New Episode Of Tiger King Is On Netflix Right Now

Watched all of Tiger King and left wanting more? The good news is that Netflix has delivered. A new episode of Tiger King, or rather an aftershow titled “The Tiger King And I,” is available now on Netflix, featuring actor and comedian Joel McHale interviewing some of the show’s main characters.

The Tiger King special was seemingly rushed into production after the show became one of Netflix’s most successful series’ ever. The special was announced on April 9 for an April 12 release. The new episode features interviews with Jeff and Lauren Lowe, fan-favorite Saff, Erik Cowie, John Finlay, John Reinke, and Rick Kirkham, all speaking over webcam from their own homes.

Notably, Carole Baskin and Doc Antle don’t appeared in the new episode, though that fact isn’t so surprising since both have since put out their own statements refuting what was depicted in the documentary. You can read Carole’s Refuting Tiger King post here, while Doc told his side of the story on radio.

The show has become hugely popular, and may have even lured in more viewers than Netflix cornerstones like Stranger Things and Ozark, according to Comicbook.com. Tiger King has caused the resurrection of a missing persons case in Florida, as well as a whole lot of memes.

Top New Games Releasing On Switch, PS4, Xbox One, And PC This Week — April 12-18, 2020

New Releases isn’t just a show about the biggest games launching every week–it also highlights some lesser-known titles you might want to put on your radar. That’s the case this week, with the Ultimate Edition of Space Engineers, tabletop RPG Vampire: The Masquerade – Coteries of New York, and zany party game Save Your Nuts. Don’t worry, there’s DLC for some bigger titles too: Fallout 76 grows with the free Wastelanders update, and Journey to the Savage Planet has the Hot Garbage expansion.

Fallout 76 – Wastelanders — April 14

Available on: PS4, Xbox One, PC

Fallout 76 is already a sizable game, but it’s growing even larger thanks to the addition of NPCs. Raiders and Settlers are returning to the game’s West Virginia setting, bringing new quests, enemies, and gear with them. The addition of actual human characters also means the return of dialogue trees, S.P.E.C.I.A.L. speech checks, and quest-changing choices. Wastelanders is free for anyone who owns Fallout 76, and if you already own the PC version, you’ll get the Steam version at no extra cost–that launches the same day as the expansion.

More Coverage:

Journey to the Savage Planet – Hot Garbage — April 15

Available on: Xbox One, PC

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Journey to the Savage Planet is about exploring an alien world and cataloguing its flora and fauna at the behest of a mega-corporation. Hot Garbage is set in a waterpark, but your rival company has poisoned the water there. Fortunately, the expansion adds some new upgrades to contend with the pollution, like underwater boots and a detoxifying tool.

More Coverage:

Space Engineers: Ultimate Edition — April 15

Available on: Xbox One

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That’s not the only space adventure launching this week, although Space Engineers has a very different tone. It’s a physics-based sandbox game, challenging you to collect resources and build structures and equipment as you explore various planets. The Ultimate Edition includes all previously released DLC packs.

More Coverage:

Vampire: The Masquerade – Coteries of New York — April 15

Available on: Xbox One

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Based on the cult classic tabletop game, Coteries of New York lets you choose from three different newly formed vampires, each with their own abilities. You’ll have to contend with two fanged factions in NYC, making decisions that will influence each side as the story continues. You can also take on side quests to bond with your various vampire companions.

Save Your Nuts — April 16

Available on: Xbox One, Switch

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The name says it all: every minigame in Save Your Nuts is about, well, saving your nuts. Eight players can compete in local and online challenges to collect the most acorns, with minigames set in a variety of environments like basketball courts, backyards, and snowy mountains.

April still has plenty of video games to come, and the next episode of New Releases is going to the jungle with Predator: Hunting Grounds. Retro RPG fans will also be able to get their fix with Trials of Mana.

Now Playing: Top New Games Out On Switch, PS4, Xbox One, And PC This Week — April 12-18, 2020

Watch Kevin Feige’s Very First Tease in 2006 of His MCU Plan

Here at IGN we occasionally like to showcase something from geekdom’s rich history — a pop-culture Time Capsule, if you will, that gives us a peek in to the past, perhaps providing a new appreciation for previous projects. If you’d like, please check out the past few Time Capsules:

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It’s hard to imagine a time when the only superhero movies hitting theaters involved Spider-Man, Batman, Blade, or the errant Painkiller Jane, but rest assured, what the village elders told you is true: There was a time before the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Even if it doesn’t readily feel like it. Heck, there was even a time before superhero movies in general. History books merely refer to this era as “The Big Dark.”

Back in the ’90s, when the company was in dire straits and needed fast cash, Marvel licensed its heroes out to any movie studio willing to shell out the bells. It’s how we wound up with 19 Punisher movies. But even the most successful of these films – like the Sam Raimi Spider-verse, the “Let’s face it, you’re here to see Wolverine”-verse, and a few others that did well enough to warrant sequels (Blade, Ghost Rider, Fantastic Four, etc) — only ever existed in their own bubble. There was no crossing the streams when it came to supers. Everyone super stayed in their super lanes.

Back in 2006, at San Diego Comic-Con, Kevin Feige — when asked about the potential for crossovers in Marvel’s new slate of films (which at the time were to be Captain America, Nick Fury, and Thor, after Iron man and Hulk) — explained: “If you listen to the characters I named, and what we’re working on currently, and you put them all together, there’s no coincidence that they may someday equal the Avengers.”

Here, check out the snippet below of Feige on the panel (at the :27 mark). (If the embed doesn’t work, watch it here.) It’s just a brief blurb, which was included in a larger documentary about the MCU. See, before smartphones were commonplace, aka “The Big Big Dark,” SDCC panels weren’t blasted out everywhere online. [extreme old man voice] When I was a kid the internet was called staring directly at the sunnnnnn.

It’s kind of cute to hear Feige, who’s now Chief Emperor Overlord of All Things Marvel, act so hopeful and optimistic about this “larger mosaic.” Using words like “may” and “possibility” and “it would be great if people would watch something other than Uncle Ben dying.” Because Marvel movies now rule the multiplexes. Or, at least, they will again someday when multiplexes start flexing their plexes again.

It’s no secret that Phase 4, and humanity in general, is off to a rocky start here in 2020. Black Widow, which was to have opened in May but was delayed due to the coronavirus pandemic, will now take the November 6, 2020, slot originally occupied by The Eternals. The Eternals now moves to Feb. 12, 2021 and Shang-Chi now takes May 7, 2021. For the rest of the new Phase 4 date switcheroos, head here.

The following year, at 2007’s SDCC, the Marvel panel was for Iron Man and The Incredible Hulk. Iron Man was the first, and most important, seed of the saga. A for Hulk… well, Hulk as a headliner is like getting a shake as your “drink” at a fast-food restaurant. It just doesn’t go down smooth.

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[poilib element=”accentDivider”] Matt Fowler is a writer for IGN and a member of the Television Critics Association. Follow him on Twitter at @TheMattFowler and Facebook at Facebook.com/MattBFowler.

Killing Eve: Season 3 Premiere Review

There’s just something about this show, isn’t there? The visual decadence, the mysterious storytelling, its enigmatic leads and their delicious chemistry. Where other shows might zig, Killing Eve is well-equipped to zag, given its method of installing a new, female showrunner every season. And in its third outing, the show has given us something worth getting excited over — and a major kick-off episode in which to do it. If you were left wanting after Season 2, fear not: this installment of BBC America’s runaway hit show will leave you fairly satisfied.

Picking up an unknown (but seemingly extended) amount of time after Season 2, Killing Eve intriguingly sets up its main questions, mysteries, and players for the forthcoming season fairly quickly. And it’s done with the flair and bombast we’ve come to expect from the series, now in the hands of its latest showrunner, Suzanne Heathcote, who previously worked on Fear the Walking Dead and See.

Please note, from here on out, it will be impossible to not divulge spoilers, so if you haven’t watched the premiere yet, turn away now.

Though we all know Eve Polastri is doing as well as could be after being shot by Villanelle at the end of Season 2, the murderous fashion slayer seems to be completely unaware that the object of her obsession is alive. In fact, she’s trying to start a new life for herself, before being pulled back into the land of murder-for-hire, only this time it seems the stakes are even higher. We’re introduced to a sort of maternal figure, Dasha, who seems to have made Villanelle in her image. The Russian gymnastics/assassin coach is desperate to get back to the motherland and away from Barcelona — a dream she might be granted if she can bring Villanelle back into the fold. But V wants more than to just be a killer — she wants to be a keeper, a role higher up the ladder than Dasha or even ol’ Konstantin. As each side seems to play the other for control in the situation, it’s clear they’re evenly matched for, at the very least, a lot of fun future-action.

The mystery of The Twelve seems alive and well and deepening ever-further, as our heroes have been splintered apart, with deadly ramifications. MI6 has brought in a minder for Carolyn Martens after her and Eve’s unsanctioned runarounds in Rome, and her son Kenny has — like Eve — left the business, seemingly for good. Kenny’s new gig as a writer/reporter seems to hinge on his taking down of The Twelve in print, only by the end of the episode it’s revealed that won’t be happening, after he’s seemingly thrown to his death.

This is just one of several twists that lie ahead in the episodes to come (that we will not spoil), as the show finds its rhythm this season as a more serialized procedural with escapist fanfare and a brief exploration of the darker sides of humanity. Though Jodie Comer and Sandra Oh are still as well-matched as ever, this season — and premiere episode — show that the star of Healthcote’s iteration of this story seems to be Comer. The series’ odd bent, its jangling parts, feel better here than they did in Season 2, but that signature, audacious Phoebe Waller-Bridge comedy from Season 1 still feels a bit lacking in the dialogue and details. Perhaps it is unfair to expect such a marker of hers to thread a series made to be baton-passed from season to season, but it is such a huge part of what has made Killing Eve so monumentally loved, especially in its first outing, that you can’t help but feel the loss.

Still, there’s much to love and delight in when it comes to Season 3, as the show’s deliciously singular style remains intact. Fans will have plenty to chew on when it comes to theories and GIFable moments, and the cat-and-mouse, spy-and-killer game between Oh and Comer may never get old, so long as they keep having this much fun with it. It’s sexy, it’s action-y, it gives us consistently excellent performances: it’s exactly the sort of fun we all need to watch right now.

Westworld Season 3, Episode 5 Review: ‘Genre’

This review contains spoilers for Westworld Season 3, episode 5, titled “Genre.” To refresh your memory of where we left off, check out our review of Westworld Season 3, episode 4.

Part of IGN’s Westworld Season 3 guide

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In the documentary about his career that Noah Baumbach and Jake Paltrow made about him a couple of years ago, the great filmmaker Brian De Palma derided the classic movie car chase as little more than “shots of wheels turning and point-of-views out of windshields and cars banging into things,” not only “very boring,” but “ridiculous to even think about doing” after it was already perfected nearly half a century ago by The French Connection. The complaint was on my mind while watching the fifth episode of Westworld’s third season, because it features one of the freshest, most dynamic car chases I have seen on screen in years. If most car chases are boring, this is the exception that proves the rule — and yet another testament to the calibre of action Westworld has been delivering all season.

Whisking someone through an extended action set piece while he’s high on a futuristic designer drug that makes him experience life as though it were a movie is such an ingenious conceit that it’s hard to believe it’s never been done before. “Genre,” as the drug is aptly named, turns the world into a private movie marathon, and when our luckless hero Caleb is dosed by Liam Dempsey, he starts to see everything through a cinematic lens — including the very movie-like blockbuster chase he finds himself inconveniently embroiled in. The bad trip begins with a foray into film noir, and the show really leans into the aesthetic, switching to moody black-and-white photography and a brass-heavy jazz score. As Serac’s goons bear down on the driverless Uber he’s hot-wired with Dolores, Caleb’s just trying to navigate a scene out of The Maltese Falcon or The Big Sleep.

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But it turns out Genre is no mere film noir simulator, and as the car chase ramps up, Caleb’s world changes styles from noir to opera — replete with saturated colors and a score courtesy of Wagner. Caleb blowing up enemy cars with a heat-seeking rocket launcher to the sound of “Flight of the Valkyries” is one of the most purely delightful moments in the history of Westworld, an improvement on the great “Paint It Black” sequence from the first season and one of the few action scenes conceived by showrunner Jonathan Nolan that I can imagine belonging in a Christopher Nolan film. When it culminates in the self-driving motorbike drifting under an oncoming vehicle and bursting into flames, I was completely ecstatic, sure that this would enter the pantheon of big-budget television.

