Inside Weekend TV: History’s
History’s Greatest Mysteries (Saturday, 9/8c) begins a three-part series, “Roswell: First Witness,” with a new investigation of the 1947 crash that includes an attempt to decode the diary of Major Jesse Marcel, who was the first to investigate the wreckage of a rumored UFO… CBS’s
48 Hours (Saturday, 10/9c) revisits “The Hunt for the Long Island Serial Killer,” a still-cold case dating back a decade. Erin Moriarty’s report includes the first TV interview with Lily Waterman, the teenage daughter of one of the victims… Timothée Chalomet (
Call Me by Your Name, next year’s
New Lifetime movie, A Sugar & Spice Holiday, features all-Asian cast
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Diverse TV holiday season includes all-Asian Lifetime movie
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Terry Tang
This image released by Lifetime shows Tzi Ma, right, in a scene from A Sugar & Spice Holiday. The TV film, featuring a mostly Asian cast, premieres Sunday, Dec. 13 at 8pm ET/PT. (Kailey Schwerman/Lifetime via AP) December 11, 2020 - 7:32 PM
In one scene from the Lifetime TV movie, âA Sugar & Spice Holiday,â a co-worker says to Suzy, an Asian American architect in Los Angeles: âI didn t know if Christmas was a big deal where you re from.â
Retorts Suzy: âI m from Maine.
A lot of viewers of a cozy Christmas film might just shrug off the insinuation that Suzy is somehow not American. But for an Asian audience, that brief exchange is a knowing reminder that microaggressions don t take a holiday. They especially haven t in the wake of the pandemic, which has triggered anti-Asian racism and terms like âChinese virusâ and âkung flu.â