Entertainment
Everything coming to Apple TV in 2026
There’s no doubt about it: 2026 is going to be jam-packed for Apple TV.
The streamer is hoping to keep up the momentum from its stellar 2025, which saw the premiere of acclaimed, award-winning shows like Pluribus and The Studio, not to mention the triumphant return of Severance. After all that TV goodness, what could possibly be next?
The answer? A lot! At its 2026 press day, Apple TV unveiled its entire slate of film and TV for the year, from new buzzy shows like Imperfect Women to more Ted Lasso. It’s a substantial list, and we’ve gathered it here in one place for your perusal. From potential new TV obsessions to films of all genres, here’s what’s coming to Apple TV in 2026, in chronological order.
Shrinking Season 3
Apple TV kicked off 2026 with one of its best shows, the currently airing Shrinking Season 3, which sees the continued misadventures of therapist Jimmy (Jason Segel) and his family, friends, and coworkers. Tune in for more life lessons and cathartic tears, and see why Mashable UK Editor Shannon Connellan wrote, “This show is so good it boggles my brain.”
Starring: Jason Segel, Harrison Ford, Christa Miller, Jessica Williams, Luke Tennie, Michael Urie, Lukita Maxwell, Ted McGinley, Brett Goldstein, Damon Wayans Jr., Wendie Malick, Cobie Smulders, Jeff Daniels, Candice Bergen, and Michael J. Fox
How to watch: Shrinking Season 3 is now streaming on Apple TV, with new episodes every Wednesday.
Eternity
OK, technically Eternity isn’t a new release, but it will be new to streaming on Apple TV. This winning romantic comedy imagines a love triangle in the afterlife, where the late Joan (Elizabeth Olsen) must choose between spending eternity with Larry (Miles Teller), her husband of over 60 years, or Luke (Callum Turner), her first husband who died at war before they truly had a life together. If that thought gives you an existential crisis, don’t worry: Eternity is as sweet and funny as it is contemplative and heartfelt. If you missed it in theaters, don’t miss it on streaming.
Starring: Miles Teller, Elizabeth Olsen, Callum Turner, John Early, Olga Merediz, and Da’Vine Joy Randolph
How to watch: Eternity hits Apple TV on Feb. 13.
The Last Thing He Told Me Season 2
Jennifer Garner-led thriller The Last Thing He Told Me is back for Season 2, beginning with the bombshell that Owen (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) has returned after five years on the run. Now, his wife Hannah (Garner) and daughter Bailey (Angourie Rice) are in a race to reunite their family before their complicated past catches up to them.
Starring: Jennifer Garner, Angourie Rice, David Morse, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Judy Greer, and Rita Wilson
How to watch: The Last Thing He Told Me Season 2 premieres Feb. 20 on Apple TV.
Monarch: Legacy of Monsters Season 2
Here there be Titans! Apple TV’s MonsterVerse series Monarch: Legacy of Monsters returns with a vengeance for Season 2, which introduces a terrifying new beast: Titan X. An aquatic beast of immense power, Titan X has the potential to be the most destructive monster we’ve seen in the MonsterVerse. It’s so threatening, in fact, that the trailer suggests the only way to take it out is by unleashing both Godzilla and King Kong against it. You know what they say: Let them fight.
Starring: Kurt Russell, Wyatt Russell, Anna Sawai, Kiersey Clemons, Ren Watabe, Mari Yamamoto, Joe Tippett, Anders Holm, Takehiro Hira, Amber Midthunder, Curtiss Cook, Cliff Curtis, Dominique Tipper, and Camilo Jiménez Varón
How to watch: Monarch: Legacy of Monsters Season 2 premieres Feb. 27 on Apple TV.
Imperfect Women
Elisabeth Moss, Kerry Washington, and Kate Mara star in Imperfect Women, based on the novel by Araminta Hall. The three play decades-long friends Mary, Eleanor, and Nancy, whose lives are shattered when Nancy is murdered. As the investigation into her death plays out, dark secrets and betrayals come to life, testing the bonds of Mary and Eleanor’s friendship and other relationships. If you love Big Little Lies, this should be up your alley.
Starring: Elisabeth Moss, Kerry Washington, Kate Mara, Joel Kinnaman, Corey Stoll, Leslie Odom Jr., Audrey Zahn, Jill Wagner, Rome Flynn, Sheryl Lee Ralph, Violette Linnz, Indiana Elle, Jackson Kelly, Keith Carradine, Ana Ortiz, and Wilson Bethel
How to watch: Imperfect Women premieres on March 18 on Apple TV.
For All Mankind Season 5
Looking to scratch your sci-fi itch while several of Apple TV’s genre shows like Severance, Pluribus, Silo, and Foundation are between seasons? Look no farther than space drama For All Mankind, which imagines the continuation of the space race. In Season 5, tensions rise between the residents of Mars and Earth, setting the stage for a space showdown.
Starring: Joel Kinnaman, Toby Kebbell, Edi Gathegi, Cynthy Wu, Coral Peña, Wrenn Schmidt, Mirelle Enos, Costa Ronin, Sean Kaufman, Ruby Cruz, and Ines Asserson
How to watch: For All Mankind Season 5 premieres March 27 on Apple TV.
Your Friends and Neighbors Season 2
Jon Hamm is back to stealing in Your Friends and Neighbors Season 2. He plays disgraced hedge fund manager Andrew “Coop” Cooper, who’s doubling down on thieving from his wealthy suburban neighbors. However, a new neighbor threatens to expose him, creating new tension in Vestment Village (and maybe, just maybe, some new dance memes). And guess what? The show is already renewed for a Season 3.
Starring: Jon Hamm, James Marsden, Amanda Peet, Olivia Munn, Hoon Lee, Mark Tallman, Lena Hall, Aimee Carrero, Eunice Bae, Isabel Gravitt, and Donovan Colan
How to watch: Your Friends and Neighbors Season 2 premieres April 3 on Apple TV.
Outcome

