We end this month with another Like It or Lump It.
This is a feature where I review a show on a streaming service and tell you if it is worth watching.
Before I get into "His & Hers" (Netflix), a quick word on a couple of other shows.
One is "Stranger Things 5".
This one was a honking big deal. Eight episodes spread out between Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's Day. It was longest Dungeons and Dragons game ever,
Basically, "Stranger Things" had run its course. All of the kids of Hawkins had grown up. Like "Eleven," who was a little girl when the show started in 2016, but now is a grown woman in more ways than one, if you catch my drift.
In real life 1987, you would have heard the guys say, "Hey, have you checked out El, lately?"
But no, they kept going down into the upside out or whatever it was to fight the Mind Flyer Spider or Mr. Vecna. Not going into great detail, but it all worked out sort of. I guess. By the time it ended, Dustin flipped off the high school's principal and a girl that had been in a coma for two years graduated with her class.
Nothing against The Duffer Brothers, but their next show should be about CalvinBall because it seemed like they just made up things as they went along.
The other show is the second season of "Fallout," which is based on a video game. You can tell.
It is about life in a post-nuclear apocalypse. The first season was really violent. The second season is too violent. I checked out after the one hundredth exploding head.
And now, "His & Hers". The premise per Reddit: "The investigation by TV anchor Anna Andrews (Tessa Thompson) into a murder case in her hometown of Dahlonega, Georgia, deeply troubles Detective Jack Harper (Jon Bernthal) in the thriller series based on Alice Feeney's novel of the same name."
Jack Harper is troubled because Anna Andrews is (wait for it) his estranged wife!
Anna was the six o'clock news anchor at WSK-TV Channel 5 Action News Scene Alive. However, she disappeared a year before the story takes place and is replaced by a bubble-headed-bleach blonde whose husband is a cameraman.
The story starts when the town's Miss Lincoln (everybody took a shot at her in the balcony) is found all carved up in a wooded section near downtown Dahlonega.
Anna just happens to stop by WSK to ask her old boss for her old job back, but Blondie has taken her place as anchor, but gives Anna the story because, what the heck, it is great to have the old mouth breather back. (The actress conveys the act of listening by looking at a person with her mouth open.)
I would add more, but it would ruin it for you. Just be aware there are a lot of "dunnits" in this "who dunnit".
Acting: Okay. There's a lot of criticism on Reddit about the guy who plays Jack Harper, who slides in and out of a Southern accent. The lady who plays Anna Andrews is a little better, but you can't really imagine her being from Dahlonega. Everybody else is just okay, too. There's a newbie detective from Boston who is being trained by Jack. You really wonder how in the world she made it to Dahlonega from Boston. Did she answer an ad? The best acting in the show came from "The lady holding a pink box of donuts in the sheriff's office". This actress really captured the essence of holding a box of donuts. The fact that my wife and I know the actress from church did not influence my evaluation.
Violence: Some stabbing, punching, and shooting. No exploding heads.
Language: NSFGRD (Not Safe For Gold Rush Days). Lots of F-words. Someone tells someone else to "shut your pie hole". I have lived in Georgia for sixty-six years, and I have never heard anyone use the phrase "shut your pie hole". That's a Yankee phrase. A southerner would say either "Hush," or if they are really mad, "Shud-up."
Sex and Nudity: Lots of getting it on in the North Georgia mountains. However, there is no nudity except Grandma nudity. It is essential to the plot.
The Good: In most tv shows and movies, Dahlonega would have been presented as a Hillbilly Redneck heaven where everybody is drinking shine and getting their white sheets dry-cleaned so they can meet up at the local Klan rally and sing praises to President Trump. "His & Hers" does not do this. The people of Dahlonega are presented as good people who say, "shut your pie hole."
Additonally, Jack and Anna are an interracial couple, and nobody makes a big deal about it.
As a whodunnit, it keeps you on your toes. There is a surprising red herring, and the ending makes some sense. Kind of. Close enough for jazz.
The Bad: The acting could have been better, except for the lady holding the pink donut box.
The Weird: Dahlonega is portrayed as a suburb of Atlanta, which I can assure you it is not. Characters zip from Atlanta to Dahlonega with no problem. It would take you 30 minutes to get from Buckhead, where WSK-TV is, to Ga-400 and at least an hour from there to Dahlonega.
Verdict: Like it, but don't expect too much from it.







