I stumbled upon Old Dog, New Tricks ( Animal ) completely by chance, and I ended up loving it. It’s one of those shows that quietly appears on Netflix with little promotion but absolutely deserves more attention. A Comedy With Heart This series is genuinely funny, but it also has a lot of warmth and emotional depth. The humor feels natural, driven mostly by the characters and the situations they find themselves in rather than by forced jokes. At the center of the story is Antón (Luis Zahera), an old-school vet who spent his life working with cattle and farm animals. Because of the bad economy, he’s forced to take a job at a fancy pet clinic — exactly the kind of environment he can’t stand. He’s sarcastic, moody, stubborn, and often grumpy, but underneath all of that, he has a good heart. That balance makes him incredibly likable. Why Antón Feels So Relatable If you’re a millennial, there’s a good chance you’ll relate to Antón more than expected. The show captures that uncomfortabl...
There is a strange feeling surrounding this episode of The Boys : it is not exactly bad, but after last week’s ... this one lands with far less impact. It feels like an in-between episode — one more interested in moving pieces around the board than delivering major emotional or narrative payoffs. And at this point in the season, that is becoming a little frustrating. Still, the episode has things worth talking about. The Deep Has Finally Hit Rock Bottom At this stage, The Deep (Chace Crawford) is no longer tragic, pathetic, or even accidentally funny. He is simply disgusting. One of the few things that made him remotely human before was his affection for sea life. As absurd as it sounds, his connection with fish was the only genuinely sweet thing left in him. But after the oil incident? Even the fish hate him now. He's ending up hated by the public, mocked by his peers, and abandoned by the very creatures he claimed to love. Every episode pushes him lower. At this point, if ...