Keanu Reeves in “Outcome.”
Credit: Apple TV
Keanu Reeves stars as a Hollywood star on the run from his past in dark comedy Outcome. Directed by Jonah Hill, the film sees actor Reef Hawk (Reeves) facing blackmail over a video that might ruin his career. He soon sets off down memory lane to try to help anyone he may have wronged — and hopefully find the blackmailer along the way.
Starring: Keanu Reeves, Cameron Diaz, Matt Bomer, Jonah Hill, Martin Scorsese, Susan Lucci, Laverne Cox, David Spade, Atsuko Okatsuka, Roy Wood Jr., Kaia Gerber, and Ivy Wolk
Mashable Top Stories
How to watch: Outcome premieres April 10 on Apple TV.
Margo’s Got Money Troubles
Rufi Thorpe’s novel Margo’s Got Money Troubles hits the small screen in Apple TV’s adaptation from A24 and David E. Kelley (Big Little Lies). Elle Fanning stars as Margo, a single mother and aspiring writer in financial crisis. To solve her money troubles, Margo jumps on OnlyFans, where her alien alter ego finds great success. Nick Offerman and Michelle Pfeiffer star as Margo’s parents in what promises to be a heartwarming family dramedy.
Starring: Elle Fanning, Nick Offerman, Michelle Pfeiffer, Nicole Kidman, Marcia Gay Harden, Greg Kinnear, Michael Angarano, Rico Nasty, and Lindsey Normington
How to watch: Margo’s Got Money Troubles premieres April 15 on Apple TV.
Criminal Record Season 2

Peter Capaldi and Cush Jumbo in “Criminal Record.”
Credit: Apple TV
British crime drama Criminal Record is back, with Peter Capaldi and Cush Jumbo’s detectives likely set to clash again. This time around, June (Jumbo) witnesses a young man’s death when far-right protestors accost a political rally. Racked by guilt, she seeks to bring the man’s killer justice — but to do so, she’ll have to take a dangerous bargain from Daniel (Capaldi).
Starring: Peter Capaldi, Cush Jumbo
How to watch: Criminal Record Season 2 premieres April 22 on Apple TV.
Widow’s Bay

Matthew Rhys in “Widow’s Bay.”
Credit: Apple TV
Blending horror and comedy, Widow’s Bay transports viewers to its titular island town, 40 miles off the coast of New England. There, Mayor Tom Loftis (Matthew Rhys) hopes to bring tourists to his struggling community. But when he does, there’s a big problem: It turns out that the local legends about the island being cursed may be true. Get ready for laughs and scares in equal measure.
Starring: Matthew Rhys, Kate O’Flynn, Stephen Root, Kingston Rumi Southwick, Kevin Carroll, and Dale Dickey
How to watch: Widow’s Bay premieres April 29 on Apple TV.
Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed

Tatiana Maslany in “Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed.”
Credit: Apple TV
Tatiana Maslany leads the new dark comedy Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed. She stars as newly divorced mom Paula, who’s convinced she witnessed a terrible crime. Her independent investigation takes her down a slippery slope of blackmail and murder, two things that are very inconvenient to be thinking about when you’re also dealing with a custody battle and an identity crisis. Will Paula crack the case and rediscover her sense of self-worth? And just how, exactly, does youth soccer fit into all this? Find out when you tune in, for what is hopefully a maximally pleasurable viewing experience.
Starring: Tatiana Maslany, Jake Johnson, Brandon Flynn, Murray Bartlett, Jessy Hodges, Jon Michael Hill, Charlie Hall, Kiarra Hamagami Goldberg, Nola Wallace, and Dolly De Leon
How to watch: Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed premieres May 20 on Apple TV.
Cape Fear

Amy Adams in “Cape Fear.”
Credit: Apple TV
Who’s ready for a remake? Apple TV reimagines Martin Scorsese’s 1991 film Cape Fear, itself a remake of the 1962 film of the same name. The series centers on married attorney couple Anna and Tom Bowden (Amy Adams and Patrick Wilson), who are about to face a vengeful reckoning from Max Cady (Javier Bardem), the killer they put behind bars. Will the series live up to its source material? Or, at the very least, The Simpsons‘ “Cape Feare” episode?
Starring: Amy Adams, Patrick Wilson, Javier Bardem, Joe Anders, Lily Collias, Malia Pyles, and Anna Baryshnikov
How to watch: Cape Fear premieres June 5 on Apple TV.
Sugar Season 2

Colin Farrell in “Sugar.”
Credit: Apple TV
Everyone’s favorite noir private detective who is also (spoiler alert!) secretly an alien is back! I’m speaking of none other than John Sugar (Colin Farrell). In Sugar Season 2, he’s on the trail of a new case, this time tracking the older brother of a local boxer. And while that mystery’s all well and good, I’m hoping Season 2 really gets into the sci-fi of it all, because again, and I cannot stress this enough, John Sugar is an alien. Explain, please!
Starring: Colin Farrell, Jin Ha, Raymond Lee, Tony Dalton, Laura Donnelly, Sasha Calle, and Shea Whigham
How to watch: Sugar Season 2 premieres June 19 on Apple TV.
Lucky
Anya Taylor-Joy enters heist mode in limited series Lucky, based on the 2021 novel of the same name by Marissa Stapley. Taylor-Joy plays Lucky Anderson, a con artist raised in a life of crime. When a multi-million-dollar heist goes awry, she’ll have to put up the fight of her life in order to escape the FBI agents and crime boss on her tail. Will she live up to her name, or will her luck finally run out?
Starring: Anya Taylor-Joy, Annette Bening, Timothy Olyphant, Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor, Drew Starkey, Clifton Collins, Jr., and William Fichtner
How to watch: Lucky premieres July 15 on Apple TV.
The Dink

Mary Steenburgen and Jake Johnson in “The Dink.”
Credit: Apple TV
Pickleball takes center court in The Dink, a comedy film from Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar director Josh Greenbaum. Jake Johnson stars as washed-up tennis prodigy Dusty Boyd, who discovers the unthinkable: He loves pickleball, even though his country club owner father (Ed Harris) despises it. With the help of his pickleball partner Candace (Mary Steenburgen), he’ll embark on a journey of self-discovery. Oh, and Andy Roddick is there as himself, who also happens to be Dusty’s childhood nemesis.
Starring: Jake Johnson, Mary Steenburgen, Ed Harris, Andy Roddick, Patton Oswalt, Chloe Fineman, Chris Parnell, Aaron Chen, and Ben Stiller
How to watch: The Dink premieres July 24 on Apple TV.
Mayday

Kenneth Branagh and Ryan Reynolds in “Mayday.”
Credit: Apple TV
Ryan Reynolds and Kenneth Branagh team up for unconventional spy thriller Mayday. Reynolds plays hotshot U.S. Navy pilot Lieutenant Troy “Assassin” Kelly, who finds himself stranded behind enemy lines in Soviet territory at the height of the Cold War. Branagh plays Nikolai Ustinov (Branagh), the gruff ex-KGB agent who discovers them. The two develop an unexpected bond in this comedy from Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves directors John Francis Daley and Jonathan Goldstein. Honestly, they gave us Jarnathan, so I trust them with my life.
Starring: Ryan Reynolds, Kenneth Branagh, Marcin Dorocinski, Maria Bakalova, and David Morse
How to watch: Mayday premieres Sept. 4 on Apple TV.
Ted Lasso Season 4

