Forever,
Now, watching the second episode of the first season. It's a slight remake of the tv show New Amsterdam, about a man who has been alive for almost 200 years. Apparently, he became immortal when he sacrificed his life to save a slave on a ship in the 1800s, falling to the bottom of the ocean with a strange watch he keeps to this day. Since then, whenever he dies, he wakes up in water. He is now a medical examiner who uses science and his relationships with people to try to figure out the mystery of his existence. He lives with his son who happens to be in his 60s, who he adopted as a baby during WWI OR II. Now, this guy is supposed to be 35, but looks between 40 and 45. In any case, I like it because of his accent, he is British. But I like heros or anti-heros that aren't overly arrogant and self centered. He seems to be very smart nice guy who helps the police solve cases because of his century plus experience studying death and corpses. The only mystery so far is why he was given immortality and who is this secret contact who claims he has the same immortality.
How to Get Away with Murder
Was looking forward to this series about a tough, brilliant law professor who chooses six students from her class to work as interns on a case handled by her law firm, whose staff has questionable ethics. The students later become embroiled in a murder conspiracy involving the professor's husband. The professor is African American and her husband is white. Not sure if race is supposed to be a key aspect of plot relevance, but show creator Shonda Rhimes has strived to put black female actresses in major lead roles. I had high hopes for this series but did not like the first episode. Felt as if they went from 0 t0 120 in 60 minutes. They advanced the plot too quickly. They rushed the character development of all the key roles. A major crime happens before we get to learn about these characters. There's something to be said about getting to know characters gradually. Everything was too rushed.