Calvin’s team includes Belle Skinner (Arielle Kebbel), Andrea Cruz (Ash Santos), and Miles Kittle (Tatanka Means). In the sneak peek, the group heads out to track their next targets — and not by SUV. The mission takes them far off-road. Like, way off-road. Vehicles won’t cut it. They’ll need horses, and who better to lead them than a bona fide cowboy? The moment perfectly encapsulates what Marshals seems poised to explore: the balance between modern federal justice and frontier instincts. Kayce may now carry a Marshal’s badge, but his roots — and his skills — still lie in the saddle. The show’s official logline reads:
“With the Yellowstone Ranch behind him, Kayce Dutton joins an elite unit of U.S. Marshals, combining his skills as a cowboy and Navy SEAL to bring range justice to Montana, where he and his teammates must balance family, duty and the high psychological cost that comes with serving as the last line of defense in the region’s war on violence.”
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Who Else Is Involved in ‘Marshals’?
The unit is rounded out by Belle, Andrea, and Miles, while Brecken Merrill returns as Kayce’s son, Tate. Mo Brings Plenty, and Gil Birmingham also reprise their roles as longtime allies from the Broken Rock reservation. However, there’s no sign of Monica Dutton, played by Kelsey Asbille in the main series, which suggests Kayce will be dealing with more than just a new job.
Produced by Paramount Television Studios and 101 Studios, Marshals is the latest entry in Taylor Sheridan’s ever-expanding Western universe. The franchise has already delivered Yellowstone, 1883, and 1923, with more to come, including Dutton Ranch and the Montana-set offshoot The Madison. Sheridan executive produces alongside David Glasser, John Linson, Art Linson, Spencer Hudnut, Ron Burkle, David Hutkin, Bob Yari, Michael Freidman, Greg Yaitanes — and Grimes himself.
Marshals premieres Sunday, March 1, at 9 PM ET on CBS. Check out our previews of the hottest upcoming television and film projects here, at Collider’s Exclusive Spring Preview.
John Davidson has been a hot topic online for going on 24 hours. The Tourette’s advocate sparked tense reactions after he shouted the n-word while Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo were presenting during the BAFTA Awards. Despite airing hours after the show wrapped, the BBC did not edit out the racial slur. Meanwhile, they seemingly edited “Free Palestine” from a speech and alleged other tics Davidson exhibited throughout the show. As Black online spaces demand accountability across the board, Davidson is clearing the air on his intention and his controversial tic.
According to Deadline, John Davidson broke his silence on the BAFTA Awards incident on Monday. In a statement, Tourette’s campaigner clarified that he feels “deeply mortified if anyone” considers his “involuntary tics to be intentional or carry any meaning.”
“I was in attendance to celebrate the film of my life, I Swear, which, more than any film or TV documentary, explains the origins, condition, traits, and manifestations of Tourette Syndrome,” John Davidson reportedly said in the statement. He added, “I have spent my life trying to support and empower the Tourette’s community and to teach empathy, kindness, and understanding from others, and I will continue to do so.”
Additionally, Davidson said he chose to leave the BAFTA Awards early into the ceremony given that his tics were causing “distress.” Variety previously shared that Davidson had shouted other offensive things like “shut the f*ck up” during a speech and “f*ck you” during a win annoucement for a family and kids’ movie.
Delroy Lindo Says No One Checked On Him And MBJ, BBC And BAFTA Apologize
At a BAFTA Awards afterparty on Sunday, Delroy Lindo admitted that he and Michael B. Jordan did what they had to after John Davidson yelled the n-word. He told Variety that he wished someone had checked on him and MBJ after their presentation, indicating no one did.
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Elsewhere, in a statement obtained by The Shade Room, BBC didn’t explain why they failed to edit out the racial slur. However, the British outlet apologized for not doing so.
“Some viewers may have heard strong and offensive language during the BAFTA Film Awards. This arose from involuntary verbal tics associated with Tourette syndrome, and as explained during the ceremony it was not intentional. We apologize that this was not edited out prior to broadcast and it will now be removed from the version on BBC iPlayer.”
