Robert Lloyd has been a Los Angeles Times television critic since 2003. Previously, he held that position at L.A. Weekly, whose music editor and critic he also was for some years, and was the author of the Today column at the late Los Angeles Herald-Examiner. His oral history of “Freaks & Geeks” appeared in the January 2013 issue of Vanity Fair. Sometimes, usually after dark, he masquerades as a musician (credits available on request).
Latest From This Author
Southern comedian Leanne Morgan stars in the eponymous Netflix series she co-created with Chuck Lorre (‘The Big Bang Theory,’ ‘Grace Under Fire’) and Susan McMartin.
- Review
‘Hurricane Katrina: Race Against Time’ focuses on disaster victims, who reflect 20 years later
The five-part documentary premiering Sunday on National Geographic is at once highly compelling and difficult to watch, though you should.
In this week’s Screen Gab, director Kyle Newacheck discusses ‘Happy Gilmore 2’ and working with Adam Sandler, plus streaming suggestions for your weekend.
Based on Esi Edugyan’s prizewinning novel, this 19th century-set Hulu miniseries centers on George Washington Black, a young escaped slave seen in two different timelines.
Netflix’s Texas-set soap opera cum murder mystery stars Brittany Snow as a transplant from Boston who becomes close to with a woman named Margo, played by Malin Akerman.
- Voices
Commentary: Stephen Colbert’s ‘Late Show’ is canceled, but he won’t go quietly into that goodnight
CBS announced on Thursday that ‘The Late Show With Stephen Colbert’ would end in 2026, but the timing, coincidental or not, comes as Paramount tries to sell itself to Skydance.
Alan Tudyk scored his first starring role with ‘Resident Alien,’ but he’s long been celebrated in genre circles, and for good reason.
Netflix’s quasi-police drama is a vacation from most crime shows in that it’s set in Yosemite National Park (though filmed in Canada).
While it is nice to recognized for your work, our TV critic says official recognition is essentially meaningless.
Adapted from King’s horror novel of the same name, this MGM+ series about children with extraordinary powers and cruel adults stars Mary-Louise Parker, Ben Barnes and Joe Freeman.