along. Gossip Girl had all the pieces to work last season but wasn’t deploying them in the right ways. Season two shakes the snow globe, Monet dons a headband and lands on the throne, and suddenly we have what we needed all along: a worthy successor to Blair Waldorf.

The show knows it too. “I can’t be Blair without a Serena,” Monet taunts Julien after she manipulates her into a power struggle. Julien, beautiful and self-absorbed and convinced she’s a better person than she is, makes a much better Serena than she ever did a Blair. As Monet, Savannah Lee Smith is a delight in every scene, clearly reveling in her bitchery. For one line in particular (“Do I look like Cupid for poors?”) she seems to be channeling Leighton Meester herself. It’s telling that in the five episodes provided for review, Monet (and Luna [Zión Moreno], who still needs more to do) are missing from just one, and it’s easily the weakest of the batch.

Along with her desire to rule with an iron fist, Monet gets saddled with some mommy issues (truly making her Blair’s spiritual heir), neatly tying into what is still the most deranged plotline of the show: Gossip Girl being run by the teachers, led by Kate Keller (Tavi Gevinson). Kate got dressed down by Monet’s mother, Camille, last season, so naturally this fragile white woman spends season two desperate to get dirt on who she now sees as her arch-nemesis. Season two also throws in a new teacher with his own Gossip Girl-related agenda into the mix, and while there’s still some moralizing about the rotten system, Gossip Girl at least moves away from trying to suggest the teachers have altruistic motivations.

Gossip Girl Season 2 | Official Trailer | HBO Max

Speaking of false altruism: Zoya continues to be more caricature than character, constantly on her soapbox, jumping to conclusions, and berating her father for trying to keep the roof over their heads. Her friend Shan (Grace Duah) from last season got bumped to series regular, and her character only functions as a foil to Zoya, but at least she’s less annoying. No one is worse than Obie (Eli Brown), who should honestly be written off. His sad-sack persona is dragging down his friends, but more importantly, the show. Whoever thought this boy was going to pass for the next generation’s Nate Archibald was tragically mistaken.

And our resident throuple—Aki (Evan Mock), Audrey (Emily Alyn Lind), and Max (Thomas Doherty)—is beginning to feel out their boundaries. While Doherty and Lind brought some sexual tension to the screen in season one, their storyline in season two is dominated by repetitive misunderstandings. How many times can we watch these three gorgeous people think their relationship is falling apart only to realize everything is fine by the end of the hour? If the show could let them be happy for a second, they could turn their scheming brains toward something more interesting.

But overall, the whole production seems much more comfortable in its second outing. Many characters feel more lived-in and less reductive, and the writing has gotten much funnier. In addition to classic lines like, “It’ll make The Spectator look like a Substack,” there’s subtle referential humor that you have to be tuned in to catch, such as Obie getting his conservative girlfriend a Chris Pratt cameo for Valentine’s Day, or Gossip Girl writer Hunter Harris appearing as herself.

The show is at its best when it’s having a good time, unafraid of letting the children misbehave. Toward the end of episode three, Julien says, “I’m sick of pretending I’m some great person.” It seems Gossip Girl had the same revelation—and as a result, we’ll all have a little more fun.


Gossip Girl season 2 premieres December 1 on HBO Max.  

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November 30, 2022
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In season 2, the Gossip Girl reboot realizes it's good to be bad - The A.V. Club
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Monday, November 28, 2022

'Gossip Girl' Season 2: Review - Social Wars With Spiritless Scandals | DMT - DMT

When the first season of “Gossip Girl Reboot” was announced, we must admit that we were less than thrilled. There was this sense of distrust that the idea invoked. When the original “Gossip Girl” premiered in 2007, it was one of the most “restaurantry” shows ever. It was about the lives of the rich and privileged and about their power plays to stay on top of the social ladder. “Gossip Girl” was definitely not one of the best shows to be made around such a topic. But what made it iconic—a status it retains to this day—was the strength of its characters. Seriously, a bunch of teenagers with the pettiest struggles framed in the most “Tolstoy-Esque” manner—it was as funny as it was engaging. However, as the years have gone by and we have grown up, age and better content have made us review our love for the show, rendering it more of a guilty pleasure than anything else. Maybe that’s why we were inclined to give the first season a chance. Honestly, we were surprised when we realized that we sort of liked it. But as the episodes went by, we saw that we liked it as a shadow of the original. This is strictly a show for teenagers or for those who are teens at heart. It follows the petty social struggles that defined the old show, but this one lacks the oomph factor, and that hasn’t been redeemed in the second season. 