Meanwhile, in a statement BAFTA apologized to MBJ and Delroy Lindo and to “all those impacted” by John Davidson’s tic. “We would like to thank Michael and Delroy for their incredible dignity and professionalism,” it wrote.
People With Tourette’s Are Speaking Out
Amid the heated backlash on the internet, people with Tourette’s have begun sharing their experiences. Some have admitted to also having the n-word as a tic, while defending the “uncontrollable” nature of tics associated with Tourette syndrome. Others have shamed violence and ableist suggestions, and still some have pointed the finger at BBC for not going the extra mile, and airing the disheartening moment.
Ella Purnell as Lucy in Fallout Season 2 finaleImage via Prime Video
The furor surrounding HBO Max’s Heated Rivalry has barely died down; Wuthering Heights and The Housemaid are still doing major box office business. But a new erotic romance series has emerged as an online obsession. The series was released mere days after Wuthering Heights grossed over $80 million at the worldwide box office in its opening weekend, following divisive reviews that called into question its overly sexualized tone. Meanwhile, Heated Rivalry has turned out to be the breakout hit of the year, following a premiere last November in Canada. The six-episode series follows a clandestine romance between two hockey players played by Hudson Williams and Connor Storrie. Wuthering Heights, on the other hand, stars Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi as lovers on the opposite ends of the British class spectrum. The new show, which debuted on Prime Video, might have more in common with Greg Berlanti‘s hit Netflix series You.
Released on February 18, the eight-episode psychological thriller is based on a novel by Catherine Ryan Howard and stars Dove Cameronand Avan Jogia in the lead roles. It follows a couple’s relationship from innocent beginnings to a horrific twist and unfolds in a non-linear structure. The show has earned a 64% score from critics and an 84% score from audiences on the aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, indicating a clear difference in opinion. In her review, Collider’s Jasneet Singh praised the two leads and wrote that “their wild, tantalizing physical chemistry is the foundation of the show’s murder mystery.”
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Here’s the New Prime Video Erotic Thriller That’s Taking Streaming by Storm
The show in question is 56 Days, developed by Karyn Usher and Lisa Zwerling. It’s co-produced by Atomic Monster, whose founder, James Wan, serves as an executive producer. According to FlixPatrol, 56 Days is the most-watched show on the global Prime Video charts, having replaced the long-running champion Fallout and the reality series Beast Games. 56 Days also managed to overtake holdover Prime Video hits such as The Night Manager, The Summer I Turned Pretty, and the relatively recent Cross. With such a smashing performance right out of the gate, it would appear that 56 Days is just what Prime Video needed to appeal to different audience demographics. The streamer was becoming synonymous with content geared toward older men, which seems to be changing now.
You can watch 56 Days at home. Stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
Wheel of Fortune star Vanna White rang in the new year with a wedding to her now-husband, John Donaldson.
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White wasn’t the only star to walk down the aisle this year. Love Is Blind season 2 alum Iyanna McNeely, for her part, married boyfriend Alex Lewis on January 17 in a dreamy Chicago ceremony.
Stranger Things star Maya Hawke, for her part, said “I do” to longtime boyfriend Christian Lee Hutson in a surprise Valentine’s Day ceremony the next month. February also brought a wedding for Dance Momsalum Brooke Hyland and longtime love Brian Thalman.
Keep scrolling to see the stars who exchanged vows in 2026:
Beyond the Gates spoilers for Feb 23-27, 2026are seeing Katherine “Kat” Richardson (Colby Muhammad) reaching an absolute breaking point—honestly, she’s looking a bit unhinged—and June (Jasmine Burke) is about to spill some major tea that could bring down a whole house of cards. Plus, Anita Dupree (Tamara Tunie) takes her health crisis to the national stage.
Beyond the Gates Spoilers: Katherine “Kat” Richardson Reaches Her Breaking Point and Snaps Over Clinic Drama
First off, let’s talk about Kat. Kat has been under so much pressure lately, and this week, it looks like she finally snaps. Spoilers for Wednesday and Thursday show her locking horns with Dana “Leslie” Thomas (Trisha Mann-Grant) and Eva Thomas (Ambyr Michelle) over the clinic.
