Season — The Mating
If an animal stops eating or looks at you, you’re too close.
As always, the man is a miracle worker. Watching him navigate the nonsense is half the fun. The Mating Season
It’s all about broken engagements and social suicide, yet it feels as intense as a thriller. If an animal stops eating or looks at
Peacocks aren't the only ones showing off. Watch for "dances" among waterfowl or brighter plumage in backyard birds. It’s all about broken engagements and social suicide,
It brilliantly skewers dating apps and "mating rituals" like ghosting or love-bombing by translating them into animal behaviors.
The creators of Big Mouth are back at it, but this time they’ve traded middle school hallways for the literal wilderness. Mating Season premiered recently, and it’s every bit as raunchy and insightful as you’d expect. The Premise
The story follows Bertie Wooster as he travels to Deverill Hall to help his pal Gussie Fink-Nottle. Naturally, this involves Bertie pretending to be Gussie, Gussie pretending to be Bertie, and a supporting cast of five terrifying aunts who seem to exist solely to make Bertie’s life miserable. Why It Still Works