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Category: The Handmaid’s Tale

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  • 5 shows to stream if you like The Handmaid’s Tale

    If you watched and loved The Handmaid’s Tale, which concludes after its sixth and final season, you might be looking for something else to watch that’s similar. To bide your time between episodes, or once you have binged your way through the show, there are several shows worth checking out with similar themes from all the top streaming services.

    Here, I have gathered five shows to stream if you liked The Handmaid’s Tale. One is new with just a single season, so it’s a quick binge. Others have multiple seasons to keep you busy and entertained for months to come. 

    Paradise (2025-)

    Already renewed for a second season, Paradise has a similar premise in that people reside in an oppressive society. It does not disrespect women like Gilead in The Handmaid’s Tale. But it is one where the central protagonist rises up to fight against injustices. Similarly, a powerful person uses their influence (and wealth) to create a society they believe is better than the one that existed before.

    Paradise will keep you gripped through its eight-episode first season. The political thriller has an equally tremendous cast and a story about good intentions rooted in an evil need for control and a desire to cope with trauma.

    Stream Paradise on Hulu. 

    Silo (2023-)

    A post-apocalyptic sci-fi dystopian drama, in Silo, the people who reside in an underground silo don’t have anywhere else to run, like June (Elisabeth Moss) does in The Handmaid’s Tale. The outside world, or so they are told, is an uninhabitable wasteland. They live under the rule of a few individuals who appear to have a cult-like mentality, fueled by warped beliefs and characterized by brainwashing and coercive control. 

    Like in The Handmaid’s Tale, people are forbidden from owning certain items or reading certain materials, namely anything that might remind them of the world before. Juliette (Rebecca Ferguson) starts to believe that there’s more to what’s going on, and her actions result in the rallying of a resistance. Silo is just as dark, though not as disturbing, with fantastic acting and a cast to match. The series has been renewed for a third and fourth season to conclude the story.

    Stream Silo on Apple TV+. 

    Servant (2019-2023)

    Servant has similar religious themes to The Handmaid’s Tale. The main plot centers around a woman who loses her baby and receives a lifelike doll that she believes to be real. A young woman is hired to help her care for the “baby,” but it turns out this woman may possess supernatural abilities. As the story unfolds, it dives into topics of religious oppression, cults, and morality.

    Servant takes the theme to a psychological horror slant, so the feel and tone of the show are different. But it’s a show fans of The Handmaid’s Tale will appreciate for the way it handles the manipulation of vulnerable women, especially pertaining to their children, and religious control. The series ended after four riveting seasons.

    Stream Servant on Apple TV+. 

    The Leftovers (2014-2017)

    Based on the Tom Perrotta novel of the same name, the supernatural drama The Leftovers centers around a disastrous event that has wiped out two percent of the world’s population. Those who survive deal with the breakdown of mainstream religion and the rise of cults with leaders and members who believe themselves to be, or to be following, the Second Coming of Jesus Christ.

    Featuring conflict between two major groups, like in The Handmaid’s Tale, The Leftovers touches on differences in beliefs and faith, dealing with trauma, and fighting back for what you believe in. The Leftovers may have only lasted three seasons, but it ranks among the best HBO shows ever.

    Stream The Leftovers on Max. 

    The Walking Dead (2010-2022)

    The Walking Dead might not initially seem like a show that fans of The Handmaid’s Tale would appreciate. But there are elements throughout that are reminiscent of themes you’ll find in that series and plenty of life lessons to be learned from the show. As the group navigates survival in a post-apocalyptic world, they come across different groups of survivors who all live by their own principles. Some are religious in nature, while others believe in the survival of the fittest.

    There are groups that will happily deliver punishments by death. There are also ones like The Saviors, where Negan claims to respect women yet forces them to be his polygamous wives, tearing them away from their real partners. In both shows, it’s about survival through dire circumstances, the need to make polarizing moral decisions, and groups coming together who might never have done so in the real world.

    Stream The Walking Dead on Netflix. 

  • The Handmaid’s Tale season 5 recap

    It has been a lengthy wait for the return of The Handmaid’s Tale, which first premiered on Hulu in April 2017. Season 5 ended with a bang in November 2022, and since then, fans have been waiting with bated breath for the sixth and final season. Season 6’s first three episodes stream on April 8, 2025, and one of the great TV shows you need to watch this month picks up right where the story left off.

    Where did the story leave off? It’s easy to forget, given that so much time has passed between seasons. To get you up to speed before you start the last season of this dystopian drama adapted from the Margaret Atwood novel of the same name, we have this handy recap refresher of all the key moments from season five.

    It’s anything but a blessed day for both June and Serena

    June (Elisabeth Moss) managed to escape from Gilead in season 4, but she’s still deeply suffering from the trauma she endured and still doesn’t have her daughter Hannah (Jordana Blake) back. She has, however, gotten some form of retribution by joining other former handmaids in beating her former Commander, Fred Waterford (Joseph Fiennes), to death, hanging his body from the wall, and sending his severed finger to his now widow, Serena Joy Waterford (Yvonne Strahovski).