Even if the plotlines could be tolerated, the characters are the show’s greatest downfall. Remember how everyone wanted to be as charming as Serena van der Woodsen but just couldn’t handle her wishy-washy behavior, yet she was undoubtedly the “it girl”? And the forever iconic Blair Waldorf. It would be fair to argue that she was the real backbone of the show. Can the writers make up their minds as to who they want to model around her? Is it Zoya, or is it Audrey? And honestly, we know that Obie is supposed to be the reboot’s Nate Archibald, but he was useless in the first season, and that hasn’t changed in the second one. But the biggest affront to our sensibilities is Chuck Bass 2.0, aka Max Wolfe. The original Chuck Bass was not just someone who was all over town. He was suave, cunning, and emotionally reckless. Max Wolfe is a poor imitation who is neither of these things. He could have been something, as we believed in the first season, but the second season just proved that his character is present only to increase the viewership with the aid of nostalgia, without any relevance to the greater storyline. Yes, an exploration of polyamorous relationships is interesting, but this series is just missing the mark. It would be unfair to say that the first season did not have substance. But the second season is just absurdly caricaturish, with plotlines that look like they were borrowed from some bad manga. What are those dialogues? What is that behavior?

Something else that has severely disappointed us since the first episode of the first season are the clothes. The original had served us with fashion moments that are still relevant, more than a decade later. It was one of the major talking points of the show. Coming to this reboot, other than a few looks here and there and mostly served by Audrey, the rest of it has just been so lackluster. Yes, they are all dressed as influencers would, but they are unable to influence us. And on that point, Hollywood has a really skewed idea of how content creators’ function, and the presentation of it through Jacqueline and Monet is extremely shallow. We also can’t help but notice how unremarkable the actors are. Serena, Blair, Nate, and the others ruled our hearts not just because of how they were written but because of how they were executed by the actors themselves. This current crop has none of that magnetism. Maybe Thomas Doherty and Emily Alin Lind, who plays Max and Audrey, are exceptions to that sentiment, but they don’t have much to go on.

“Gossip Girl” is centered around the lives of the flashy kind of rich, the ones who don’t like the silence that comes when the money is old. But maybe go easy on the metaphors and the references in the dialogues and make actual sense for a change? It was okay for one season, but now it is getting tiresome. The reason we can’t help reminiscing about the original “Gossip Girl” so much is that this show wouldn’t stand a chance if it wasn’t built on the memory of the old series. There are far too many shows and movies that are way better for us to give any attention to this one if we did not feel nostalgic for the original series. Therefore, the disappointment is doubled when we are presented with such a basic product. If anything, we would say that the second season is a serious miss. Just watch the first season and be done with it. In fact, go back and rewatch the old show; maybe you can find those episodes when Blair and Dan were a thing. That was a beautiful subplot, and anybody who disagrees can argue with the wall. Now excuse us while we go check out some of the best moments of the OG “Gossip Girl.” It will mostly be Blair Waldorf putting people in their place. She was undoubtedly our favorite character, and she is the one this show should have tried to emulate the most for it to have a shred of success.


Note: The review is based on the first five episodes of “Gossip Girl” Season 2 provided by Warner Bros. Discovery.

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November 29, 2022 at 12:02AM
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Celebrity gossip, sightings in and around Connecticut in November - CT Insider

YES Network's John J. Filippelli honored at Aaron Judge’s ALL RISE Foundation Gala

Greenwich resident John J. Filippelli, president of the YES Network, after receiving the “Slugger Award” at Aaron Judge’s ALL RISE Foundation Gala at Cipriani on Nov. 18.

Greenwich resident John J. Filippelli, president of the YES Network, after receiving the “Slugger Award” at Aaron Judge’s ALL RISE Foundation Gala at Cipriani on Nov. 18.

Contributed photo / Matt Duarte

Greenwich resident John J. Filippelli, president of production and programming and executive producer of the YES Network, was awarded the “Slugger Award” for his work as a “heavy hitter” at Aaron Judge’s ALL RISE Foundation Gala at Cipriani in New York City in mid-November. 

