▲ 4 r/tvshow

What’s a show you’ve seen a dozen times, but you still keep finding small details you completely missed before?

I’ve rewatched Breaking Bad way more times than I’d like to admit, and I still just caught a throwaway line in Season 2 that completely changes how I look at the finale. It’s like the show has an extra layer I keep walking past without noticing.

I’m curious, what’s the show that rewards you the most for paying attention? I love that feeling of finding a hidden layer in a show I thought I knew inside and out.

Are there any shows you've seen a million times where you're still discovering new things, or have you finally solved your favorite series?

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u/Emilyy-yay — 1 day ago
▲ 141 r/Makeup

Does anyone else skip foundation most of the time? I feel like I’m the only one who can’t stand the feeling of it.

I’ve tried so many foundations over the years, but I’ve finally had to accept that I really dislike how they feel. Even the lightweight ones start to feel sticky or heavy on my skin after a few hours. I usually only wear foundation for big occasions where I really need that extra coverage, but for everything else, I just can't do it—I end up wanting to wash my face the second I get home.

Lately, I’ve been sticking to just concealer where I need it and then using powder, which feels so much more comfy for me. But sometimes I see these full-coverage routines online and wonder if I’m missing out by keeping it so simple.

Are there any other no-foundation people out there? What’s your go-to way to even out your skin without dealing with the heavy feeling of liquid products?

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u/Emilyy-yay — 3 days ago

What’s a thriller shows you finished, and then immediately had to go read a deep dive about because you were so confused?

I love those shows that don't hold your hand and leave you sitting there in the dark after the finale, wondering what the hell just happened. I’m looking for something that is legitimately mind-bending or just plain weird. What’s the most 'I need to process this' thing you’ve watched lately?

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u/Emilyy-yay — 6 days ago

Does anyone else feel guilty about having neglected bottles?

I look at my perfume shelf sometimes and feel bad for the bottles that I haven't touched in months. I keep wanting to finish them, but I just keep reaching for my same two favorites every single day. Does anyone actually manage to rotate through their whole collection, or are we all just rotating through the same few?

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u/Emilyy-yay — 8 days ago

IJW: I Will Find You (2026)

I just finished the final episode on Netflix last night, and my head is honestly spinning from how fast those last two episodes threw twists at the screen.

If you’ve watched any of the other Harlan Coben shows, you know exactly what you’re getting into, totally unrealistic but completely unputdownable. Sam Worthington plays a father serving life for allegedly murdering his own son, until his ex-sister-in-law drops a photo showing the kid might actually be alive. The prison break happens so early on, and from that point, the pacing completely takes off as a nationwide manhunt.

What I loved about this one compared to some of the past adaptations is the cast. Britt Lower and Milo Ventimiglia are great, and having it set in the US gave it a slightly different energy. Is the plot incredibly far-fetched? Absolutely. Are there character decisions that make you want to yell at the TV? For sure. But as a pure, popcorn mystery puzzle where you just want to see how the missing pieces finally snap together, it absolutely hooks you.

If you need a fast-paced, high-stress thriller to binge over a weekend without thinking too hard about the logic, this one definitely delivers.

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u/Emilyy-yay — 10 days ago
▲ 124 r/tvshow

What is the only TV show intro that is so unskippable you actually get mad if someone hits the "skip intro" button?

Streaming apps have made it way too easy to just blast through the opening credits of everything, and 95% of the time I’m glad the button is there. But there are a tiny handful of shows where the theme song or the visuals are so flawless that skipping it feels like a literal crime.

For me, it's Game of Thrones (or Succession). I have to hear that theme music every single time. Which show has an intro that you genuinely look forward to hearing every single episode?

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u/Emilyy-yay — 12 days ago
▲ 4 r/tvshow

Do you prefer sticking to one TV genre, or do you constantly flip between completely different moods?

I realized my watchlist is a total mess right now. One night I’m completely sucked into a heavy, dark crime mystery trying to figure out a puzzle, and the very next night I just want to put on a lighthearted romantic comedy or a fun adventure show to completely turn my brain off.

I find it hard to binge multiple seasons of the same intense drama without needing a total palette cleanser in between. How do you guys usually watch TV? Do you stick to one specific vibe until you finish a series, or do you constantly switch things up depending on the day?

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u/Emilyy-yay — 1 month ago

IJW: Interstellar (2014) - I know I'm incredibly late, but what a masterpiece.

I honestly can’t believe it took me over a decade to finally watch this. I feel so silly for putting it off for this long, but I am just completely blown away.

I went into it expecting a cool sci-fi space movie, but I was not prepared for how heavy it was going to be. It completely wrecked me. The whole concept of time dilation is terrifying on its own, but watching Cooper miss decades of his kids lives because of a few hours on another planet was brutal to watch.

That scene where he sits there crying while catching up on 23 years of video messages absolutely broke me. Matthew McConaughey's acting in that moment felt so real. Plus, the soundtrack by Hans Zimmer gave me full body chills. It made everything feel so massive and intense.

It is one of those rare films that makes you feel tiny in the grand scheme of the universe, but also makes you want to hug your family a little tighter.

For those who have seen it, which part hit you the hardest? I honestly don't know how I'm supposed to just go to sleep normally after that ending.

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u/Emilyy-yay — 1 month ago

What’s a fast-paced, high-energy show that keeps your attention the whole time?

My attention span has been terrible lately, and if a show has too many slow scenes of people just staring out windows or dragging out conversations, I immediately start scrolling on my phone.

I need something with snappy dialogue, quick editing, or a plot that constantly moves forward. It can be a comedy, a light drama, or a heist show—just something that keeps my brain completely locked in from the start!

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u/Emilyy-yay — 1 month ago
▲ 126 r/RewatchTV+1 crossposts

What is the one canceled TV show that you will never truly get over?

There are so many incredible series that get prematurely cut short by networks before they even have a chance to hit their stride. It is so frustrating when a show has a unique concept, great writing, and an amazing cast, but it gets axed after just one or two seasons because of bad marketing or scheduling.

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u/30HummingbirdLane — 1 month ago