Greenleaf: Season 3/ Episode 2 “The Space Between” – Recap/ Review (with Spoilers)
Lady Mae is put on the defensive and while she is getting hit every which way, she refuses to go down without a fight.
Lady Mae is put on the defensive and while she is getting hit every which way, she refuses to go down without a fight.
Jet Trash is the kind of film where you feel like, if they just dialed it back a bit, it could have been much more satisfying.
Sharp Objects, once it gets into its groove, reminds you why mini-series make for the best method to do book adaptations.
Everybody Digital, as a platform, has promise, but it is missing a handful of bells and whistles which seem essential for lasting success.
Season 3 of Queen Sugar feels like a transition season as it wraps up the trials and tribulations of the first two seasons and preps for the show’s future.
Greenleaf returns and with Mae and James’ relationship on the rocks, the foundation of the family is splintered and puts all on unsteady ground.
Support The Girls is a tad strange, and lacks any real story, but Haley Lu Richardson and Shayna McHayle make it worth watching till the end.
August 28: A Day in the Life of a People needs to be a perennial feature on OWN, and a play done across the nation during Black History Month.
As light-skinned and bi-racial Black actresses find themselves asked about colorism, will they do more than note awareness of it?
The Innocents lacks a real, and consistent, hook, but June and Harry’s relationship, alongside a character named Kam, pushes you to hope the season will get better as it goes on.
The overall goal of Wherever I Look is to fill in that space between the average fan and critic and advise you on what’s worth experiencing.