Times Colonist

Surviving R. Kelly named top show of 2019

- ALICIA RANCILIO

Entertainm­ent reporters with the Associated Press have ranked the best television stories of the year, with Surviving R. Kelly leading the way. Here are the rankings:

1. Surviving R. Kelly, Lifetime. No other series made the kind of real-world impact than this one did. Allegation­s of sexual abuse against minors followed R. Kelly for years: The superstar was even acquitted of child-pornograph­y charges in 2008. But it wasn’t until after the airing of Lifetime’s sixpart docu-series featuring testimonia­ls by alleged abuse survivors that criminal investigat­ions were kicked into high gear. He now faces criminal charges federal and state courts. Lifetime also announced last summer that it was planning a Surviving Jeffrey Epstein series.

2. Unbelievab­le, Netflix. This series about a young woman who is accused of lying about rape allegation­s and two female detectives in another state trying to catch a serial rapist is the kind of eyeopening show that isn’t just compelling television, but a lesson in treating sexual-assault victims with compassion and humanity.

3. Succession, HBO. There was no sophomore slump for this HBO series about a wealthy family that owns a major media conglomera­te. The show only upped the ante with compelling performanc­es from its entire cast, playing characters that are ruthless and not even likable, yet somehow you root for (some of) them anyway.

4. Fleabag, Amazon Prime. Not since The Thorn Birds has a forbidden romance between a woman and a priest been so exciting. Phoebe Waller-Bridge establishe­d herself as a woman in crisis in season one but season two showed her heart, with her in love with a hot priest and devoted to her sister, who is trapped in an unhappy marriage.

5. Schitt’s Creek, CBC, Pop TV. The series aired its fifth season in 2019, but the Canadian show has been a slow burn thanks to word of mouth and a run on Netflix. The comedy about a rich family that loses their fortune and moves into a rundown motel in a small town is funny and smart with rich, quirky characters.

6. The Morning Show, Apple+. Jennifer Aniston performs her best work in years as a longtime morning-show anchor whose co-host (Steve Carell) is fired for sexual misconduct. Reese Witherspoo­n co-stars as the new co-host who makes Aniston question the status quo. Their scenes together, whether getting along or at each other’s throats, are just fun.

7. Chornobyl, HBO. This series about the 1986 Soviet Union nuclear power plant disaster is grim but masterfull­y executed. An equally heartbreak­ing and horrifying scene where children marvel and play in radioactiv­e dust falling like snow will stay with you.

8. When They See Us, Netflix. Ava DuVernay did an excellent job with this four-part series about the five black and Latino teens wrongfully prosecuted for the rape of a white Central Park jogger in 1989. The interrogat­ion scenes where the boys are confused and disoriente­d are especially hard to watch, but that’s the point.

9. The Politician, Netflix. Ben Platt has already mastered Broadway, but he showed he could carry a series with The Politician. Platt shows his range as a young man obsessed with becoming student body president (a necessary step to achieve his ultimate goal of becoming president of the United States).

10. FYRE: The Greatest Party That Never Happened, Netflix. This documentar­y followed plans and hype for the kind of luxurious music festival in the Bahamas that Instagram was created for, except poor execution and overpromis­ing turned it into a failure of epic proportion­s. Hulu also released its own film on the festival featuring an interview with its organizer, Billy McFarland, but the Netflix version is better.

 ??  ?? R. Kelly is now facing criminal charges.
R. Kelly is now facing criminal charges.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada