SHRINKING, SEASON THREE Sometimes it takes a few seasons for a show to hit its stride - especially sitcoms. Before they do, you can see the potential but it requires patience - a quality most streaming service commissioners tend not to have. Fortunately for Bill Lawrence, Jason Segel and Brett Goldstein's 'Shrinking' is on AppleTV which has been given the sitcom time and space to find its top gear. Season One of a show about the messy personal lives of three psychiatrists and their friends got off to a pretty strong start. Segel gave audiences a typically likable performance as the emotionally fragile, fortysomething, widowed father, Jimmy Laird. Jessica Williams was a ball of energy as his quick witted, fellow psychiatrist Gaby Evans. But it was Harrison Ford who stole the show as the wonderfully grumpy head of their practice, Paul Rhoades. And while the three principals shone, Lawrence, Segel and Goldstein were smart enough to assemble around them a delightful supporti...
THE DRAMA We live in an age of outrage. Fuelled by social media, people are quick to lecture others about how they should live and how they should think. Some of the outrage is performative. A lot of it is self serving and just plain attention seeking. Attempts at brutal takedowns online are what make X, Facebook and many other online platforms particularly insufferable - especially if you value reasoned debate. Politics has also been impacted, with politicians chasing votes by creating rage bait. Rather than focus on fixing problems, populist leaders choose instead to harangue their rivals over how incompetent they are and even how evil. Against this backdrop, writer director Kristoffer Borgli has waded in with a new movie about cancel culture. Having tackled the subject before in his 2013 movie ' Dream Scenario ' with Nicolas Cage, he's back at it again with a new darkly comic parable 'The Drama'. A sort of anti-romcom, the movie starts with a " meet cute...