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TV OT: Why are my shows filled with mean girls? Plus, UFOs and the best lines from 'Cooking with Paris' - CNN

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TV OT is a weekly look at what CNN's entertainment team is watching since too much television has us all working overtime.

(CNN)It's the end of another week, end of another Olympics and the end of my hopes of becoming the next "Jeopardy" host (Although, I never had any chance because I'm a woman and a person of color. Bazinga.)

With all these endings, let's start something. How about this week's TV OT?

Smells like teen dispirit

These two...SMH.
I'm not sure when it happened. But it was at some point between catching up on "Gossip Girl," watching the latest episode of "White Lotus" and continuing to glacially make my way through the new season of "Never Have I Ever" that I had a realization: If I was a teen girl right now, I'd be annoyed.
It seems as this generation of young women was being ushered into what us elders would like to believe is a better world -- one where they can love who they want to love surrounded by body positive messages and real-life examples of extraordinary young people using their voices and talents for good -- they've been boxed in.
If the aforementioned shows are to be believed, all teen girls are social media bullies, faux-woke hypocrites and downright mean to other people for the pure pleasure of bragging that they have two boyfriends. Young ladies, I think you need to hear this blatantly from at least one person who's been where you are: You deserve better.
This is where I admit that while I don't regularly cross paths with any teen girls, aside from the occasional cordial wave at my neighbor who walks her white fluffy dog while I walk my white fluffy dog. But roughly 180 moons ago, I was a teen girl.
The early aughts was a tough time to be a teenage girl watching television because it didn't feel like anyone making TV shows understood what it was really like to actually be one. I thought that if my lineup was any indication, I was the only freak my age not in love triangle, getting into alcohol-fueled car wrecks, dealing with a clique of over-lip-glossed queen wannabees or navigating an unwanted pregnancy. Was I a boring teen? Absolutely. But when the best and most empowering representation of a girl your own age that TV can provide is written by a now- problematic man and leaves you wishing vampires were real so you could slay them, too, that's sad.
Things have gotten better, thankfully. For one, there are more teens than ever who aren't just white, straight and wealthy/middle-class. There are differed experiences reflected (see: lots of stuff on Disney+, "All Americans," "On My Block"), and that's great. But teen girls deserve more credit and respect across the board -- on shows not made specifically for them (like "White Lotus") and especially on shows made for them.
Now, Maitreyi Ramakrishnan, star of "Never Have I Ever," has acknowledged that "not everyone's going to relate" to her show or chaos-driven, two-timer character, "and that's okay," she told Teen Vogue. Which is fair and true.
My only caution, as a Certified OldTM, is that there's a reason names like Meadow Soprano, Dana Brody and Julie Taylor -- teen girls often listed among the most annoying characters ever -- roll off the tongue a lot easier than the names of fictional teenage girls who feel or felt authentic. (But here are some, if you want to refresh your brain.) Images matter and the bad ones stick.
This generation has put up with a lot -- too much to be remembered by TV historians as the generation of hollow values that always knows the right things to say but nothing about the right thing to do.
The beautiful thing is that in your real life, you get to decide who you want to be, and it doesn't have to come from TV.

Watch the skies? 

A still from Showtime's "UFO."
An Unidentified Sighing Critic (CNN's Brian Lowry) has a recommendation that's out of this world. He writes:
"The robust UFO-curious industry has been flying high since the government began declassifying certain material, adding to the tantalizing reality that some sightings that simply cannot be explained. 'UFO,' a new multipart docuseries on Showtime premiering Aug. 8, taps into that fascination, while focusing on the extent to which witnesses have been dismissed, diminished and belittled.
Produced by among others director J.J. Abrams, the project begins with the New York Times reporting in 2017 that pulled back the curtain, a bit, on government study of the issue. 'UFO' includes an interview with former senator Harry Reid, who was instrumental in bringing much of what has been reported in the last few years into the public eye.
'With UFOs, nothing is ever black and white,' says author John Greenewald Jr.
'UFO' probably won't change many hearts or minds, but it's an intriguing exploration of the gray area in between."

'Hit & Run' TV 

A scene from "Hit & Run."
Lowry also drives in an important point on a new series from Netflix that you may see appear in your queue this weekend if your algorithm sees fit. He writes:
"If you're in the market for an Israeli/US thriller where nobody is who they appear to be, Netflix's 'Hit & Run' might be for you.
The show begins with a seemingly innocent tragedy, as an Israeli tour guide (Lior Raz) loses his American-born wife (Kaelen Ohm) in a hit-and-run accident. But the story spins wildly into lots of cloak-and-dagger stuff thereafter, from Tel Aviv to New York.
It's certainly binge-able, with a US-Israeli cast that includes Sanaa Lathan as a US reporter who eventually gets involved, but be forewarned: The nine episodes leave room for more, so if you're wary about committing to another one of these international vehicles that Netflix is using to fill its showroom of originals, your mileage may vary."

Say what?

The Hilton family cutting onions in "Cooking with Paris."
I struggled with what to say about Paris Hilton's new cooking show on Netflix because I'm very sensitive to what's she's been through as the original influencer. I don't like laughing at people but since she's made it clear that she's laughing with us this time, I think I can bring you this collection of best lines with no guilt.
Before we eat, a prayer: Netflix, bless this mess.
Paris, in a grocery store: "Excuse me, sir. What do chives look like?"
Paris, with three phones in her hand: "Where are my other phones? I have two more."
Demi Lovato, reading a recipe: "'Zest of one lemon.' What's a 'zest'? Is that the top of it?"
Paris: "Zest? I know what a zest is. I actually had no idea what a zest was earlier, but I learned because I went to our friend Google."
Paris, speaking to a dog: "Do you want some caviar?"
Paris, after dousing herself in a spray: "I needed a perfume break."
Kathy Hilton, to Paris: "Honey, you're getting your feathers in everything."
Finally,
Nicky Hilton, walking into her sister's home for dinner: "Just what you need — another picture of yourself."

Silver screen goes for gold

James Gunn's 'The Suicide Squad'
Lowry with a final thought: "As the Olympics come to a close, a quick nod to one constituency that still appears to fervently believe in the Games, even with ratings way down: Movie studios and streaming services. All those ads for 'Dune,' 'The Suicide Squad,' 'Shang-Chi' and Disney+ prove DC/Warner Bros. and Marvel/Disney can agree on something -- namely, that when it comes to reaching a lot of the most elusive viewers (i.e. young men) that they hope will flock to such fare, this is the last big chance until football season kicks off in September."

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