Current:Home > Finance'The Morning Show' review: Season 3 gets lost in space, despite terrific Reese Witherspoon -TrueNorth Finance Path
'The Morning Show' review: Season 3 gets lost in space, despite terrific Reese Witherspoon
View
Date:2025-04-12 20:18:18
In its crackpot new season, “The Morning Show” doesn’t just jump the shark. It literally hurls itself into space.
When we pick up with Season 3 of the Apple TV+ drama (★★; streaming Wednesday, then weekly), veteran newscaster Alex Levy (Jennifer Aniston) is preparing to shoot a segment aboard a tourist spacecraft as its tech billionaire owner (Jon Hamm) negotiates to buy the network. But after a spat with her double-dealing boss (Billy Crudup), Alex blows off the broadcast at the last minute, forcing another familiar face to launch into orbit without any prior training or preparation.
No longer content to merely defy logic, "The Morning Show" fully incinerates it this year. During a building-wide power outage caused by a potential gunman, evening news anchor Bradley Jackson (Reese Witherspoon) opts not to go into lockdown with her colleagues. Instead, she hops into an elevator, which predictably breaks down and traps her inside. Later in the season, Alex is shocked when her reporting is overshadowed by her high-profile office romance ― a relationship that violates all sorts of journalism ethics, apparently a foreign concept to anyone at the fictional UBA network.
'The Morning Show':When does Season 3 come out? Release date, cast, trailer
Flummoxing choices combined with ham-fisted dialogue make for a sort of Lynchian fever dream that is strangely addictive the more you watch. Like a car crash, or Max's similarly batty "Sex and the City" sequel, you simply can't look away.
When “The Morning Show” does succeed, it’s because of its performances. Greta Lee (“Past Lives”) and Karen Pittman (“And Just Like That…”) are captivating standouts as Stella Bak and Mia Jordan: two women of color navigating a minefield of power dynamics at the network.
Nicole Beharie also delivers a searing turn as Christina Hunter, a newly hired anchor who learns she was the target of a racist remark by longtime UBA chairwoman Cybil Richards (Holland Taylor). In a tense on-air interview, Christina confronts Cybil about diversity practices and her inherent racism, proving that the series is capable of nuance when it allows its characters to just sit in a moment for longer than five seconds.
With her disgraced (and now deceased) former co-host Mitch Kessler (Steve Carrell) out of the picture, Aniston’s Alex is oddly given very little to do in the season’s first half, although her coverage of Roe v. Wade takes center stage in later episodes. Bradley is also saddled with some of the show’s most far-fetched storylines, but Witherspoon's exceptional performance grounds the material.
She’s deeply affecting in a flashback to the first year of the pandemic, as Bradley quarantines with then-girlfriend Laura Peterson (Julianna Marguiles, making a welcome return to the series). Isolation and a COVID-related death eat away at Bradley, who struggles to let her guard down with Laura.
In the season's wildest sequence, we discover that Bradley was inside the U.S. Capitol as it was being stormed by right-wing extremists on January 6, 2021. Her incriminating smartphone footage of the attack opens up some intriguing narrative doors, as long as you don't think about them for too long.
Like other dramas that have attempted to comment on current politics, including HBO's "Succession" and "The Newsroom," "The Morning Show" can't keep up with the hamster wheel of 24/7 media coverage. The series rehashes debates around masks and vaccines with no fresh insight, and limply attempts to satirize Elon Musk though Hamm's character, while the real figure still looms larger and more ludicrous. Discussions about abortion and Ukraine also very rarely go beyond surface level.
Unenviably, "The Morning Show" can never quite shake the feeling that it’s old news. But with a cast this starry – and this committed – at the anchor desk, it's hard to stop tuning in.
veryGood! (8378)
Related
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Trump campaign says he raised $45.5 million in 3rd quarter, tripling DeSantis' fundraisng
- Dancing With the Stars' Mark Ballas and Wife BC Jean Share Miscarriage Story in Moving Song
- Becky G says this 'Esquinas' song makes her 'bawl my eyes out' every time she sings it
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- The Philippines' capital is running out of water. Is building a dam the solution?
- Dick Butkus, Hall of Fame linebacker and Chicago Bears and NFL icon, dies at 80
- Simone Biles' good-luck charm: Decade-old gift adds sweet serendipity to gymnastics worlds
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Eligible electric and plug-in vehicle buyers will get US tax credits immediately in 2024
Ranking
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- Jason Derulo Deeply Offended by Defamatory Claims in Emaza Gibson's Sexual Harassment Lawsuit
- 'Our friend Willie': Final day to visit iconic 128-year-old mummy in Pennsylvania
- Jay Cutler Debuts New Romance With Samantha Robertson 3 Years After Kristin Cavallari Breakup
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Flood unleashed by India glacial lake burst leaves at least 10 people dead and 102 missing
- Police identify vehicle and driver allegedly involved in fatal Illinois semi-truck crash
- London's White Cube shows 'fresh and new' art at first New York gallery
Recommendation
Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
Bruce Springsteen announces new tour dates for shows missed to treat peptic ulcer disease
Police bodycam video shows arrest of suspect in 1996 killing of Tupac Shakur
How to watch Austin City Limits Music Festival this weekend: Foo Fighters, Alanis Morissette, more
Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
Migrants pass quickly through once impenetrable Darien jungle as governments scramble for answers
Woman charged in June shooting that killed 3 in an Indianapolis entertainment district
'A person of greatness': Mourners give Dianne Feinstein fond farewell in San Francisco