Kat is trying to protect her legacy, but Leslie is just relentless. By Thursday, things take a darker turn when Kat gets some news about Laura Peterson’s (Destiny Love) unsolved accident from a year ago.
This news sends her into a tailspin, and she is absolutely set off. We’re hearing that her confrontation with Leslie and Eva is going to escalate on Friday to a point of no return. Kat is usually the composed one, but she is officially unhinged this week.
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BTG Spoilers: June Spills the Tea: The Truth About Hayley Lawson’s Ring Exposed
Now, over at Orphey Genes June is playing a very integral role. We know June sees and hears everything as a server, and this time, her observation skills are going to be a total game-changer.
She noticed Lynette Wise (Domini Madison) flashing that ring around—the one that actually belongs to Hayley Lawson (Marquita Goings). On Monday, June gives Joey Armstrong (Jon Lindstrom) a valuable tip about that ring. This is the big spill everyone has been waiting for.
With Joey getting this intel, the net is finally tightening around Hayley’s mugger, and it looks like Lynette, Hayley, and Randy Parker’s (Maurice P. Kerry) little scheme is starting to crumble.
Beyond the Gates Spoilers: Anita Dupree Goes Public with Cancer Diagnosis on the Gayle King Show
Speaking of big moves, Anita makes a massive decision this week. On Monday, she decides to go public with her cancer diagnosis, and she’s doing it in a big way—appearing on the Gayle King Show.
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Yes, we’ve got Gayle King guest starring as herself! By Thursday, Anita’s televised interview turns into a citywide call to action. It’s a huge moment for the Dupree matriarch, but you have to wonder how the rest of the family—and her enemies—are going to react to her being so vulnerable in the spotlight.
Beyond the Gates Spoilers: Katherine “Kat” Richardson – June
BTG Spoilers: Samantha Richardson Faces a Difficult Choice Between the Clinic and High Society
Elsewhere in Fairmont Crest, Samantha Richardson (Najah Jackson) is struggling. She’s trying to balance school, the debutante ball, and her work at the clinic. It’s a lot for anyone, and she’s reaching her limit.
Luckily, June is there for her too, offering some sage wisdom to help her figure out where her heart truly lies. It’s looking more and more like the clinic is going to be her main focus, despite Leslie’s efforts to push her out.
Joey’s Shocking Escape and More Beyond the Gates Spoilers for the Week
We’ve also got Joey orchestrating a shocking escape on Tuesday, while Bill Hamilton (Timon Kyle Durrett) gets some intel that leaves him absolutely enraged. And keep an eye out for Jacob Hawthorne (Jibre Hordges), who runs into a familiar face while working undercover on Wednesday.
It is going to be a wild week on Beyond the Gates. Who do you think Izaiah Hawthorne (David Lami Friebe) is meeting with on Friday? And is Kat finally going to take Leslie down, or is she just going to destroy herself in the process?
Buffy the Vampire Slayer is a show that fans love to endlessly rewatch because they always find something new to appreciate. However, those fans are increasingly finding something old to hate: the character of Xander Harris. He was written to be an adorkable male presence in a female-dominated show, but many of his jokes and actions (like that time he magically roofied every single woman at Sunnydale High so they’d fall in love with him) just seem wildly problematic in retrospect.
Honestly, the best thing Xander ever did was date Anya, but he left her at the altar, becoming nothing but “bad joke support character” by the show’s final season. However, Buffy came dangerously close to improving Xander in the most shocking way: by brutally killing him off. Even more surprisingly, he was going to be the final form adapted by the First Evil, effectively making one of Buffy’s oldest, closest friends into the series’ final Big Bad.
The Big Bad That Never Was
This information comes to us courtesy of the original DVD commentary tracks for Buffy the Vampire Slayer (just in case you needed another reason to embrace physical media). In the commentary for the episode “Dirty Girls,” writer Drew Goddard said that the writing staff considered ending Xander’s first encounter with Caleb (a minion of the First Evil, played by Nathan Fillion) in a very different way. Instead of simply having the henchman rip our hero’s eye out, Caleb would have immediately killed Xander!
