Plus, Perry Masonâs first season comes to a close, Disney honors one of its brightest songwriters, Showtime imports a serial killer drama from the U.K., and Endeavour heads into a new decade on PBS
Hello!
I don’t know about you, but everyone I know has fallen in love with Hulu’s culinary travel show Taste the Nation with Padma Lakshmi — it’s super comforting and informative, and if you haven’t watched it yet, please do so immediately because [the show was just renewed for a second season]( (along with the streaming service’s latest coming-of-age series Love, Victor). Hulu also just announced [a new food docuseries starring chef and restaurateur David Chang](. Basically, Hulu is coming for Netflix’s title as the destination for great culinary programming (that it obviously stole from The Food Network and Cooking Channel). Anyway, here are this weekend’s picks. –Kaitlin
[Your Watch This Now! newsletter is created by Senior Recommendations and Reviews Editor Tim Surette and more show-obsessed editors at TV Guide!](
WATCH THIS NOW
[Woman Reading](
[Can Perry Mason close the Charlie Dodson case?](
Season 1 finale Sunday at 9/8c on HBO
After an encouraging start, HBO's Perry Mason has plateaued storywise (what is up with that baby resurrection and funeral riot?), but it remains one of the best-looking and well-acted new series on television, thanks to a stellar cast and truckloads of cash. Sunday's finale sees a frazzled Perry wrapping up his defense case of Emily Dodson while his team works overtime for one last shred of evidence to pin the murder of Charlie on corrupt cops, and the episode won't end until there's one more high-profile death and Della proves once again she's the series' heart and soul. Originally pitched as a miniseries, HBO liked what it saw enough to renew Perry Mason for a second season, and you'll get a peek at what next season's case might be as the final moments set up what's coming next. –Tim Surette
[FuboTV Ad](
SPONSORED
[Get the entertainment you want, without cable.](
Looking for something new? Try fuboTV’s 100+ live TV channels, plus movies and shows on demand.
[Try it now](
BEHIND THE MUSIC
[Howard will make your heart sing](
Now on Disney+
There's a good chance that if you've ever sung in the shower, you've belted out a few bars of Howard Ashman's songs. Ashman, who died in 1991, gets honored with this documentary celebrating his talent and life. He was responsible for some of Disney's most famous songs from its fabled Renaissance Era, including earworms from The Little Mermaid, Beauty & the Beast, and Aladdin. –Tim Surette
IS IT WORTH IT?
[Work It is like Pitch Perfect, but with dancing, and wholesome](
Now on Netflix
Disney Channel alum Sabrina Carpenter stars in this teen movie as a high school senior who wants to join her school's award-winning dance team in order to beef up her extracurriculars for college applications, but she isn't any good at dancing. Yet. So she starts her own team with her best friend (Liza Koshy, YouTube's most successful crossover star) and enlists the help of a talented dancer (To All the Boys 2's Jordan Fisher) to teach her how to — wait for it — work it. Will they be good enough to win the dance competition? The trailer's top-rated YouTube comment is "This movie looks corny and predictable. I can't wait to watch it." Accurate! –Liam Mathews
MURDER, THEY DID
[We Hunt Together is a neon world of murder and mayhem](
Series Premiere Sunday at 10/9c on Showtime
A game of cat-and-mouse driven by emotional and sexual manipulation, We Hunt Together has already aired in the U.K. but makes its U.S. debut this weekend. The six-part series follows Baba (Dipo Ola), a former child soldier waiting to be approved for refugee status in the U.K., and Freddy (Hermione Corfield), a phone sex operator with psychopathic tendencies, who meet when the former rescues the latter from a sexual assault. Fueled by their lust and attraction for one another, the pair soon embark on a series of murders, beginning with the man who attacked Freddy. Hot on their heels, though, are two mismatched detectives, played by Babou Ceesay and Eve Myles. While not as compelling as, say, Killing Eve or Hannibal, the series stands out for its highly stylized visuals — the series is bathed in neons — which offer a unique element to the traditional whydunnit.
MORSE CODE
[Endeavour ushers in the 1970s with psychics](
Season 7 premieres Sunday at 9/8c on PBS
There are few things you can count on in life, but Endeavour being worth watching is one of them. The detective series kicks off its seventh season on Sunday with an episode directed by star Shaun Evans. The 90-minute outing opens on New Year’s Eve 1969, and with the new decade comes an era of change. Morse (Evans) rings in the new year in Venice as part of his four months of leave, while Thursday (Roger Allam) investigates the death of a barmaid in Oxford whose demise is somehow connected to an experimental science unit at the college that is investigating a sixth sense. When Morse returns months later and begins going over the still-unsolved case, seemingly disregarding Thursday’s initial findings, it becomes clear that not everything is back to how it used to be.
[Unsubscribe]( | [View online](
©2020 CBS Interactive | All Rights Reserved.
CBS Interactive - [235 2nd St., San Francisco, CA 94105](#)
[Privacy Policy]( | [Terms and Conditions](