Antoni, Tan, Karamo, Bobby and Jonathan settle in Philadelphia for season 5 of Queer Eye. - Ryan Collerd / Netflix

It's not just the live, there is also the replay. From YouTube to Netflix, passing the replays of television channels and podcasts of radio stations, 20 Minutes  puts together every Sunday a list of things to see, or review, listen to or listen to again.

Week of June 1-7, 2020

"Queer Eye" is always worth a look

The "Fab Five" - ​​the fantastic five - are back since Friday for a fifth season on Netflix. The concept remains the same: Antoni, Bobby, Karamo, Tan and Jonathan continue to provide advice (well-being, clothing, food, planning, etc.) to people who, each in their own way must overcome a personal ordeal.

This time, the quintet operates in Philadelphia, helping, among others, a gay pastor, the owner of a dog grooming salon or a divorced dad whose daughter is going to marry… The result is always as good and pleasant to look at . Queer Eye is the perfect antidote for blues.

A #BlackLivesMatter selection on arte.tv

The hashtag #BlackLivesMatter (“Black lives matter”) has been at the heart of the news for the past few days. It is the rallying cry, all around the world of protest movements against racism and police violence, in reaction, in particular, to the death of the American George Floyd. While the United States is at a pivotal moment in its history, as 20 minutes Jim Bittermann, CNN correspondent in Paris, said, arte.tv offers, on its site, a selection of reports and documentaries shedding light on the issue of racism in America. Among them, I am not your negro (also visible under the title of I Am Not Your Negro on Netflix) retracing the history of the struggle for civil rights, or even An American hero - The story of Colin Kaepernick , star American football, whose career was shattered by his political positions.

"People are killed unjustly and no one is held responsible." American football player Colin Kaepernick has sacrificed his sports career to denounce police violence in his country 🏈 https://t.co/oinn9yLStx pic.twitter.com/TAWZOWqEBl

- ARTE (@ARTEfr) June 5, 2020

"Killing Eve" bows out (for now)

The third season of Killing Eve (MyCanal) is far from having thrilled fans with its intrigue which, we admit, tended to tread water. But doesn't the interest of the series reside simply, whatever the story, in the cat and mouse game in which Eve and Villanelle engage? In the erotic tension between the two women? And in the escapades of the frosty hitmaker brilliantly camped out by Jodie Comer? The final episode 8 has been online since Monday, we haven't watched it yet, just to make the fun last a little longer. And we are already waiting for season 4!

Closing remarks for season 3 of #KillingEve
, So what was the moment that marked you the most?

- CANAL + Series (@CanalplusSeries) June 6, 2020

Hair with Thomas's Wigs

Along with Creustel and Les Caractrères, Les Perruques de Thomas is one of the humorous Instagram accounts that illuminated our confinement. A simple wig for Thomas Poitevin is enough to get into the skin of a new character, for a short video inspired by everyday life. Since May 11, the various protagonists of the comic vignettes have been deconfining and echoing what we have experienced - or not - since.

From Brice, the zealous pharmacist, to Sébastien, father at home, via Marie-Jo who makes his first terrace ... each time, the sketch hits the bull's eye. It is not surprising that the artist, like the two other accounts cited above, caught the eye of the television and now finds themselves exposed in Je t'aime, etc. on France 2.

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We talked about racism with the two stars of "Little Fires Everywhere"

  • Arte
  • Canal Plus
  • Netflix
  • LGBT
  • Series
  • Television
  • Culture