Judge attended with his parents, Wayne and Patty Judge, who serves as president/executive director of ALL RISE Foundation. Also in attendance, Yankee teammates Giancarlo Stanton, DJ La Mahaiu, Anthony Rizzo and Nester Cortez, YES broadcaster and former Yankee star, Paul “The Warrior” O’Neill, and New York Yankees General Manager Brian Cashman. Meredith Marakovits, Yankees clubhouse and sideline reporter for the Yes Network, co-hosted the event with Yankees broadcaster Suzyn Waldman, who was recently inducted into the Sports Radio Hall of Fame. 

- Susie Costaregni

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November 28, 2022 at 10:26PM
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Sunday, November 27, 2022

What's On TV, Nov 27-Dec 1: Willow, Gossip Girl, Sort Of - The A.V. Club

Warwick Davis in Willow; Zión Moreno in Gossip Girl; Bilal Baig in Sort Of
Warwick Davis in Willow; Zión Moreno in Gossip Girl; Bilal Baig in Sort Of
Photo: Lucasfilm Ltd.; Barbara Nitke/HBO; HBO Max

Welcome to What’s On, our weekly picks of must-watch shows. Here’s what you need to watch from Sunday, November 27, to Thursday, December 1. All times are Eastern. [Note: The weekend edition of What’s On drops on Fridays.]


The biggies

Willow (Disney+, Wednesday, 3:01 a.m.)

Willow | Official Trailer | Disney+

Jonathan Kasdan’s Willow is a direct sequel to Ron Howard’s 1988 film of the same name. The fantasy drama follows six unlikely teammates who embark on a quest to dangerous places to fight inner (and presumably outer) demons and save the world. You know, it’s the usual stuff heroes are made of. Warwick Davis reprises his role as dwarf sorcerer Willow Ufgood, and the rest of the ensemble includes Erin Kellyman, Tony Revolori, Ellie Bamber, Christian Slater, Amar Chadha-Patel, and Ruby Cruz. The A.V. Club will recap episodes of the show weekly.


Gossip Girl (HBO Max, Thursday, 3:01 a.m.)

Gossip Girl Season 2 | Official Trailer | HBO Max

The notorious and wealthy Upper East Side teens are back in Gossip Girls second season. Joshua Safran extends the world of 2007s Gossip Girl as a new generation of Constance Ballard students have to face the titular anonymous social media account. Except this time, Gossip Girl’s identity isn’t a secret but is revealed in the premiere itself. In season two, Michelle Trachtenberg will reprise her role as Georgina Sparks from the original. Look out for The A.V. Club’s review this week.


Sort Of (HBO Max, Thursday, 3:01 a.m.)

Sort Of Season 2 Trailer

In a post-Schitt’s Creek and Kim’s Convenience world, Sort Of deserves to be your next favorite Canadian sitcom. Created by Bilal Baig and Fab Filipo, the groundbreaking series follows non-binary Pakistani immigrant Sabi Mehboob (Baig), who struggles to balance family life, their parents’ expectations, and multiple professions, such as being a bartender at an LGBTQ+ bookshop and a caregiver to the young children of a professional couple. Season one is available to stream on HBO Max, and season two will consist of six episodes.


Hidden gems

Crime Scene: The Texas Killing Fields (Netflix, Tuesday, 3:01 a.m.)

Crime Scene: The Texas Killing Fields | Official Trailer | Netflix

After The Vanishing At The Cecil Hotel and The Times Square Killer, season three of Joe Berlinger’s true-crime docuseries Crime Scene centers on League City, Texas, where at least 30 bodies of young girls and women have been found over the past 50 years on a patch of swampland. While the residents search for answers, the authorities struggle to find the perpetrators, believing these acts could be tied to ritualistic killings.


Irreverent (Peacock, Wednesday, 3:01 a.m.)

Irreverent | Official Trailer | Peacock Original

Chicago Med’s Colin Donnell is staying in the NBC family with his Australian series Irreverent, which debuts on Peacock in the U.S. Donnell plays Paulo, an American criminal who messes up his heist and is forced to go on the run in a Queensland reef town, posing as a reverend.


Branson (HBO, Thursday, 3:01 a.m.)

Branson | Official Trailer | HBO

Directed by Chris Smith, Branson is a four-part docuseries depicting Richard Branson’s 70-plus-year journey, with the billionaire himself reflecting on the costs and rewards of his relentless optimism and boundary-pushing developments. (The series was filmed about two weeks before his spaceflight.)


More good stuff

The Howard Stern Interview: Bruce Springsteen (HBO, Sunday, 9 p.m.)