Obviously, the writers ultimately decided against this plan: in Season 7, Xander narrowly survives his encounter with Caleb and makes it through the final episode intact, although his former fiancée Anya dies. However, I can’t help but feel like the writing staff made the wrong call here. Had Caleb killed off Xander, it would have legitimized him as a major threat while making the First Evil’s final appearances that much more chilling.
The Change That Would Have Made Season 7 Unforgettable
You see, the First Evil’s gimmick is that she can take the form of anyone who has previously died. This is how she impersonates Buffy (who died twice) to torment the Slayer and to manipulate others, including Spike. When Buffy’s former boytoy vampire comes back with a new soul and a muddled brain, the First manages to deceive him, ultimately transforming Spike into her murderous attack dog.
It was always fun seeing the First Evil take the form of various deceased characters, but how much cooler would it be if it took the form of Xander after Caleb killed him? Buffy would suddenly be receiving taunts and threats from someone wearing the face of her closest friend. This would have made the First that much scarier to audiences because taking Xander’s appearance would be a constant reminder of just how deadly this ancient evil really was.
Joss Whedon’s Self-Insert Character Nearly Died Onscreen
Plus, the writing for Xander’s character had gotten increasingly worse over the years, so killing him off would be an effective (if drastic) way of making the character interesting again. Additionally, Joss Whedon has frequently stated that Xander is his own self-insert character, which is why the young man serves as the quip-spewing class clown of the Scooby Gang. Now that Joss Whedon has been canceled (both for allegedly cheating on his wife with unnamed cast members and for allegedly abusive behavior on the Justice League set), some fans might find it downright cathartic to see his surrogate character get killed onscreen.
The Buffy revival is right around the corner, and it may very well retroactively redeem Xander, making him a more likable character. Until that happens, though, he will be remembered by the Buffy the Vampire Slayer fandom as a guy who gets just a little creepier every time they rewatch the show. Because of this and (let’s be honest) how weak sauce the First Evil was as a final villain, it would have been better for the show if Xander had been killed off so he could take his rightful place as the scariest Big Bad of them all.
The popular streamer has added dozens of new movies this month, and Watch With Us has selected only the very best for you to view.
At the top of our watchlist is How to Train Your Dragon, the hit live-action remake of the 2020 animated classic.
Also on our radar is the creepy horror flick The Black Phone, starring recent Oscar nominee Ethan Hawke, and the ‘90s Robin Williams comedy Mrs. Doubtfire, which still makes us laugh.
Sydney Sweeney has cut a huge business tie with her ex-fiancé, Jonathan Davino, dissolving their old production company and starting a brand new one with the same name, TMZ has learned.
Sources with direct knowledge tell TMZ that Sydney paid Jonathan out, so she could have a clean slate. Jonathan has nothing to do with Sydney’s life, we’re told.
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According to sources, Jonathan has been telling people he made her. Sources close to Sydney feel radically different about the subject, feeling that, if anything, Jonathan used the entertainer.
Sydney, with Jonathan, launched Fifty-Fifty Films LLC back in January 2019. The exes started dating in 2018 and ended their engagement in March 2025.
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Per official records, Sydney and Jonathan were both listed as managers of the company in May 2025.
Fifty-Fifty Films described itself as an “independent production studio,” working on the actress’s horror film “Immaculate”, along with her smash hit rom-com “Anyone But You”, costarring Glen Powell.
But on December 12, 2025, docs were filed asking the State of California to dissolve the Fifty-Fifty Films LLC … and a box was checked on the form indicating that the dissolution was made by a vote of all members.
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The “Euphoria” star’s team filed paperwork on January 2026 to start a new company called Fifty-Fifty Films, Inc. Sydney is listed as the Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer, and Secretary. The paperwork says there are no vacant board seats.
A little more than a week into its theatrical run, the movie Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die‘s box-office fate seems to have been sealed. It’s going to need a miracle to bounce back from its current state, having recouped only one-fourth of its reported production budget. The sci-fi time-travel film probably has only another couple of million dollars left in it, which certainly won’t be enough for it to break even at the box office. Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die marks the return of director Gore Verbinski after a decade; his last film was the psychological horror movie A Cure for Wellness, another commercial underperformer that failed to recover its budget. A Cure for Wellness was a soft comeback itself, after Verbinski was thrown in director jail following the critical and commercial drubbing of The Lone Ranger.
