Inkoo Kang
@inkookang
Television critic @newyorker. Pronounced in-goo. Find me at the other place and/or get updates from me: inkoo.substack.com
ID: 115723072
https://www.newyorker.com/contributors/inkoo-kang 19-02-2010 17:54:43
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Apple TV+’s soi-disant succession drama, “La Maison,” is “more diversion than art, but what diversion,” Inkoo Kang writes. “The ensemble soap is as bitchy and as backstabby as you could hope for, replete with bons mots and campy self-importance.” nyer.cm/h4sxTfP
NYC! It’s your last chance to get tickets for my talk with Bridget Everett and Amy Sedaris at New Yorker Festival on Saturday, October 26th nyer.cm/zCmbo30
In setting, subject matter, and theme, “Say Nothing,” stands “refreshingly apart from most other American programming, and its longitudinal account of political disillusionment makes it one of the year’s finest shows.” Inkoo Kang reviews the FX drama. nyer.cm/FAjqzDe
With the new HBO comedy “The Franchise,” Hollywood gets the “Veep” treatment. The two shows are “united in a bone-deep cynicism that can be unexpectedly invigorating,” Inkoo Kang writes. nyer.cm/corzpve
I had a good time on It's Been a Minute, being very cynical about what it means that we keep killing our daddies on TV, alongside the always-brilliant duo Inkoo Kang and host Brittany Luse. You can listen here: npr.org/2024/12/29/126…
The new season of “Severance” seems to pull back from bleakness, losing itself in abstract ethical conundrums and rote emotional ones. “It’s far from a dissection of work and life as we know them; the incisions are only skin deep,” Inkoo Kang writes. nyer.cm/pzgSdji
“The Pitt,” a new Max series, is built on nostalgia and predictability. “It’s structured such that you know you’ll have your heart broken and mended several times per episode—it’s just a matter of how,” Inkoo Kang writes. nyer.cm/j06KBOA
“The Pitt,” a new Max series, is built on nostalgia and predictability. “It’s structured such that you know you’ll have your heart broken and mended several times per episode—it’s just a matter of how,” Inkoo Kang writes. nyer.cm/9xumf8w
This season of “The White Lotus” is “not quite dark enough to confront what happens in a country where foreigners can buy nearly anything they want for the right price, nor frothy enough to showcase the baroque weirdness of the wealthy,” Inkoo Kang writes. nyer.cm/ZFKOflU
The first season of the Tudor-era drama “Wolf Hall” ends with Anne Boleyn’s decapitation. Season 2, which débuted on March 23rd, ends with Thomas Cromwell’s. “The six hours of television between those two deaths are riveting,” Inkoo Kang writes. nyer.cm/ri6ypgt
“Dying for Sex,” the Michelle Williams-led series about a woman seeking erotic fulfillment amid a terminal diagnosis, starts off as an unorthodox comedy—then deepens into something far better. Inkoo Kang reviews the new show. nyer.cm/B8qP1CC
The first season of the Tudor-era drama “Wolf Hall” ends with Anne Boleyn’s decapitation. Season 2 ends with Thomas Cromwell’s. “The six hours of television between those two deaths are riveting,” Inkoo Kang writes. nyer.cm/tUaJA52
The new FX/Hulu miniseries “Dying for Sex” has a morbid, somewhat off-putting hook: a woman with terminal cancer looks to get laid while she still can. But the show is “also something of a Trojan horse,” Inkoo Kang writes. nyer.cm/kG2tFRF
“If Hollywood still can’t resist telling stories about itself, it can at least strive for honesty about its flop era.” Inkoo Kang writes about “Hacks” and “The Studio” and the guiding ethos of the two insidery show-biz series. nyer.cm/dPax83n
Recent shows about the ethically challenged rich have emphasized their characters’ personality disorders along with the trappings of the high life. ” ‘Your Friends and Neighbors’ flips the formula, to unsatisfying effect,” Inkoo Kang writes. nyer.cm/1i4oF6H