    Serena retaliates by holding an elaborate and televised funeral for Fred, where she ensures that Hannah is part of the ceremony, donning a dress of a color that indicates the coming-of-age girl is ready to be married off. This infuriates June, who comes close to killing Serena when they cross paths. However, there’s a reason she doesn’t pull the trigger.

    Serena is surprisingly pregnant, and in a poetic twist of fate, banished from Gilead because she’s now an unwed mother and sent to Canada to work as a diplomat. In reality, Serena is placed with the Wheelers, a couple who take a creepy interest in her child. Serena is not a handmaid, but she’s being treated like one. It’s clear this couple will take her baby once it’s born.

    While trying to navigate this new devastating situation, Serena gets word that June has been caught in No Man’s Land, where she went with her husband, Luke (O-T Fagbenle), to gain intel. Serena asks to execute her former handmaid and her husband’s killer. While holding the gun to June’s head, Serena chickens out and shoots the guard instead. Serena hops in a car and forces June to come with her. Serena is going into labor, and June reluctantly helps her deliver the baby inside a barn.

    Later, at a hospital, Luke calls the authorities on Serena for being in the country illegally, and she ironically pleads with June for help because she knows what this means: the Wheelers will take her baby. June tells her, “We’re not friends,” but sympathetically doles out last-minute advice: go back to the Wheelers and plot revenge from within. Serena does just that. She offers to be present at the opening of the Gilead Cultural Center, arguing that her appearance with a baby in tow would be wonderful for recruitment. While there, she manages to escape.

    June needs to save Hannah, but she’s in danger

    While still in Canada, June and Luke are desperately trying to figure out how to save Hannah. Commander Lawrence (Get Out’s Bradley Whitford) offers her a home in his new, supposedly more progressive community called New Bethlehem. He promises he will situate them close to Hannah and her eventual new husband. Understandably, June refuses.

    With the help of Mark Tuello (Sam Jaeger), a representative of the U.S. government-in-exile, a strike plan is put into motion to raid Hannah’s school in Gilead, but the attack is thwarted. Tuello thinks the only way in is through Nick (Max Minghella), and he tries to convince the now commander to get on board and work as a mole for Canada. While Nick initially declines, he becomes enraged when a Gilead truck hits and nearly kills June. He blames Lawrence, punches him, and winds up in jail. His pregnant wife visits, advising that she’s aware he’s still in love with June and she’s not having it. 

    Realizing that the anti-refugee sentiment in Canada is growing and that Gilead won’t stop until she’s dead, June decides the only answer is to flee until she can figure out her next steps. Tuello warns them that there are soldiers at the airport, but he arranges for them to get on a train to Vancouver instead. From there, they can travel to Hawaii.

    When June and Luke arrive at the station with baby Nicole, officers run ID checks and discover a warrant for Luke’s arrest. Luke severely beat the man who hit June with his truck, and the man has since passed. Luke knows he’ll never make it on the train, and when he surrenders himself, June realizes he never intended to get on in the first place.

    As she boards with baby Nicole, June hears the cries of another child. She peeks through the crowd and spots Serena with baby Noah.

    Praise be what the future holds

    Gilead is expanding its reach and recruiting new people to the concept of New Bethlehem, promising positive change. However, the cracks begin to show. Several once-staunch supporters now question the community and its actions. Nick may be indoctrinated, but he can’t get June out of his head and wants to protect her at all costs. In a twisted sense of poetic justice, Serena now understands what she put June through and awakens to her own wrongs.

    Back in Gilead, Aunt Lydia (Ann Dowd) becomes aware of Esther’s (McKenna Grace) pregnancy. This puzzles Aunt Lydia because she isn’t posted anywhere. meaning she won’t take part in the official conception ceremony. She reports this to Commander Lawrence, who doesn’t seem bothered, but he later sentences Commander Putnam (Stephen Kunken) to death for his actions. Aunt Lydia may finally be seeing the light — not everything she does is righteous. Gilead has diverted its focus in ways she may not be able to accept.

    Commander Lawrence was once an ally, but his new community and rising status are priorities. Remarried to Naomi (Ever Carradine), he had Janine (Madeline Brewer) placed with them so she could spend time with her biological daughter. But an argument with Naomi gets Janine banished, which could send Aunt Lydia into a tailspin, given her closeness with the young woman. 

    How everything plays out for this 10-episode final season of one of the best shows on Hulu has fans eager and excited for a happy ending, or at least a satisfying resolution to the sordid tale. 

    Stream The Handmaid’s Tale on Hulu. 

  • 5 great TV shows you need to watch in April 2025

    Joel and Ellie sitting together at a bar in The Last of Us season 2.
    Liane Hentscher / HBO

    There’s a lot of great TV coming in April 2025. You’ll find new shows like Hulu’s Dying for Sex and Apple TV+’s Government Cheese along with returning shows like Doctor Who (Disney+, April 12), Godfather of Harlem (MGM+, April 13), and You (Netflix, April 24). It’s going to be a busy month for TV lovers!

    All the aforementioned shows are worthy of being added to your watchlist this month. However, the five shows below are so exciting that you won’t want to miss the episodes when they release. They include four returning shows, one for its final season after a 2.5-year hiatus, and a brand-new series starring Jon Hamm.