With little reason to celebrate so far, Verbinski can take pride in minor victories. For instance, Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die has outgrossed fellow time travel film Safety Not Guaranteed, which marked the directorial debut of Colin Trevorrow, who’d go on to direct Jurassic World and Jurassic World Dominion. Safety Not Guaranteed starred Mark Duplass, Jake Johnson, and Aubrey Plaza in the lead roles, and like Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die, it earned positive reviews. Verbinski’s film currently holds a “Certified Fresh” 84% score on the aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, where the critics’ consensus reads, “A gleeful high-concept comedy with a serious message at its core, Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die lets Sam Rockwell rip with thrilling results while marking a very welcome return of director Gore Verbinski in peak form.”
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Here’s the Time Travel Comedy that ‘Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die’ Is Trailing By a Huge Margin
The film has grossed around $6.5 million so far against a reported budget of $20 million. For context, this is roughly one-tenth of the $65 million that time-travel comedyHot Tub Time Machine grossed globally in 2010. Starring John Cusack, Rob Corddry, Craig Robinson, Clark Duke, Lizzy Caplan, and Chevy Chase, the movie earned mixed reviews. It’s currently sitting at a 64% score on Rotten Tomatoes, where the consensus reads, “Its flagrantly silly script — and immensely likable cast — make up for most of its flaws.” The movie inspired a sequel, which crashed with just $13 million at the box office and earned poor reviews. You can watch Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die in theaters. Stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
Before the 1960s gave way to the 1970s, sitcoms were generally seen as an escape from the turbulent reality of the decade. At a time of civil and international unrest, we had sitcoms such as The Andy Griffith Show still showing us what America was, wholesome and down-to-earth. But going into the 1970s, show creators could no longer showcase that Andy and Opie vibe in a truthful way. Social change was afoot, whether people liked it or not, and sitcoms of the decade began to reflect that change.
Whereas sitcoms of the ’50s and ’60s featured women who largely stayed at home and took care of the kids and the home, the ’70s featured a proud single woman putting her career first. Instead of the occasional African American, we had an entire Black family who showed suburban America that life in the inner cities at the time was no picnic. To punctuate how uncomfortable societal change was to those who were used to the peace and tranquility of the ’50s, the ’70s brought us a sitcom about a grumpy old man who longed for the “good old days.” Sitcoms of the ’70s aimed to be daring, a vehicle for how American society truly was, not what it once was; and that made some of the decade’s biggest shows truly timeless to this very day.
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1
‘Happy Days’ (1974–1984)
The cast of Happy Days pose for a photo.Image via ABC
While sitcoms in the ’70s leaned hard into the social changes of the decade, there was a segment of the TV viewer who longed for the days sitcoms were sanitized. Enter Happy Days, created by Gary Marshall, Happy Days saw a market in giving viewers the scenes of a time that once was, when kids hung out at the diner and the coolest kid dressed and acted like Fonzie (Harry Winkler).
Happy Days fostered the ideal view of what the 1950s were all about, and it kick-started the ’50s nostalgia craze, and it certainly was more family-friendly than most sitcoms of the decade. With Happy Days winning over audiences with its unflinching nostalgia, it brought the apolitical, clean-cut sitcom back into vogue, which would become a staple of shows in the 1980s.Happy Days is timeless because it was a prime example of escapism TV, a bit rebellious, yet harmless.
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2
‘The Mary Tyler Moore Show’ (1970–1977)
In the 1960s, Mary Tyler Moore was the lovable housewife on The Dick Van Dyke Show, fitting the common character trope for women in the ’50s and ’60s. While women did land starring roles in sitcoms, they were always the sidekick to the husband, and presenting to America that women cared more about taking care of the home than chasing a career. Then the calendar flipped to the ’70s, and Mary Tyler Moore was done being a housewife.
