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Netflix has unofficially anointed July the Month of the Teen. Several adolescent-aimed projects are hitting the streaming service next month, including second seasons of Mindy Kaling’s delightful coming-of-age comedy Never Have I Ever and Outer Banks, a soapy teen drama filmed on the Carolina coast. Perhaps even more urgently, all five of the Twilight Saga films will be available for streaming.
New installments are also on the way for two popular, offbeat comedies. The subversive I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson is back for a second round of awkward sketch comedy antics. Then there’s a farewell season for Atypical, the Peabody-nominated drama about navigating the autism spectrum from the perspective of a teenager.
Ahead, a list of all the major releases headed to Netflix in July, starting with a few highlights. I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson Season 2 (July 6) Watching an episode of this sketch comedy series from SNL one-season wonder Robinson is a bit of a trip. But he, along with co-creator Zach Kanin and executive producers The Lonely Island (a.k.a.
This season welcomes some of comedy’s best and brightest into the fold, including Search Party’s John Early, Shrill’s Patti Harrison, and Bob Odenkirk in a callback to his sketch origins. Her series centers on Devi (Maitreyi Ramakrishnan), a quirky Indian-American teenager who desperately seeks approval after a family tragedy. The first season ends with Devi seemingly achieving semi-popularity, caught in a romantic crossroads between Ben (Jaren Lewison) and Paxton (Darren Barnet).
Luckily, all five of the franchise’s films—Twilight, New Moon, Eclipse, Breaking Dawn: Part 1, and Breaking Dawn: Part 2—will soon be in one place for your viewing pleasure. Relive the thrill of vampires playing baseball to a Muse song and the discomfort that can only come from seeing Taylor Lautner “imprint” on a CGI baby named Renesmee. The show’s second season, however, will premiere during vax summer—a celebration of ill-advised hookups and solving murder mysteries in crop tops.
Netflix has unofficially anointed July the Month of the Teen. Several adolescent-aimed projects are hitting the streaming service next month, including second seasons of Mindy Kaling’s delightful coming-of-age comedy Never Have I Ever and Outer Banks, a soapy teen drama filmed on the Carolina coast. Perhaps even more urgently, all five of the Twilight Saga films will be available for streaming.
New installments are also on the way for two popular, offbeat comedies. The subversive I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson is back for a second round of awkward sketch comedy antics. Then there’s a farewell season for Atypical, the Peabody-nominated drama about navigating the autism spectrum from the perspective of a teenager.
Ahead, a list of all the major releases headed to Netflix in July, starting with a few highlights. I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson Season 2 (July 6) Watching an episode of this sketch comedy series from SNL one-season wonder Robinson is a bit of a trip. But he, along with co-creator Zach Kanin and executive producers The Lonely Island (a.k.a.
This season welcomes some of comedy’s best and brightest into the fold, including Search Party’s John Early, Shrill’s Patti Harrison, and Bob Odenkirk in a callback to his sketch origins. Her series centers on Devi (Maitreyi Ramakrishnan), a quirky Indian-American teenager who desperately seeks approval after a family tragedy. The first season ends with Devi seemingly achieving semi-popularity, caught in a romantic crossroads between Ben (Jaren Lewison) and Paxton (Darren Barnet).
Luckily, all five of the franchise’s films—Twilight, New Moon, Eclipse, Breaking Dawn: Part 1, and Breaking Dawn: Part 2—will soon be in one place for your viewing pleasure. Relive the thrill of vampires playing baseball to a Muse song and the discomfort that can only come from seeing Taylor Lautner “imprint” on a CGI baby named Renesmee. The show’s second season, however, will premiere during vax summer—a celebration of ill-advised hookups and solving murder mysteries in crop tops.
Netflix has unofficially anointed July the Month of the Teen. Several adolescent-aimed projects are hitting the streaming service next month, including second seasons of Mindy Kaling’s delightful coming-of-age comedy Never Have I Ever and Outer Banks, a soapy teen drama filmed on the Carolina coast. Perhaps even more urgently, all five of the Twilight Saga films will be available for streaming.
New installments are also on the way for two popular, offbeat comedies. The subversive I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson is back for a second round of awkward sketch comedy antics. Then there’s a farewell season for Atypical, the Peabody-nominated drama about navigating the autism spectrum from the perspective of a teenager.
Ahead, a list of all the major releases headed to Netflix in July, starting with a few highlights. I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson Season 2 (July 6) Watching an episode of this sketch comedy series from SNL one-season wonder Robinson is a bit of a trip. But he, along with co-creator Zach Kanin and executive producers The Lonely Island (a.k.a.
This season welcomes some of comedy’s best and brightest into the fold, including Search Party’s John Early, Shrill’s Patti Harrison, and Bob Odenkirk in a callback to his sketch origins. Her series centers on Devi (Maitreyi Ramakrishnan), a quirky Indian-American teenager who desperately seeks approval after a family tragedy. The first season ends with Devi seemingly achieving semi-popularity, caught in a romantic crossroads between Ben (Jaren Lewison) and Paxton (Darren Barnet).
Luckily, all five of the franchise’s films—Twilight, New Moon, Eclipse, Breaking Dawn: Part 1, and Breaking Dawn: Part 2—will soon be in one place for your viewing pleasure. Relive the thrill of vampires playing baseball to a Muse song and the discomfort that can only come from seeing Taylor Lautner “imprint” on a CGI baby named Renesmee. The show’s second season, however, will premiere during vax summer—a celebration of ill-advised hookups and solving murder mysteries in crop tops.
Netflix has unofficially anointed July the Month of the Teen. Several adolescent-aimed projects are hitting the streaming service next month, including second seasons of Mindy Kaling’s delightful coming-of-age comedy Never Have I Ever and Outer Banks, a soapy teen drama filmed on the Carolina coast. Perhaps even more urgently, all five of the Twilight Saga films will be available for streaming.
New installments are also on the way for two popular, offbeat comedies. The subversive I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson is back for a second round of awkward sketch comedy antics. Then there’s a farewell season for Atypical, the Peabody-nominated drama about navigating the autism spectrum from the perspective of a teenager.
Ahead, a list of all the major releases headed to Netflix in July, starting with a few highlights. I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson Season 2 (July 6) Watching an episode of this sketch comedy series from SNL one-season wonder Robinson is a bit of a trip. But he, along with co-creator Zach Kanin and executive producers The Lonely Island (a.k.a.
This season welcomes some of comedy’s best and brightest into the fold, including Search Party’s John Early, Shrill’s Patti Harrison, and Bob Odenkirk in a callback to his sketch origins. Her series centers on Devi (Maitreyi Ramakrishnan), a quirky Indian-American teenager who desperately seeks approval after a family tragedy. The first season ends with Devi seemingly achieving semi-popularity, caught in a romantic crossroads between Ben (Jaren Lewison) and Paxton (Darren Barnet).
Luckily, all five of the franchise’s films—Twilight, New Moon, Eclipse, Breaking Dawn: Part 1, and Breaking Dawn: Part 2—will soon be in one place for your viewing pleasure. Relive the thrill of vampires playing baseball to a Muse song and the discomfort that can only come from seeing Taylor Lautner “imprint” on a CGI baby named Renesmee. The show’s second season, however, will premiere during vax summer—a celebration of ill-advised hookups and solving murder mysteries in crop tops.