The Howard Stern Interview: Bruce Springsteen | Teaser | HBO

Howard Stern’s two-hour interview with Bruce Springsteen already aired on Sirius XM, but here’s your chance to view it up close and personal. The duo candidly discuss Springsteen’s musical and personal growth, with the singer unpacking the ideas behind hits like “Born To Run” and his new studio album, Only The Strong Survive.


Snack Vs. Chef (Netflix, Wednesday, 3:01 a.m.)

Snack VS. Chef | Official Trailer | Netflix

Netflix really loves a weekly dose of either true crime docs or cooking reality shows, huh? Snack Vs. Chef features 12 contestants trying to recreate the world’s most iconic snacks, as well as invent some new ones, for a $50,000 prize. Meg Stalter and Hari Kondabolu host.


Qala (Netflix, Thursday, 3:01 a.m.)

Qala | Official Trailer | Tripti Dimri, Babil Khan, Amit Sial, Varun Grover | Netflix India

Directed by Anvita Dutt, the Bollywood movie Qala follows a talented aspiring singer who faces the pressures of success, self-doubt, and her mother’s dislike of the industry. The cast includes Triptii Dimri, Swastika Mukherjee, and Babil Khan (the son of Irrfan Khan).


Can’t miss recaps

The White Lotus (HBO, Sunday, 9 p.m.)

Welcome To Chippendales (Hulu, Tuesday, 12:01 a.m.)

Mythic Quest (Apple TV+, Friday, 12:01 a.m.)


Ending soon

The Equalizer, East New York, NCIS: Los Angeles (CBS, Sunday, 8-11 p.m., fall finales)

9-1-1 (Fox, Monday, 8 p.m., season six fall finale)

All American, All American: Homecoming (The CW, Monday, 8-10 p.m., season five fall finale)

Avenue 5 (HBO, Monday, 10 p.m., season two finale)

Queen Sugar (OWN, Tuesday, 8 p.m., series finale)

The Rookie: The Feds (ABC, Tuesday, 10 p.m., season one fall finale)

The Mighty Ducks: Gamechangers (Disney+, Wednesday, 3:01 a.m., season two finale)

The Masked Singer (FOX, Wednesday, 8 p.m., season eight finale)

Kung Fu (The CW, Wednesday, 9 p.m., season three fall finale)

Titans (HBO Max, Thursday, 3:01 a.m., season four fall finale)

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November 27, 2022 at 09:00PM
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What's On TV, Nov 27-Dec 1: Willow, Gossip Girl, Sort Of - The A.V. Club
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Video: Between men and women, who do you think gossip more? - Per Second News

What's On TV, Nov 27-Dec 1: Willow, Gossip Girl, Sort Of - The A.V. Club

Warwick Davis in Willow; Zión Moreno in Gossip Girl; Bilal Baig in Sort Of
Warwick Davis in Willow; Zión Moreno in Gossip Girl; Bilal Baig in Sort Of
Photo: Lucasfilm Ltd.; Barbara Nitke/HBO; HBO Max

Welcome to What’s On, our weekly picks of must-watch shows. Here’s what you need to watch from Sunday, November 27, to Thursday, December 1. All times are Eastern. [Note: The weekend edition of What’s On drops on Fridays.]


The biggies

Willow (Disney+, Wednesday, 3:01 a.m.)

Willow | Official Trailer | Disney+

Jonathan Kasdan’s Willow is a direct sequel to Ron Howard’s 1988 film of the same name. The fantasy drama follows six unlikely teammates who embark on a quest to dangerous places to fight inner (and presumably outer) demons and save the world. You know, it’s the usual stuff heroes are made of. Warwick Davis reprises his role as dwarf sorcerer Willow Ufgood, and the rest of the ensemble includes Erin Kellyman, Tony Revolori, Ellie Bamber, Christian Slater, Amar Chadha-Patel, and Ruby Cruz. The A.V. Club will recap episodes of the show weekly.


Gossip Girl (HBO Max, Thursday, 3:01 a.m.)

Gossip Girl Season 2 | Official Trailer | HBO Max

The notorious and wealthy Upper East Side teens are back in Gossip Girls second season. Joshua Safran extends the world of 2007s Gossip Girl as a new generation of Constance Ballard students have to face the titular anonymous social media account. Except this time, Gossip Girl’s identity isn’t a secret but is revealed in the premiere itself. In season two, Michelle Trachtenberg will reprise her role as Georgina Sparks from the original. Look out for The A.V. Club’s review this week.