Jason Sudeikis and Hannah Waddingham in “Ted Lasso.”
Credit: Apple TV
You better BELIEVE, because Ted Lasso is back. Turns out Season 3 was not the end of Ted’s (Jason Sudeikis) time in Richmond. The lovable soccer coach has returned to England to lead a second division women’s football team, and he’ll be joined by several familiar faces. What are you waiting for? Grab some shortbread and settle in for the resurrection of one of Apple’s biggest shows.
Starring: Jason Sudeikis, Hannah Waddingham, Juno Temple, Brett Goldstein, Brendan Hunt, Jeremy Swift, Tanya Reynolds, Jude Mack, Faye Marsey, Rex Hayes, Aisling Sharkey, Abbie Hern, and Grant Feely
How to watch: Ted Lasso premieres this summer on Apple TV.
Matchbox The Movie

John Cena in “Matchbox The Movie.”
Credit: Apple TV
Mattel’s Matchbox toys get the film treatment in Matchbox The Movie. The movie centers on a group of friends whose lives get blown up by the return of their former leader, undercover CIA agent Sean (John Cena). He gets them involved in a plot to save the world, and the rest is globe-trotting history.
Starring: John Cena, Jessica Biel, Sam Richardson, Teyonah Parris, Arturo Castro, Corey Stoll, Bill Camp, Danai Gurira, and Golshifteh Faranhani
How to watch: Matchbox The Movie premieres Oct. 9 on Apple TV.
Way of the Warrior Kid

Chris Pratt and Jude Hill in “Way of the Warrior Kid.”
Credit: Apple TV
Chris Pratt gives a child a Navy SEAL makeover in Way of the Warrior Kid. Based on the best-selling novel by former Navy SEAL Jocko Willink, the film introduces bullied middle schooler Marc (Jude Hill), whose uncle Jake (Pratt) endeavors to teach Marc to defend himself. Enter “Operation Warrior Kid,” based on Jake’s own Navy SEAL training and designed to help Marc learn about courage. While Marc is the student, Jake may learn something about himself and his own demons along the way.
Starring: Chris Pratt, Linda Cardellini, Jude Hill, Ava Torres, Levi McConaughey, Darien Sills-Evans, Carl McDowell, and Parker Young
How to watch: Way of the Warrior Kid premieres Nov. 20 on Apple TV.
Entertainment
Unrated Slacker Comedy Is This Generation’s Office Space
By Robert Scucci
| Published

No matter where you’re from, you probably grew up with somebody like Marty (Joshua Burge) from 2014’s Buzzard. While you went to college or joined the workforce, or at the very least tried to make something of yourself, Marty wants nothing to do with the rat race. The problem is he’s not smart enough to scrape by without resorting to criminal activity. He’s the kind of guy who would stage a slip and fall at a fast food restaurant just to get a $500 payout three years later, thinking he stuck it to the man and came out on top.
Buzzard explores this behavior to the extreme, one scam, pizza coupon, and Nintendo controller at a time. It’s the ultimate slacker comedy because Marty cares about self-preservation just enough to stay out of serious trouble, but not enough to stop himself from constantly getting hoisted by his own petard. It’s Office Space for the disenfranchised Millennial. It’s a slacker comedy with a nihilistic bent. It’s the $20 plate of hotel spaghetti that keeps you going until you can find more Mountain Dew to sustain yourself.
It’s Always A Party With Marty

Buzzard, like most films written and directed by Joel Potrykus and starring Joshua Burge, centers on Marty, an office temp at a mortgage company who’s always looking for the next scheme to help him coast through life. He lives off frozen pizzas he gets at a discount by calling customer service to complain after every meal, scoring coupons in return. He steals toner, staplers, telephones, and keyboards from the company dumpster and returns them to office supply stores for cash. He opens bank accounts for the free $50 deposit, withdraws the funds, and then does it again. It’s not beneath him to cut his hand at home, show up to work, and stage an accident with the paper slicer so he can file a worker’s comp claim.
Marty decides to ante up when he realizes he can steal customer refund checks, sign them over to himself, and cash them at the bank. Never thinking about the consequences, he quickly learns the company receives monthly check-cashing reports, complete with images of the checks and the accounts they were deposited into.

