Vida: Season 1/ Episode 1 [Series Premiere] – Recap/ Review (with Spoilers)
With STARZ barely featured in “water cooler” conversation, it seems with Vida, there is a push to really be taken seriously as a network which promotes diverse stories.
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With STARZ barely featured in “water cooler” conversation, it seems with Vida, there is a push to really be taken seriously as a network which promotes diverse stories.
There is a bit of a change in the usual girl from nowhere comes to the big apple, and with Ella Purnell at the helm, this could very well get interesting.
There might actually be something that could make this spin-off interesting. However, how much longer can we get strung along?
Multiple characters have their life on the line and it seems someone we may know, Game of Thrones style, might actually die.
We’re left on a cliffhanger, but do learn who burned down Davis house and get a major development in the secret societies plot.
Sam heads to her dad’s funeral, with Joelle and surprisingly Coco, and comes to terms with, not just her guilt, but also a renewed love for her father.
Gabe and Sam have a real conversation. One that fully addresses Sam, narcissism and all, as well as Gabe and how white allies, or those who attempt to be, will forever be dealing with the learning process.
Stripped of the qualities he took upon for status, Troy is left trying to find who he is in spite, and because, of his community and upbringing.
The person behind AltIvyW is revealed, and Brooke gets added to the list of people who need their own episode.
FINALLY Joelle gets her time in the sun and while they lay it on thick what she goes through, as a dark-skinned Black woman, it’s to compensate for the topic being generally avoided.
Coco makes a new friend and puts tests that friendship with quite the task.
Lionel comes into focus as does his life after exposing the Hancocks. But, what really matters is a potential love interest you could get behind.
Three weeks after having a gun pointed at him, Reggie is only getting worse and it seems partying, sex, therapy, and alcohol aren’t doing a damn thing.
Dear White People returns and Sam is struggling to get back into her groove, until some anonymous person takes things too far.
To help you understand how hard Al’s decision was to let Earn go, we take it back to middle school where Al stuck up for Earn and it had deadly consequences.
Steins;Gate 0 attempts to inspire interest by noting Okabe feeling a world line shift, and it being noted Suzu didn’t return to the past alone.
Sexual assault, LGBT issues, alongside Ayanna making a triumphant return is featured. Alongside your usual relationship drama.
Guilt over not being the perfect mom, nor feminist, haunts June as she reminisces about her mother and how she has been as a mom.
Two pawns in Ezequiel and Marcela’s war nearly cause a massacre. However, in the end, only one ends up dying.
Fernando and Joana are doing all they can to present an alternative to the bombing but, the question is, is that the sole solution Silas wants?
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.