The ladies dig into season 2 of Ms. Fisher's Modern Murder Mysteries, including whether Peregrine Fisher lives up to her famous aunt Phryne, and what exactly this show is doing with the romance at its center.
A listener asks where the non-Masterpiece British shows on your local PBS station come from and the ladies attempt to explain, in a wide-ranging discussion about everything from Midsomer Murders and Vera to Walter's Choice imports like Seaside Hotel and Line of Separation.
The ladies dive into the world of streaming service HBO Max - what it is exactly, what you can watch on it, how it differs from standard HBO, and whether it's necessary for Anglophiles.
Contributor Janet Mullany returns to the show to discuss the final episodes of Atlantic Crossing, from the uncomfortable FDR creep factor and Martha's impressive array of great hats to the series' determined refusal to pick a lane about whatever is going on with their relationship.
The ladies decide to talk about a show that's not particularly British or especially prestigious, but they love it anyway: Buzzy Netflix fantasy drama Shadow and Bone, which molds a popular YA fantasy into something that's much greater than the sum of its parts.
Obviously, the ladies had to talk about the big Sanditon news: The series is coming back for not one but TWO seasons. Let's get in our feelings about it.
The ladies dig into the good, the bad, and the difficult to quantify of HBO's new steampunk fantasy series The Nevers, a series that tries to do entirely too much at once.