Premiering in 1970, The Mary Tyler Mooreshow presented a different kind of woman, one that was more career-focused than home-focused. The show redefined how women were portrayed on TV, tackling such issues as feminism, equal pay, and gay rights through fascinating characters rather than preaching to the audience. Not only that, but The Mary Tyler Moore Show was also the first successful workplace sitcom, in which the sitcom was mainly set within Mary Richard’s workplace, with her co-workers just as important to the show as Mary herself. In the end, The Mary Tyler Moore Show cemented its status as a timeless sitcom of the decade.
3
‘Sanford and Son’ (1972–1977)
Redd Foxx and Demond Wilson sitting at a kitchen table and smiling in Sanford and Son.Image via NBC
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In the 1970s, a major cultural shift was happening on the television landscape. Instead of the landscape being mainly white, television finally wised up to the fact that African Americans had stories that needed to be told as well. Enter the late Norman Lear, who, alongside Bud Yorkin, created Sanford and Son, the pioneering sitcom that focused on the working-class life of African Americans.
Starring comedian Red Foxx, the show followed a father and son who ran their own business in South Central Los Angeles. In some respects, Sanford and Son was the Black version of All in the Family, although it wasn’t nearly as bigoted as that famous show (more on this later). It was bold, brash, and unapologetic, and it also broke down barriers. It showed TV executives that African American leads could rake in Nielsen success. Sanford and Son wasn’t just a success in Black homes, it achieved something that few thought it could at the time, crossover success, thanks to its edgy comedy, mainly provided by Foxx. Sanford and Son‘s legacy is very much secured, a timeless sitcom that had a major impact on the sitcom genre as a whole.
4
‘WKRP in Cincinnati’ (1978–1982)
WKRP staff hang out in the DJ booth having a laugh in WKRP in Cincinnati’s “Turkey’s Away.”Image via CBS
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As soon as you read the title of this entry, you immediately thought of the iconic theme song, didn’t you? Of course, you did, and who could blame you if you’re humming it now. But WKRP in Cincinnatiwas a lot more influential beyond that famous theme song. The sitcom was iconic in its character-driven ensemble cast, and it further cemented the workplace sitcom as a major part of the genre’s base.
WKRP in Cincinnati was a timeless sitcom in the fact that it was a very real depiction of the radio business. I feel like a lot of readers may not know this, but the main plot followed the station as it transitioned from Top 40 to rock to lift sagging ratings, and the station’s DJs having to adapt to the change in formats, with hilarious results. Radio stations suddenly changing formats is a real thing, andWKRP in Cincinnati captured the struggle that comes with having to switch formats, especially as a small business. This was one of those sitcoms that actually got more popular in syndication, which makes it timeless thanks to its perfect blend of humor and workplace social commentary.
5
‘M*A*S*H’ (1972–1983)
Hawkeye (Alan Alda) and Trapper (Wayne Rogers) standing together in ‘MASH’ episode “Major Fred C. Dobbs”Image via CBS
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While the “dramedy” sitcom has become quite commonplace on television today, it was nuanced in the 1970s. Before M*A*S*H premiered in 1972, sitcoms followed a general script: introduce a problem the main protagonists had to solve, keep the audience laughing, and make sure everything was solved at the end of each episode. That all changed with M*A*S*H, which refused to follow the same sitcom tropes, and pioneered the dramedy, which blended the intense drama that comes with war, with traditional sitcom humor.
By molding serious subject matter with humor, it formed an whole new subgenre that would later become a staple within the sitcom genre. Make no mistake, M*A*S*H was very much aware of the social upheaval that was happening during the time.The sitcom reflected the anti-war sentiment of the decade, realistically showing the changing views of morality and conflict. As much as M*A*S*H had heavy dramatic moments, it certainly didn’t let you forget that it had comedy as well, creating a timeless classic that many sitcom fans will forever remember.
6
‘Good Times’ (1974–1979)
John Amos smiles in the center being embraced by smiling cast members in Good Times.Image via CBS
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With Sanford and Son breaking down the door for black-led sitcoms, Norman Lear went to work creating his next big hit surrounding the plight of an inner-city Black family. This time, he teamed up with Eric Monte to create one of the decade’s most timeless sitcoms, Good Times. While Sanford and Son provided edgy, rapid-fire jokes, Good Times was a family sitcom that, for the first time, featured a Black household that had two parents, the tough and caring James Evans (John Amos) and the loving but stern Florida Evan (Esther Rolle).
