, the network will air "three heartfelt Yuletide tales" every weeknight, along with a more packed weekend schedule.
07.06.2020 - 17:13 / glamour.com
I May Destroy You might just be the TV show of the summer. The new, gripping drama stars Michaela Cole (Chewing Gum) as a young woman who was drugged and sexually assaulted after a night out and must piece together what happened in the following days.
The writes that Cole is in the role, so if you don't earmark this one to watch, you're missing out.And this isn't the only captivating new show or movie hitting your queues this week. Here's a list of everything you need to watch in the coming
., the network will air "three heartfelt Yuletide tales" every weeknight, along with a more packed weekend schedule.
Poet, writer and actress, Michaela Coel has many strings to her bow. And in 2016, the rising star was in the midst of one of the most exciting periods of her life.
The Killers were taking to Glastonbury’s Pyramid stage for their headline set. Topping the festival for the second time in their career (the first in 2007 – a show that was plagued with sound problems), Brandon and co.
Athlete A) and fun escapism. (The Will Ferrell and Rachel McAdams movie about Eurovision looks like...a lot!) These 10 titles, below, are the buzziest releases of the bunch.The Chi: Season three will feature the show's creator, Lena Waithe, in multiple episodes as a Chicago mayoral candidate.
the BBC show is already earning high praise for its ability to take on these topics realistically and powerfully. The first four episodes have already aired and Twitter is alight with praise, so it’s definitely one to check out.For all the latest stories on EVOKE, click here.
Brian Steinberg Senior TV EditorShowtime will give”Desus & Mero” a Sunday-night berth, putting the program in direct competition for live viewers with John Oliver’s “Last Week Tonight” on HBO.Want to read more articles like this one?
Caroline Framke Chief TV CriticWhen the night first starts to go south, Arabella (Michaela Coel) chalks it up to a mistake she’s made before. After promising herself that she’d stay sober, get productive and be good, she gives in to her restlessness and goes out for “just one drink.” Some time later — impossible to tell how much — she wakes up right back where she started, as if shaken out of a nightmare.
Adele is a huge fan of Michaela Coel’s new series “I May Destroy You”.
Singer and living legend Adele took to social media, where she praised Michaela Coel. Coel, a British genius, who is a writer and the creator behind the hit series, I May Destroy You.
Adele has hailed Michaela Coel’s new TV series as “the best thing” she has seen on British television “for years”.
I May Destroy You creator and star Michaela Coel says that writing about her sexual assault in the new Netflix show was a “cathartic” experience.The show is based on the real-life experience of Chewing Gum creator Coel being drugged and sexually abused.“It took me two and a half years all in all to write it and I didn’t do any other job,” she told Radio 1’s Newsbeat in a new interview.“It’s been quite hard but cathartic because I’m reflecting on a dark time rather than feeling it is happening to
, which has been for perpetuating white savior tropes. (It's also directed by a white man and based on a book by a white woman.)Don't watch The Help.
Peter White Television EditorThe Television Academy Foundation has added four new members to its board of directors: Endemol Shine’s Cris Abrego, Bunim/Murray Productions co-founder Jonathan Murray, OWN president Tina Perry and composer Rickey Minor.Abrego is chairman, Endemol Shine Americas, and CEO, Endemol Shine North America, and oversees shows in the U.S.
I May Destroy You—the trailer —and, if I’m being honest, by the time the credits were rolling, I still have no idea what I’m in for as the series continues. But that’s the magic of I May Destroy You.