Sort Of (HBO Max, Thursday, 3:01 a.m.)

Sort Of Season 2 Trailer

In a post-Schitt’s Creek and Kim’s Convenience world, Sort Of deserves to be your next favorite Canadian sitcom. Created by Bilal Baig and Fab Filipo, the groundbreaking series follows non-binary Pakistani immigrant Sabi Mehboob (Baig), who struggles to balance family life, their parents’ expectations, and multiple professions, such as being a bartender at an LGBTQ+ bookshop and a caregiver to the young children of a professional couple. Season one is available to stream on HBO Max, and season two will consist of six episodes.


Hidden gems

Crime Scene: The Texas Killing Fields (Netflix, Tuesday, 3:01 a.m.)

Crime Scene: The Texas Killing Fields | Official Trailer | Netflix

After The Vanishing At The Cecil Hotel and The Times Square Killer, season three of Joe Berlinger’s true-crime docuseries Crime Scene centers on League City, Texas, where at least 30 bodies of young girls and women have been found over the past 50 years on a patch of swampland. While the residents search for answers, the authorities struggle to find the perpetrators, believing these acts could be tied to ritualistic killings.


Irreverent (Peacock, Wednesday, 3:01 a.m.)

Irreverent | Official Trailer | Peacock Original

Chicago Med’s Colin Donnell is staying in the NBC family with his Australian series Irreverent, which debuts on Peacock in the U.S. Donnell plays Paulo, an American criminal who messes up his heist and is forced to go on the run in a Queensland reef town, posing as a reverend.


Branson (HBO, Thursday, 3:01 a.m.)

Branson | Official Trailer | HBO

Directed by Chris Smith, Branson is a four-part docuseries depicting Richard Branson’s 70-plus-year journey, with the billionaire himself reflecting on the costs and rewards of his relentless optimism and boundary-pushing developments. (The series was filmed about two weeks before his spaceflight.)


More good stuff

The Howard Stern Interview: Bruce Springsteen (HBO, Sunday, 9 p.m.)

The Howard Stern Interview: Bruce Springsteen | Teaser | HBO

Howard Stern’s two-hour interview with Bruce Springsteen already aired on Sirius XM, but here’s your chance to view it up close and personal. The duo candidly discuss Springsteen’s musical and personal growth, with the singer unpacking the ideas behind hits like “Born To Run” and his new studio album, Only The Strong Survive.


Snack Vs. Chef (Netflix, Wednesday, 3:01 a.m.)

Snack VS. Chef | Official Trailer | Netflix

Netflix really loves a weekly dose of either true crime docs or cooking reality shows, huh? Snack Vs. Chef features 12 contestants trying to recreate the world’s most iconic snacks, as well as invent some new ones, for a $50,000 prize. Meg Stalter and Hari Kondabolu host.


Qala (Netflix, Thursday, 3:01 a.m.)

Qala | Official Trailer | Tripti Dimri, Babil Khan, Amit Sial, Varun Grover | Netflix India

Directed by Anvita Dutt, the Bollywood movie Qala follows a talented aspiring singer who faces the pressures of success, self-doubt, and her mother’s dislike of the industry. The cast includes Triptii Dimri, Swastika Mukherjee, and Babil Khan (the son of Irrfan Khan).


Can’t miss recaps

The White Lotus (HBO, Sunday, 9 p.m.)

Welcome To Chippendales (Hulu, Tuesday, 12:01 a.m.)

Mythic Quest (Apple TV+, Friday, 12:01 a.m.)


Ending soon

The Equalizer, East New York, NCIS: Los Angeles (CBS, Sunday, 8-11 p.m., fall finales)

9-1-1 (Fox, Monday, 8 p.m., season six fall finale)

All American, All American: Homecoming (The CW, Monday, 8-10 p.m., season five fall finale)

Avenue 5 (HBO, Monday, 10 p.m., season two finale)

Queen Sugar (OWN, Tuesday, 8 p.m., series finale)

The Rookie: The Feds (ABC, Tuesday, 10 p.m., season one fall finale)

The Mighty Ducks: Gamechangers (Disney+, Wednesday, 3:01 a.m., season two finale)

The Masked Singer (FOX, Wednesday, 8 p.m., season eight finale)

Kung Fu (The CW, Wednesday, 9 p.m., season three fall finale)

Titans (HBO Max, Thursday, 3:01 a.m., season four fall finale)

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