That would have been enough, but the episode explores the idea of this trip even further. (“Watch out for that last act,” Caleb is warned, hinting at what’s to come.) We switch next to romance, as Caleb, in the middle of a deadly firefight, gazes at Dolores longingly (and in slow-motion!), strings swelling exaggeratedly. It’s an amusing, even sort of moving touch, relishing the beauty of the moment even as it roars with gunfire and carnage. And it sets up perfectly the following shift, which finds Caleb gliding more contemplatively through the LA subway system to Iggy Pop’s “Nightclubbing,” an excellent needle drop on a show with no shortage of them. On board the subway, it’s time for Dolores to unveil another revelation: that she intends to use Dempsey’s login credentials to share Rehoboam’s future-predicting data with everyone in the world.

Aaron Paul excels, again, in his brief monologue to Liam Dempsey on the bitter truth of his experiment, relating a story about drowning rats and false hope that might have been overwrought in a different actor’s hands, but rings true when Paul delivers it. “I would rather live in chaos than in a world controlled by you,” he snarls — and of course the parallel drawn is clear. Dolores chose chaos over control when she liberated herself from Westworld; she’s now offering the same freedom to humankind, although whether for destructive ends rather than benevolent ones is hard to say. In any case, she sends the info to smartphones worldwide, and it’s heartwrenching to watch ordinary people learn the worst about their narrowly defined lives. With everything laid bare, hope’s eradicated. And chaos will reign.

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One of Ramin Djawadi’s beloved instrumental covers of pop songs greets us as our heroes exit the subway — David Bowie’s “Life on Mars,” which was the perfect choice to score the confusion and havoc that’s already erupting outside. “What genre is this?” Caleb asks as he watches men and women fighting and looting, stealing cars and wailing in the street. The bleak answer? “It’s reality, man.” The implication is that, thanks to Dolores, the real world has now transformed into a movie, full of drama and excitement and the kind of intensity that Serac and Rehoboam carefully suppressed. Maybe all this chaos and violence seems brutal, but the question the show wants to pose for us is whether that might not be preferable to the benign monotony of total control.

Caleb’s last genre, down on the shore by the docks where Dolores told him he’d eventually take his life, is horror, heralded by synths from Wendy Carlos’s unforgettable score for The Shining. (There are some interesting ways to think about this reference: like Jack Torrence, Caleb may be a man of dubious mental health and dark mysteries in his past.) We’re edging closer to what I suspect will be some seriously major revelations about Caleb’s identity, including whatever exactly Liam Dempsey warns him he was responsible for before succumbing to his wounds on the sand. It seems that Caleb was involved in some untoward business during his time as a vet, and we get an intriguing glimpse of what appears to be the torture and kidnapping of a man played by Enrico Colantoni, who played Keith on Veronica Mars. Whatever the secret, Dolores knows, and it’s sure to figure into her plan in some respect.

In and around all this action, meanwhile, we learn everything there is to know about the formerly enigmatic Serac, who it transpires has the classic supervillain motivation of wanting to dominate the world in order to save humanity from itself. Serac can persuade foreign governments to do his bidding and dictates the course of the bulk of world-historical events, and the point, as we learn in a series of flashbacks, is to create order out of the chaos that is the world’s natural state. I can’t quite tell if Serac is an interesting character or if Vincent Cassel is just a really compelling actor, but either way, it was nice to learn more about him and to better understand his goal and motivation. Now that he’s better developed, I’m anticipating his impending collision with Dolores all the more.

HBO’s Westworld: 15 Clues in Season 3, Episode 5 “Genre”

HBO’s Westworld: 15 Clues in Season 3, Episode 5 “Genre” – GameSpot

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Disclosure: ViacomCBS is GameSpot’s parent company


Daily Deals: Save on Digital PC Games, Hulu, Disney+ and More

Sunday is here, and what better way to spend it than playing some amazing PC games, at an amazingly discounted price. Thanks to Green Man Gaming, you can do that very thing! If gaming isn’t for you though, keep reading, as we’ve got deals on Disney+, ComiXology and more!

