

SISTERS follows Canadian Sarah (Goldberg) and Irish Suze (Stanley), two strangers who find their lives suddenly intertwined with the discovery that they are half-sisters. The six-part series explores how the absence of parents can influence adult life in unforeseen ways, and how that void can affect a woman’s relationship to alcohol, men, work, and motherhood (or lack thereof). Using comedy to explore the series’ themes of family, identity, and culture, SISTERS has already received rave reviews from The Irish Examiner and The Irish Times, with the Examiner comparing Goldberg and Stanley with renowned female screenwriters Phoebe Waller-Bridge (FLEABAG) and Michaela Coel (I MAY DESTROY YOU). SISTERS is directed by EMMY-nominee Declan Lowney (TED LASSO). Set in Ireland, SISTERS is written by EMMY®-nominee, and Canada’s own Sarah Goldberg (HBO’s BARRY), and Susan Stanley, lead actresses in the series and real-life best friends. Grace gives up the petty arguing from Book 2 in favor of lots of heroism and romance, of course.Crave announced today that its new, half-hour original dark comedy series, SISTERS, premieres with the entire first season on Wednesday, May 17.


You'll find some racial diversity in the minor characters, and there's an LGBTQ+ couple that's out and proud in front of family and friends. Lots of brand-name junk food gets eaten, Armani clothing is repeatedly mentioned, and language is pretty raw, with lots of "f-k" and plenty of everything else. Fistfights to earn money end in lots of injuries and victims of a not-nice vampire hang from the ceiling in her den, dripping blood. One friend of the main characters dies in battle and another loses part of his leg. Brutal fights among supernatural creatures include some gore: a leg torn is off and eaten, a heart is ripped out, a prisoner is skewered by a claw, other creatures are skewered by tusks through the head and eye, and a neck is snapped. While the moony romance with hot vampires is similar (expect everything short of sex in this installment, including barely described hand jobs and orgasms), the violence is a bit more intense.

Parents need to know that Covet is the third book of four in the Crave series that will remind you very much of Twilight. Champagne drunk at a party and adult characters drinking at a bar.ĭid you know you can flag iffy content? Adjust limits for Drinking, Drugs & Smoking in your kid's entertainment guide. One 18-year-old character drinks until falling-down drunk.
