Marcella
News

Marcella, Titans renewed; another Lethal exit; Netflix’s Chronicles of Narnia; + more

Every weekday, TMINE brings you the latest TV news from around the world

Internet TV

French TV

UK TV

  • Trailer for BBC Four’s There She Goes
  • ITV renews: Marcella
  • BBC NI: green lights legal drama Counsel, Down’s syndrome adventure drama Up and Downs, renews The Soft Border Patrol and Give My Head Peace

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

New US TV show casting

  • Brett Dier to co-star in ABC’s Schooled
  • Tequan Richmond and Tetona Jackson to star in, Leland B Martin and Lala Milan join BET’s Boomerang
  • Matt Bomer joins DC Universe’s Doom Patrol
  • Richard Roxburgh, Gina McKee, Rory Kinnear et al join HBO’s Catherine The Great
Mystery Road
News

Mystery Road, Shut Eye, The Art of More acquired; Insatiable, Candice Renoir renewed; + more

Every weekday, TMINE brings you the latest TV news from around the world

Internet TV

  • Netflix green lights: Lady of the Lake-centric Arthurian drama Cursed, with Katherine Langford…
  • renews: Insatiable
  • James Marsden and Ed Asner to co-star in Netflix’s Dead to Me
  • Trailer for Netflix’s The Ballad of Buster Scruggs
  • Trailer for Amazon’s The Romanoffs

Canadian TV

  • Cynthia Dale, Eric Peterson and Anthony Sherwood to return to, Cara Ricketts, Steve Lund and Yvonne Chapman join CBC’s Street Legal
  • Global green lights: series of medical drama Nurses

French TV

International TV

  • Lee Pace joins Youku (Hong Kong)’s Flying Tiger

UK TV

US TV

  • Teasers for season 2 of Fox’s The Gifted

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

New US TV show casting

Project Blue Book
News

Project Blue Book trailer; Creepshow TV series; + more

Every weekday, TMINE brings you the latest TV news from around the world

Internet TV

Australian TV

  • SBS green lights: series of school student explicit photo-sharing drama The Hunt

Canadian TV

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

New US TV show casting

The Crown
News

Kingdom, Ransom renewed; UnREAL cancelled; Daniel Mays joins Porters; + more

Every weekday, TMINE brings you the latest TV news from around the world

Internet TV

  • Nic Bishop, Annabella Sciorra, Molly Hagan et al to recur on Apple’s Are You Sleeping
  • Zoey Deutch, Lucy Boynton, Laura Dreyfuss et al join Netflix’s The Politician
  • James Purefoy to recur on Netflix’s Sex Education
  • Netflix renews: Kingdom
  • Teaser for season 3 of Netflix’s Stranger Things

Canadian TV

German TV

  • Das Erste green lights: city dweller and a dog on a farm drama Racko – Ein Hund für Alle Fälle (Racko – A Dog for All Cases)[subscription required]

UK TV

US TV

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

  • Charlie Matthau developing: adaptation of David Pietrusza’s 1920: The Year of the Six Presidents

New US TV show casting

The Outpost
Airdates

When’s that show you mentioned starting, TMINE? Including Kim’s Convenience, The Outpost, The Bletchley Circle: San Francisco, White Famous, Insatiable and Ghoul

Every Friday, TMINE lets you know when the latest TV shows from around the world will air in the UK

A big bunch of premiere dates this week, with only one new show getting picked up with just a vague date (“Some time in August“) – ABC (US)’s pretty dreadful Ten Days In The Valley. Otherwise, we know where and when all of the following will be showing up on UK TV and laptop screens:

Premiere dates

Kim's Convenience

Kim’s Convenience (Canada: CBC; UK: Netflix)
Premiere date: Today

Adaptation of the hugely successful Canadian stage play about a Korean family who run a convenience store. Fun but not always the funniest, I enjoyed it enough to stick around for three episodes at least.