Save On Digital PC Games at Green Man Gaming

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Looking to play some PC games while you’re stuck at home? How about you play those games on the cheap! Green Man Gaming is having a huge sale at the moment, with some great games currently discounted.

Sign Up for Disney+/Hulu/ESPN+ Package for $13 and Watch Pixar’s Onward, Frozen 2, Parasite, The Mandalorian, and More

Disney+ alone costs $6.99 per month (there’s a 7-day trial) and you’ll get to watch Pixar’s Onward, The Lion King, Aladdin, and every episode of The Mandalorian Season One. However, an even better deal is the Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+ package, which only costs $12.99 per month and gets you access to Parasite, every UFC Fight Night, and more.

Marvel’s The Infinity Gauntlet Digital Comic Collection (Issues #1-#6) for $1.99

Each issue normally sells for $1.99 but with this deal you’re getting all six for $1.99. If you thought the Infinity War movies were good, you should read the spectacular source material. You can choose to download the comics to your Kindle or ComiXology app.

Watch Parasite with Free 1 Month Hulu Trial

New Subscribers Only

This was the first ever foreign film to win Best Picture and Best Director at the Oscars. We gave it a 9.5/10. And it’s free to watch on Hulu. Don’t have a Hulu subscription. You can currently sign up for a free 1 month trial.

3 Months of Amazon Music Unlimited for Free

This deal only works for new Amazon Music Unlimited subscribers, but you don’t have to be a Prime member. Normally you’d be paying $9.99/month for this service (or $7.99/mo for Prime members). Amazon Music Unlimited works alot like the paid ad-free versions of Spotify or Pandora. Get access to millions of songs and playlists that you can stream anywhere.

40% Off 3 Months of Audible Membership

Or 30-Day Free Trial for New Subscribers

An Audible membership normally costs $15 per month. With this deal you’re only paying $8.95 per month for the first 3 months The Audible membership gives you access to an extended audiobook library whenever and wherever you want (includes all Harry Potter, Game of Thrones, and Witcher books). Every month you also get one free audiobook of your choice and two free Audible Originals (which you keep forever even when your subscripion ends), and 30% off additional audiobook purchases.

If you have never signed up for Audible before, you can instead get a free 30-day trial and you’ll still get a free audiobook and Audible Originals to keep indefinitely.

ComiXology Free Trial Extended to 60 Days

This sponsored deal is brought to you by ComiXology

The ComiXology trial period is normally 30 days.  ComiXology is Amazon’s digital comic platform and is the largest digital retailer of American comics. The site hosts 20,000 digital comics, graphic novels, and manga from DC, Marvel, Image, Dark Horse, and more. Here’s your chance to access all of it, totally free, for 30 60 days. If you’re an avid comic reader, you might want to consider continuing on afterwards, since it’s only $5.99/month. You can even sign in with your Amazon account.

Xbox One X (Factory Refurbished) with Bonus Witcher 3 Game for $229.98 at Dell

This is the lowest price we’ve ever seen for an Xbox One X gaming console from a reputable vendor, plus you’re getting an outstanding game. Note that this is a Microsoft refurbished item, which means that it still comes with a 90-day warranty. Note that you do not need to be a Dell member or student to get this deal; simply use guest checkout.

Lenovo Legion T730 Intel Core i9-9900K 8-Core RTX 2080 Gaming PC for $1699.99

This gaming PC is equipped with the best consumer Intel processor on the market, the i9-9900K. Unlike the i7-9700, this is an 8-core processor with hyper-threading enabled. It also has an unlocked multiplier for better overclocking headroom. The RTX 2080 is superior to the previous generation GTX 1080 Ti and should power through any game at up to 4K resolution.

HP OMEN Obelisk Intel Core i5-9600K RTX 2080 Ti Gaming PC for $1769.99

I’ve never seen a prebuilt gaming PC with an RTX 2080 Ti (the fastest video card out right now) for this price. In terms of gaming, upgrading from an Intel Core i5-9600K to an Intel Core i7 is a waste… performance-wise they are identical. I’d also recommend upgrading the RAM and storage on your own to save lots of money.

