Kevin Can F K Himself episode six
Photo: Zach Dilgard/AMC
Stop me if you’ve heard this description of
Kevin Can F K Himself’s eponymous character before: “He’s awful, it might seem like he’s an idiot…but he’s also manipulative, and an asshole.” Allison says it at the top of the hour in episode six, communicating to Nick her reasons for wanting her husband dead. Over its first five outings, the AMC drama has built on this integral postulation about Kevin so much that hearing Allison say it yet again might feel repetitive. Well, fret not. “The Grand Victorian” takes the opportunity to display that we’ve just scratched the surface of Kevin’s ego and hypocrisy. With Patty in the loop, both women offer $7000 to Nick to kill Kevin, along with a prescription bottle of Oxy as down payment. He readily accepts but not without yelling at Allison to “shut up!” a few times, a moment that comes full circle by the end.
Photo: Jojo Whilden/AMC
Kevin Can F K Himself’s third episode, “We’re Selling Washing Machines,” establishes that Allison isn’t the only fed-up sitcom woman on this show. Her neighbor Patty is also stuck in the orbit of tiring men like her brother Neil, who is just as moronic as his BFF Kevin. Patty ingrains herself with Neil, Kevin, and Pete, but she’s not just “one of the boys,” as Allison suggests. She is unafraid to speak her mind and resourceful, as evidenced at the end of “New Tricks.” when we learn she is secretly selling pills from her salon. Clearly, even if Patty is limited by her town and her family, her rebellion against it all began long before Allison’s did. Unfortunately, Allison’s newfound urgency crashes Patty’s side hustle this week, intertwining both their fates and resulting in a begrudging but most welcome partnership.
On March 5, the Disney-owned FX announced the Emmy- and Peabody-winning
Pose will end with the third season. The final season will consist of an abbreviated seven episodes and debut Sunday, May 2, at 10 p.m. with two episodes. The series finale will air June 6, for Pride Month.
There have only been two TV series telling the story of the AIDS pandemic of the 1980s and 90s: the current British series
It s a Sin and
Pose. So this is a loss. But the show s creators were upbeat. We got to tell the exact story we wanted, as we wanted to tell it, and I m incredibly honored and grateful, co-creator Ryan Murphy said in a statement March 5.
For All Mankind Season 2 Review: Lunar Cold War Heats Up
It’s 1983, and the Moon is getting militarised. By Akhil Arora | Updated: 19 February 2021 09:00 IST
Photo Credit: Apple
Highlights
A total of 10 episodes, dropping weekly until April 23
Joel Kinnaman, Wrenn Schmidt lead For All Mankind cast
For All Mankind season 2 premiering February 19 on Apple TV+ worldwide continues to explore the ripple effects of the Soviets putting a man (and a woman) on the Moon before the Americans. In some ways, it created a better, equitable world in the USA. Women enjoy a better position at NASA (in spacesuits and in the boardroom) and in society (the Equal Rights Amendment actually got ratified), though the same can t be said about race relations. And as the For All Mankind season 1 post-credits scene revealed, NASA s Sea Dragon dream a two-stage rocket conceptualised in the ‘60s as the pathway to manned Mars missions before funding was scrapped