Regina Leader-Post

Summer gems

Three TV shows that deserve to be rediscover­ed

- HANK STUEVER

With the pandemic shutdown beginning to slow the usual open-hydrant blast of new TV shows down to a trickle, there’s an opportunit­y for viewers and critics alike to take time to discover (or re-evaluate) some recent noteworthy shows. Following are three standouts.

I MAY DESTROY YOU MONDAYS, CRAVE

There’s something captivatin­g about Michaela Coel, the creator-writer-star of this dramedy about a British social-media influencer. Arabella battles writer’s block while trying to deliver the cheeky millennial memoir she’s sold to a big publisher. Seeking escape from her work with a night of partying, Arabella blacks out and can’t fully recall what happened — except for a vague recollecti­on of being raped.

In an instant, a show that at first seems to blend the best elements of Fleabag, Euphoria and Insecure swerves in an emotionall­y startling direction, as Arabella and her two best friends (Weruche Opia and Paapa Essiedu) embark on paths of self-discovery and the recognitio­n of shared traumas.

RAMY SUNDAYS, CRAVE

Creator, star and Golden Globe winner Ramy Youssef picks up his dramedy where we left it in season 1, as the title character, a 30-year-old Muslim American in New Jersey, tries to get himself right with Allah and rejects such haram temptation­s as internet porn. Things change when Ramy joins a small mosque headed by Sheikh Ali Malik (Mahershala Ali), who helps Ramy see Islam’s core values rather than its restrictio­ns.

Through Ramy’s increased devotion, viewers get a broader understand­ing of Islam’s tenets of peace and self-awareness, in addition to Youssef ’s brand of humour, which illuminate­s the difficulti­es of being Muslim in American culture. The show exhibits a command of mood, meaning, personal integrity and the quirks of family life.

HIGHTOWN SUNDAYS, CRAVE

Here’s the tightly wound, smartly layered, compulsive­ly watchable crime drama about an alcoholic, lesbian marine fisheries agent that you’ve all been waiting for. Monica Raymund (Chicago Fire) gives a compelling performanc­e as Jackie Quiñones, whose hard-partying nights in Cape Cod’s summertime gay mecca of Provinceto­wn, Mass., are endangerin­g her day job. After one wild binge, Jackie discovers a woman’s body washed up on the beach, drawing viewers into a larger story about the cape’s deadly opioid trade.

Hightown captures a seamier side of life in this vacation paradise and becomes an enjoyable getaway of a different sort.

 ??  ?? Monica Raymund
Monica Raymund
 ??  ?? Ramy Youssef
Ramy Youssef
 ??  ?? Michaela Coel
Michaela Coel

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