  • Click Here
  • Click on “Customize & Buy”
  • Select Graphics Card – NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 Ti (+$450)
  • Price should show up as $1769.99

New Alienware Aurora R9 AMD Ryzen 7 3700X AMD Radeon RX 5700 XT Gaming Desktop PC for $1110

For those of you who haven’t been keeping up with the Intel vs AMD CPU war, AMD has been giving Intel a run for its money with its flagship processors. The new AMD Ryzen 7 3700X 8-core processor is comparable to the Intel Core i7-9700, both in terms of gaming and workstation performance. It’s paired with an RX 5700 XT video card, which is on par with the RTX 2070. If you want to upgrade the RAM or hard drive, I’d suggest doing it on your own. You’ll save money, and the Aurora R9 allows for toolless access without voiding your warranty.

Oculus Rift VR Headset (Factory Refurb) at the Oculus Store for $299 (Compatible with Half-Life: Alyx)

Includes 6 Month Oculus Warranty

The Oculus Store has refurbished Oculus Rift VR headsets and they are clearing them out at a great price, $100 less than the Oculus Quest and Rift S. This is the only way to get an Oculus Rift with warranty. I bought my Oculus Rift headset over 3 years ago and still use it to this day. I’ve never had the urge to upgrade to the newer VR headsets, especially at their ridiculous price points. The original Oculus Rift controller is, in my opinion, still the best controller for Beat Saber because it is the lightest and least bulky compared to the rest (even the Rift S controller). It also has exceptional tracking, even with only two sensors. Also, the higher resolution on the newer VR headsets requires an even more demanding computer. My GTX 1070 equipped PC can run the Rift perfectly well, but may not suffice for a VR headset with nearly double the pixel count. Half-Life: Alyx is also compatible with the Oculus Rift.

The 2020 Premium Learn To Code Certification 10-Course Bundle for $39

Over 120 Hours of Learning Material

In this day and age, learning to code is one of the safest ways to job security. There’s no lack of programming jobs, especially in growing tech sectors like here in the San Francisco Bay Area. This online package contains ten courses to get you started, or only $3.90 per course. They include topics on JavaScript, HTML5, CS3, Python, Django 2, Flutter, Dart, and more.

The Complete Python Certification Bootcamp 12-Course Bundle for $34.99

Over 80 Hours of Learning Material

Python is the most popular computer language, so it makes sense to learn this language first. If that’s what you want, then this bundle is for you. You get 85 hours worth of training material divided among 12 courses (or $2.92 per course). This is one of the most popular and best selling courses on StackSocial.

The All-in-One Adobe Creative Cloud Suite Certification Bundle for $34

Over 60 Hours of Learning Material

Proficiency in Adobe apps is basically a requirement for today’s graphic or video professional, but these are also very handy tools for hobbyists who are into photography, video streaming, digital art, and more. This bundle includes 8 courses, or only $4.25 per course and includes topics on Photoshop, Illustrator, Premier, Lightroom, InDesign, and more.

New Licensed Castlevania Apparel at the IGN Store

Do you enjoy Netflix’s original Castlevania animated series? If so, the IGN Store has added a host of officially licensed Castlevania apparel. Sign up for our newsletter and get a 20% off coupon code. Alternatively, save 10% off using coupon code “igndeals10“.

SNL’s Middle-Aged Mutant Ninja Turtles Will Haunt Your Dreams

This week’s Saturday Night Live, which adopted a unique “At Home” format, and featured surprise host Tom Hanks and a fun swipe at Tiger King’s Carole Baskin, aired a new animated short, catching us up on the now-miserable lives of Michelangelo, Leonardo, Raphael, and Donatello — as the Middle-Aged Mutant Ninja Turtles!

Watch April and Mikey try to keep their marriage alive. Cringe in fear as Donny gets some disturbing news from his doctor. And what happened to ol’ Shredder? Prepare yourself for some scintillating adulting…

Looking for shows to binge during these quaran-tainment times? Here are some IGN-recommented series to take in…

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Matt Fowler is a writer for IGN and a member of the Television Critics Association. Follow him on Twitter at @TheMattFowler and Facebook at Facebook.com/MattBFowler.