
It's a little more over the top to me - it's somewhat realistic, but three women planning a major robbery and getting away with it (to the point I've seen, anyway), is a little tough for me to believe just because there were so many witnesses and secrets coming out. Viewing difficulties aside, this show is amazing.

but try to have a way to watch season two, because you'll be hooked and wanting more! I was able to watch a few episodes of season two through a friend's on demand account, but now I need more! The last few episodes of season two are on Hulu, but I haven't been able to find 1-8 on any streaming service. Season one of this show is on Netflix, and I recommend you watch it. I'm eager to see what happens - and if you haven't seen the show yet, you have time to catch up before anything new is out!Īfter finishing Dead to Me and wanting more, More, MORE!, I turned to Good Girls. I recently saw that there will be a second season, though no date has been set yet. The season finale was also a nice balance of suspense, but believable events. And I think there were one or two of those in this show, but overall I felt like the use of suspense and slowly letting the viewer learn secrets was perfectly done. Like when the resolution turns out to not be a major plot point, but just a fake-out.

But cliffhangers can be well done, or they can be so overly dramatic that, when they're resolved, you feel like you were duped. I know cliffhangers are necessary for shows, especially season finales, and sometimes for book chapters. The concept was compelling enough, but the secrets revealed towards the end of each episode made for perfect cliffhangers. I loved this ending so much more than the story, though I like being able to compare them both, because I think it makes the episode's twist stand out that much more.įirst up was Dead to Me on Netflix, at the recommendation of some coworkers. He reaches for a bottle and the snake coils around his wrist and bites him. He wants something strong to take the edge off his anxiety from the snake.

After they leave, the roommate gets up and goes to the liquor cabinet. The man tries to calm him down and says he knows where his car is, and that he'll take him there.

When the doctor sees his car is gone, stolen by the woman brought home, he gets angry. After the sheet is pulled back and there's no snake, the doctor asks the man if the roommate might have imagined it all. The bulk of the episode is the same as the story, with the added aspect of the woman hiding in the kitchen so the roommate and doctor don't see her and tarnish her reputation. I think she was added into the episode to make it more dramatic. I don't think he did, because later in the episode she steals the doctor's car, and I don't recall that from the story. The episode was similar to the story, though I don't remember if the man brought a woman home.