Fearing he’s about to get caught red-handed, Marty lays low at his friend and coworker Derek’s (Joel Potrykus) house while trying to figure out his next move. If you haven’t noticed by now, planning ahead is not Marty’s strong suit. For reasons never explained, he modifies an old Nintendo Power Glove with steak knives, a la Freddy Kreuger, and carries it with him everywhere. Just in case.
The rest of the movie plays out exactly how you’d expect. Marty tries cashing checks, but every bank flags his account. He tries breaking into a motel to sleep for free and immediately gets caught. He burns through the last of his money with no backup plan other than continuing to live exactly how he wants. The problem is he’s running out of options, and his increasingly sloppy crimes are catching up to him.
Marty Will Never Learn

What’s most fascinating about Buzzard is how deeply the slacker DNA is embedded in Marty. No matter what happens, he finds a way out of a jam, and he doesn’t care how pathetic it makes him look. When called out for his “worksite injury,” he shrugs and waits for it to blow over while the doctor stares him down, clearly not buying it. When he’s finally backed into a corner where the authorities might get involved, he busts out the Power Glove in a desperate attempt to fend off his problems. When he spends his last $20 on hotel spaghetti, he shovels it down without a single thought about where his next meal will come from.
Marty is every slacker you’ve ever met, all rolled into one composite character. He’s impulsive, repulsive, and never sympathetic. But that’s also what makes Buzzard so much fun to watch, because you end up rooting for him anyway. He’s screwing the system every chance he gets, or so he thinks, and part of you wants to live vicariously through that because he genuinely does not give a single sh*t. It’s almost inspiring how little he cares about anything, whether it’s his friendships, job security, or reputation. None of it matters to Marty.

It’s the kind of personality you envy in small doses, if only because you know you could never carry yourself with that level of nonchalance while still functioning as a productive member of society.
Consequences Be Damned
Half the fun of watching Buzzard is wondering when Marty’s run will finally end, and how many people he’d be willing to drag down with him if it means squeezing out one more free Party Pizza before getting hauled off to jail, flipping his boss the bird on the way out. Even if he does face consequences, you get the sense he’ll find a way to keep scamming his way through life.

That’s what makes Buzzard so compelling. Marty puts more effort into avoiding responsibility than it would take to just show up, do the bare minimum, and live comfortably. That’s the real irony, because everything he does looks exhausting.

As of this writing, Buzzard is streaming for free on Tubi.

Entertainment
The Forgotten Buffy Episode That Secretly Endorsed Communism
By Chris Snellgrove
| Published

Buffy the Vampire Slayer is, for the most part, a generally apolitical show. Obviously, there are embedded messages about the importance of feminism and accepting others who may be different (like being gay, being a witch, or being a gay witch). Some might consider those “woke” messages, but the show was simply emphasizing the importance of treating everyone equally. However, one memorable episode might have taken the idea of equality a little too far. You see, the climax of Season 3’s opening episode, “Anne,” actually endorsed Communism!
For some context, “Anne” was the first Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode of Season 3, and it continued from the previous season’s fairly startling cliffhanger, “Becoming.” In the Season 2 finale, Buffy killed Angel, who had turned evil. In doing so, she managed to save the entire world from getting sucked into Hell. However, at the last minute, Angel’s soul was restored, forcing Buffy to kill the man she loved to save all of humanity. As if that wasn’t bad enough, she previously got an ultimatum from her mother to never return home if she walked out the front door. Accordingly, Buffy packed her things and secretly moved out at the end of the episode.
A New Life In The City Of Angels

“Anne” continues Buffy’s story, revealing that she is now living in Los Angeles and working as a waitress. She just wants to lead a normal life, but she discovers a supernatural plot where a demon is forcing humans into hard labor at his evil factory. Buffy saves the day, of course, killing the demon and helping to free all of his captives. Realizing that she just can’t escape her calling as a Slayer, she returns home to Sunnydale, where she is reunited with her very worried mother.
Generally speaking, fans really like “Anne,” an episode that takes Buffy out of her comfort zone and even plants the seeds for the eventual Angel spinoff. However, most of this episode’s biggest fans miss Buffy’s not-so-subtle endorsement of Communism. You see, when she is fighting some of the demon’s sidekicks, the most prominent weapon she uses is a hammer and sickle!
It’s Hammer Time

The hammer and sickle is, of course, the famous symbol of the Soviet Union. These tools symbolically represent Communism because they show the workers and peasants unifying themselves against common enemies. Those enemies nominally include those who would try to take power and make themselves superior to others. In this way, there is also a threat embedded in this symbol. Namely, that when someone tries to oppress others, workers and peasants will unite to overthrow their usurpers.
Believe it or not, the climax of “Anne” really emphasizes this. On top of Buffy wielding a hammer and sickle (the latter of which she stole from a bad guy), she fights in a factory where a demon has uncharacteristically forced humans into hard labor. It’s not entirely clear what the purpose of the factory is, but it’s very obvious that the demon has tried to seize the means of production from the workers (a big no-no in Communism). Buffy even gets the workers to chip in, and they all work together to escape. Uniting the workers and peasants together to fight a demonic capitalist? In this case, both Giles and Stalin would be proud!