    Need more recommendations? Then check out the best new shows to stream this week, as well as the best shows on Netflix, the best shows on Hulu, the best shows on Amazon Prime Video, the best shows on Max, and best shows on Disney+

    The Handmaid’s Tale season 6 (April 8)

    It has been more than 2.5 years since The Handmaid’s Tale delivered its fifth season, and the story is finally ending with the sixth and final season this month. The story, based on the Margaret Atwood novel of the same name, takes place in a dystopian future whereby a theocratic regime has taken over, forcing child-bearing women to serve as handmaids for the infertile wives of wealthy commanders. June (Elisabeth Moss) is desperate to escape and get back to her husband and her daughter, and she eventually leads the charge for a revolt.

    By season 5, June has escaped to Canada, but she remains traumatized by her experiences and hellbent on revenge. Plus, the folks in Gilead aren’t satisfied with letting her get off that easily. The stakes are raised higher as June ends up with Serena (Yvonne Strahovski) and baby Nichole, both fleeing, while Luke (O-T Fagbenie) lets himself get arrested so she can get to safety. The story in The Handmaid’s Tale has long since diverted from Atwood’s writings that inspired the first season, leaving fans guessing as to where it ends. But like Atwood’s heartwrenching story, The Handmaid’s Tale is a deeply troubling tale about societal downfall into oppression and cruelty masked by religion.

    Stream The Handmaid’s Tale on Hulu.

    Hacks season 4 (April 10)

    Earning several Primetime Emmy Awards through its three-season run to date, Hacks is back for season 4. The story centers around Deborah Vance (Jean Smart), a stand-up comedian looking to reinvent her act for modern times. She is paired with young comedy writer Ava Daniels (Hannah Einbinder) to help.  Despite coming from completely different generations of comedy, Deborah and Ava become a formidable pairing.

    With an almost a perfect Rotten Tomatoes critics score, Hacks is one of those shows worth binge-watching. Both leads deliver fantastic performances with amazing chemistry. The guest cast keeps you consistently entertained with the eclectic mix of personalities, including Julianne Nicholson, Michaela Watkins, and Eric Balfour.

    Stream Hacks on Max. 

    Your Friends and Neighbors season 1 (April 11)

    Sometimes, wasteful extravagance isn’t really noticed until you no longer have the means to partake. This is the situation with Andrew “Coop” Cooper (Jon Hamm) in Your Friends and Neighbors. He’s a hedge fund manager whose life is upended after losing his job. Due to murky contract stipulations, he can’t work in the field again for the foreseeable future. With two teenage kids, a mortgage on a house he no longer even lives in, and other struggles, the mounting bills and the personal toll everything is taking on Coop aren’t just going to disappear. The walls are closing in on him. One day, however, he gets a ridiculous idea: his elitist friends have so much more money and material things than they know what to do with. Would they really miss it if he stole a thing or two?

    Naturally, Coop’s actions start to get out of hand, and every move he makes opens another Pandora’s Box of problems. Your Friends and Neighbors is as much a story about a man’s descent into darkness as it is a wake-up call about greed and excess, told through Coop’s inner monologue narration. It’s when you do everything right and think you have it all that you lose sight of what’s actually important. Your Friends and Neighbors is arguably one of Hamm’s best roles since Don Draper in Mad Men, bringing you back to the suave, businessman swagger for which he first became known.

    Stream Your Friends and Neighbors on Apple TV+. 

    The Last of Us season 2 (April 13)

    It’s finally here. After an almost two-year wait, The Last of Us is back this month with its second season. Based on the Naughty Dog video game franchise of the same name, our reviewer calls it the “most faithful video game adaptation that has ever been produced.” Pedro Pascal returns as Joel and Bella Ramsey as Ellie, an unlikely smuggler and teenager duo navigating the post-apocalyptic, virally infected wasteland together. Adapting the story from The Last of Us Part II, season 2 is set five years later as the pair continue their journey.

    They encounter new people, and tensions run high. That’s especially so given that, based on the trailer, Ellie presumably learns about that big lie Joel told her to save her life. Earning eight Primetime Emmy Awards for its first season (of an impressive 24 nominations), The Last of Us has been one of the most anticipated show returns this year.

    Stream The Last of Us on Max. 

    Andor season 2 (April 20)

    It’s only going to run for two seasons, and fans have waited almost three years for the return of Andor, one of many new shows within the Star Wars universe. As a prequel to Rogue One, Diego Luna stars as Cassian Andor, with the first season focusing on telling the story of his journey to becoming a revolutionary. Our reviewer calls it a “thoughtful, slow-developing story.” Season two chronicles the next four years in his life, leading up to the events in Rogue One, another prequel to 1977’s Star Wars.

    Follow Andor as he goes from thief to a core member of the Rebel Alliance, who fights back against the Galactic Empire. Season 1 received universal acclaim and three Primetime Emmy Awards. Season two is poised to be a fitting end to the compelling story that technically marks the beginning point of this massive franchise.

    Stream Andor on Disney+.