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Just as summer days go by, especially when you enjoy vacations,

many series say goodbye

to their platforms in the middle of summer.

To prevent anyone from being left halfway or outraged when they finally dare to see them and can't find them, we list those who leave the world of

streaming

, even temporarily.

Dwason Grows (Netflix, July 14)

"You have to see

Dwason Grows

."

This was the phrase that many teenagers in the 90s heard from the mouths of friends who had Canal +, where the series was broadcast in encrypted form, which gave it an aura of mythical production.

Then, when some were finally paid, either for football, or for being able to watch

Friends

(stopping it from being broadcast was a scoundrel), viewing it caused love and hate.

The series chronicled the life of Dawson (

James Van Der Beek

), an aspiring film director;

his best friend Joey (

Katie Holmes

), who had a crush on him since childhood;

his best friend, lazy Pacey (

Joshua Jackson

) and Jen, the mean girl, played by

Michelle Williams

, who best knew how to take advantage of the success of this fiction.

At least, in the interpretive field: when it comes to occupying covers, Holmes has taken the cake after her turbulent marriage with

Tom Cruise

.

The End of Comedy (Amazon Prime Video, July 14)

Seeing

Ignatius Farray

as a confused old man on the streets of New York after not winning the Emmy for

Best Comedy

was possible thanks to this production.

It doesn't matter that neither he nor his two creators,

Raúl Navarro

and

Miguel Esteban

, had a table when they arrived at the gala.

The series received the well-deserved recognition for its good work when it comes to showing the life behind the cameras of Ignatius, a comedian for whom getting on stage in a room full of drunks is easier than daily life, where he is a father Divorced Tenerife native with problems renting a flat or getting a bank loan.

Amazon Prime Video subscription is available here.

Scream (Netflix, July 16)

Few recent series have loaded with the curse of this.

Its first two seasons were broadcast on MTV and they had to face different conflicts: not being able to use the original

Ghostface

mask due to rights problems;

the resignation of

Maggie Malina

, the director of the chain who had fought the most for the project and, finally, the dispute between Netflix and

The Weinstein Company

, the company that produced the original

Scream

movies that revolutionized the

slasher genre

at the hands of

Wes Craven

.

All in all, the first season was received with pleasure: it kept the spirit of the films and adapted them to modern times surrounded by new technologies and social networks.

The second batch of episodes, on the other hand, passed unnoticed and the third season premiered two years after its filming, making a clean slate with the plot and going completely unnoticed.

Pico da Neblina (HBO Max, August 4)

Series set in a fictional future in which marijuana has been legalized in Brazil.

Biriba (

Luis Navarro

) is a young drug dealer from Sao Paulo who decides to leave the criminal world and use his knowledge to sell legally.

His partner in this new stage is Vini (

Daniel Furlan

), a complete inexperienced in the matter.

Both will have to deal with the pressures of their past and the many pitfalls that this type of business presents.

A series with a suggestive and groundbreaking proposal (not for nothing,

Fernando Meirelles

is behind it) with applauded script twists and aimed at becoming a cult production in a few years.

You can subscribe to HBO Max here.

Dietland (Amazon Prime Video, August 5)

Incisive, violent and captivating,

Dietland unapologetically

tackles today's society's obsession with fashion and weight loss.

She does it through the eyes of those who work in the beauty industry, in this case, Plum (

Joy Nash

), an obese and frustrated journalist, and Kitty Montgomery (

Julianna Margulies

), the insufferable magazine editor for beauty.

that she works.

With them she develops a fantasy of revenge that unapologetically explores issues that women face today, such as misogyny, rape culture or patriarchy.

Amazon Prime Video subscription is available here.

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