USA TODAY US Edition

HBO’s Fridays feature freaky fun, ‘Flyness’

The week’s most off night is the perfect spot for the network’s most offbeat fare

- Patrick Ryan

Chances are, you’ve probably been missing out on some of HBO’s smartest, strangest shows. ❚ The prestige cable network has typically reserved its most accessible, awards-friendly comedies for Sunday nights: “Veep,” “Silicon Valley” and the newly returned “Insecure” among them. But recently, the channel has cultivated a small slate of offbeat fare on Friday nights, ranging from idiosyncra­tic late-night shows to niche comedies aimed at twentysome­things.

“Friday is an interestin­g night,” says HBO’s executive VP of programmin­g Nina Rosenstein. Anchored by “Real Time With Bill Maher,” “it’s a good night to try these new formats and introduce new talent who may be a little out of the mainstream. Sunday nights are kind of our big, splashy shows and these are our shows that are a little more genre-breaking.”

USA TODAY looks at three of HBO’s new and recent Friday-night offerings that should be on your radar.

‘Random Acts of Flyness’

Like “Wyatt Cenac’s Problem Areas,” another freshman series that aired Fridays earlier this year, “Random” tackles social and cultural issues in an unconventi­onal late-night setting. But while Cenac’s show is primarily a deep dive into the problems plaguing law enforcemen­t in America

today, “Random” creator Terence Nance’s scope is much wider, using animation, music and documentar­y approaches to explore themes of blackness, sexuality, police violence and death. It’s an urgent, fantastica­l fever dream unlike anything else on TV right now, with Jon Hamm – dryly satirizing so-called “white thoughts” in the first episode – as you’ve never seen him before. (Fridays, midnight EDT/PDT)

‘Animals’

If Mickey Mouse had a drinking problem and Garfield was into bondage, you’d probably get something akin to “Animals,” which just kicked off its third season. The crudely animated comedy was conceived by newcomers Phil Matarese and Mike Luciano, and produced by the prolific sibling duo of Mark and

Jay Duplass, who have helped woo an extraordin­ary guest roster to voice characters. This season Tracy Morgan, Johnny Knoxville, Edie Falco and Lucy Liu pop in to play cats, dogs, pigeons, rats and other citydwelli­ng critters in a series of loosely related, deceptivel­y dark vignettes. (Fridays, 11:30 EDT/PDT)

‘High Maintenanc­e’

This is stoner comedy of the highest grade. Adapted from the Vimeo web series of the same name by husband-andwife duo Ben Sinclair and Katja Blichfeld, its HBO incarnatio­n follows “The Guy,” a nameless weed deliveryma­n (Sinclair) in New York as he bikes his product to a colorful cast of cannabis-smoking characters. Hannibal Buress, Lena Dunham and Dan Stevens are among the biggest names who have appeared on the show, which aired Fridays last winter and offers wry, unexpected­ly poignant glimpses into people’s lives. It’s been renewed for a third season, which is expected to premiere early next year. ( Streaming on HBO Go/ HBO Now)

 ?? ART BY HBO ?? “Random Acts of Flyness” includes everything from animation to music to documentar­y-style talk-show segments like this one with Doreen Garner and Terence Nance discussing black sexuality.
ART BY HBO “Random Acts of Flyness” includes everything from animation to music to documentar­y-style talk-show segments like this one with Doreen Garner and Terence Nance discussing black sexuality.
 ??  ?? The dark lives of city “Animals” are voiced by big-name guests.
The dark lives of city “Animals” are voiced by big-name guests.

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