Episode reviews: 1-2, 3

Bletchley Circle San Francisco

The Bletchley Circle: San Francisco (US: BritBox; UK: ITV)
Premiere date: Wednesday, July 25, 9pm

US-made spin-off of ITV’s The Bletchley Circle that sees a bunch of former Bletchley Park codebreakers head off to San Francisco, where they link up with some American code-breaking friends to solve crimes.

White Famous

White Famous (US: Showtime; UK: Sky Atlantic)
Premiere date: Wednesday, July 25, 11:05pm

Series supposedly based on the life of Jamie Foxx, in which comedian Jay Pharoah decides he wants to be famous not just to black people but to white people as well. And that’s going to involve some compromises, some of which might involve dealing with the rather bizarre ‘Jamie Foxx’.

Sometimes funny because of its takes on ‘soft racism’, it felt more like a weak Entourage and Jamie Foxx wanting to get a few things off his chest than anything worthwhile.

Episode reviews: 1

Insatiable

Insatiable (Netflix)
Premiere date: Friday, August 10

Insatiable tells the story of Patty, who for years has been bullied, ignored, and underestimated by those around her because of her weight. But now that she finds herself suddenly thin, Patty is out for payback against anyone who has ever made her feel bad about herself. Bob Armstrong, a disgraced attorney whose true passion is coaching beauty pageant contestant, is the only one who sees Patty’s potential, and takes her under his wing – first as a legal client, and then as a pageant contestant whom he coaches toward becoming the top pageant queen in the country. But Bob and his wife Coralee have no idea how deep Patty’s rage goes, or how far she will go to exact revenge on anyone who has ever wronged her. Bullies beware: payback’s a bitch, revenge is sweet, and if you cross Patty, you’ll be her next treat.

The comedy series, which was created by Lauren Gussis, stars Debby Ryan, Dallas Roberts, Alyssa Milano, Christopher Gorham, Erinn Westbrook, Michael Provost, Kimmy Shields, Irene Choi and Sarah Colonna. The executive producers are Lauren Gussis, Ryan Seacrest, Nina Wass, Andrea Shay, Todd Hoffman, Dennis Kim and Andy Fleming.

The Outpost

The Outpost (US: The CW; UK: Syfy)
Premiere date: Monday, August 13, 9pm

I’ve just watched the first episode of this, so consider it a review as well, to save me writing a full review.

The Outpost follows Jessica Green, ‘a strong female hero’ and the lone survivor of a race called ‘Blackbloods’. Years after her entire village is destroyed by a gang of brutal mercenaries, Talon travels to a lawless fortress on the edge of the civilised world, as she tracks the killers of her family. On her journey to this outpost, Talon discovers she possesses a mysterious supernatural power that she must learn to control in order to save herself, and defend the world against a fanatical religious dictator.

And it’s dreadful. It’s nearly unwatchable, low-budget, badly written, terribly acted dredge that is a throw-back to the syndicated likes of Relic Hunter in the 90s. If you make it past the first minute of plot-dumping dialogue, I’ll be surprised.

It desperately wants to be Game of Thrones, but it doesn’t come close to even the qualities of the somewhat similar The New Legends of Monkey – somewhat similar in that it not only features our heroine wandering around some nondescript fantasy realm, fighting mildly-threatening fantasy things, it’s stuffed full of Australians. While the present day antics are almost unwatchable, the little momentum they have is broken up by dreadful flashbacks to Green’s childhood in which everyone speaks a ludicrous made-up language (sorry in advance if it turns out to be Gaelic, as there are a lot of Irish actors around, too). Except they only speak it for about five seconds at a time before switching to English for no reason then starting again a minute later. The child who plays the younger Green looks so unlike her, too, it makes me wonder if that’s potentially even a plot point.

The fights are about the best bit of it, although the direction is so poor that you’ll spot every time a stuntwoman subs in for Green. Avoid like the zombie-alien plague. No, really. They have zombies with Alien mouths.

Ghoul

Ghoul (Netflix)
Premiere date: Tuesday, August 28

Three-part Indian  horror series about a prisoner who arrives at a remote military interrogation centre and turns the tables on his captors, exposing their most shameful secrets.