Despite their seemingly dire financial situation, the Evans proved that as long as you had fight and family, you could get through any challenge, and the Evans family certainly went through challenges. The sitcom was mirrored into what society was like for Black families, but it also made sure to show its resilience. And, we can’t talk about Good Times without mentioning J.J. Evans (Jimmy Walker), James and Florida’s eldest child who became the breakout star of the series with his trademark catchphrase “Dyn-o-mite!” Despite some iffy seasons after Amos left the series, Good Times is still an influential sitcom with a very, very catchy theme song. Oh, and for what it’s worth, that final lyric in the theme was “hanging in a chowline.” You’re welcome.
7
‘All in the Family’ (1971–1979)
Rob Reiner, Jean Stapleton, Sally Struthers, and Carroll O’Connor in a cast photo for ‘All in the Family’.Image via CBS
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“Those were the days.” You can hear the theme song that the Bunkers were wishing for the “good old days” to come back after a decade of social change. Let’s be real for a second — a sitcom like All in the Family would be cancelled in a heartbeat, as modern audiences would probably be repulsed with the main protagonist being classified as a “lovable bigot.” But, what many modern audiences would miss is how Norman Lear, the show’s creator, used the Bunker family to tell raw, socially relevant storylines.
In a sense, All in the Family was the anti-Happy Days. There was no lighthearted escapism celebrating nostalgia. This was a show that broke taboos and showed, in an unflinching way, the struggle between an American culture that was changing and the older generation that was struggling to adapt to the changing times. All in the Family showed the sitcom world that it could tell relevant social commentary without the fluff, and still be humorous in the process. The ’70s sure were the days, weren’t they?
Plenty of shows took 2025 audiences by surprise. Alongside Jack Thorne and Stephen Graham‘s Adolescence stunning audiences into vital discourse and hit medical drama The Pitt outperforming most expectations, it was a Hulu political thriller that no one expected to be a post-apocalyptic sci-fi tale that is possibly the year’s biggest TV surprise. Paradise, a series that marked a reunion for This Is Us showrunner Dan Fogelman and star Sterling K. Brown, delivered eight unmissable episodes in 2025 and a quick second-season renewal.
After almost a year of waiting, that second season finally arrived today, with the first three episodes debuting at the same time on Hulu. “In season two, Xavier searches for Teri out in the world and learns how people survived the three years since The Day,” an official synopsis for Season 2 reveals. It continues, “Back in Paradise, the social fabric frays as the bunker deals with the aftermath of Season 1, and new secrets are uncovered about the city’s origins.”
Today, the embargo was lifted on official reviews of Paradise Season 2, revealing that critics are already confirming this to be no one-season wonder. On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, following the first 30 reviews, Paradise Season 2 boasts a near-perfect 90% score and is already “certified fresh.” Called a “cut-above” by one critic and “the best show of the year” by another, this impressive score is already a 4% increase on the four-time Primetime Emmy-nominated first season.
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‘Paradise’ Season 2 is “Even Better” Than Season 1
Sterling K. Brown as Agent Xavier Collins wearing a tactical vest with other people in Paradise.Image via Hulu
Among the many critics praising Paradise Season 2 is Collider’s Meredith Loftus, who awarded it a 7/10 score in her official review. “Fogelman and Brown ambitiously bring Paradise to the next level with Season 2, and, by and large, they succeed,” Loftus wrote, adding, “Even with a heavier emphasis on life after the apocalypse, the show’s political thriller themes remain as timely as ever, and the stakes are elevated with twists that connect the season’s characters in surprising ways.” She concluded:
“Previously, Brown discussed a three-season plan for the series, and if things go according to plan, then Paradise Season 2 is a worthy middle chapter that stands strong while setting up an explosive Season 3.”
The first three episodes of Paradise Season 2 are available now on Hulu. Make sure to stay tuned to Collider for the latest updates.