Obviously, Buffy the Vampire Slayer didn’t become an openly Communist show after this, and the inclusion of a hammer and sickle in “Anne” was likely nothing more than a glorified Easter egg. But it’s undeniably fun to see our protagonist become a hero of the people, openly leading helpless workers in a revolt against the literal boss from Hell. Speaking of bosses, “Anne” offers some gallows hope to anyone who hates their job. At least your employer is only sucking out your soul metaphorically rather than literally.
Entertainment
Raunchy, R-Rated Comedy Finds Purpose Where You Least Expect It
By Robert Scucci
| Published

There’s no problem in life that can’t be solved by an epic rant because it’s the best way to lay all your thoughts out on the table and properly dissect them. In 2025’s Is This Thing On?, these rants come in the form of an amateur stand-up set as a man tries to navigate his upcoming divorce. What starts as a completely impulsive move turns into a lifeline for Will Arnett’s Alex Novak, who doesn’t necessarily want to move on without his wife and kids, but doesn’t yet know how to accept this phase of his life.
A comedy drama with an extra emphasis on comedy, Is This Thing On? is a feel-good story about falling out of love, coping with the loss, and picking up the pieces in unexpected ways. If I have any criticism of the film, it’s that it’s just a little too convenient, and the stakes, all things considered, are considerably low for the kind of point it’s trying to get across. The concept, which is loosely based on English comedian John Bishop’s life, is fun, and it’s a light watch. It’s a great movie about second chances, and sometimes that’s all you really need after a particularly tumultuous week on the home front.
From Bachelor Pad To Comedy Club

Is This Thing On? doesn’t have much going on at a narrative level, but its character arcs are still satisfying. Amicably separated from his wife of 20 odd years, Tess (Laura Dern), Alex Novak (Will Arnett) feels lost post-marriage. Their divorce wasn’t rancorous, and they still run in the same social circles. They live separately, but share custody of their two kids, Felix (Blake Kane) and Jude (Calvin Knegten). By all measures, this is the healthiest way to approach divorce, but it’s obvious that the separation is gnawing away at both Alex and Tess, who no longer feel like a couple but still show up for each other every day.
After eating a pot cookie with Tess and accidentally getting separated at the train station, Alex walks into a comedy club. Not having any cash on hand, he signs up for an open mic to get out of paying the cover charge, and something awakens in him that night. He goes on stage and kills it, finding the sense of purpose outside of his white-collar job and family life that he’s been desperately craving.

It doesn’t take long for him to become an open mic regular, and eventually a featured act, unbeknownst to his family, which is probably for the better. Since most of his jokes are about his failed marriage, it’s a good thing that Tess doesn’t hear his rants. That is, until she shows up at a comedy club by sheer coincidence and sees him in action.
From this point forward in Is This Thing On?, Alex and Tess decide to give their relationship a second chance, learning the real reason their marriage failed now that they’ve had some time apart. It’s not like everything gets fixed overnight, but they still have feelings for each other, even if they don’t quite know how to move forward at this point in their lives.
When A Feel-Good Movie Feels Too Good

A total feel-good movie through and through, Is This Thing On? is about more than life after divorce and one man’s attempt to pick up the pieces. By all measures, Alex is killing it. He’s showing up for his family in ways he neglected in the past, and his comedy hobby puts a bounce in his step. His new lease on life is immediately noticed by the woman who no longer wanted to be with him, but decides that she does upon realizing that she could also be chasing her dreams of being an Olympic volleyball coach while supporting him with his.
The problem with this dynamic, however, is that it doesn’t feel plausible, even if it’s inspired by a true story. Too many critical changes happen too quickly, making the whole thing play out like a Lifetime movie, which is unfortunate because with a little more drama and tension, this could have been a perfect movie. It explores themes that a lot of married couples struggle with, but its “conflict” is borderline nonexistent.

For what it’s worth, though, it’s a nice movie about finding a new purpose in life well into adulthood, when you should be set in your ways, and that’s really all it needs to be. I’m not buying how clean everything resolves here, but if these things happened in my life, it’s probably how I’d want them to play out.

As of this writing, Is This Thing On? is streaming on Hulu.
