So on a hunch i started watching Upload, a new comedy/drama show on Amazon Prime and i am very pleasantly surprised.
The show is set in the near future (2033) and a technology is available to upload your consciousness into a virtual environment, making a person effectively immortal.
The lead, Robbie Amell (brother of Stephen Amell of Arrow fame and he himself had a small role in the Arrowverse too), plays a programmer whose automatic car malfunctions and kills him.
He is uploaded to a lakeside luxury hotel and starts to deal with "afterlife" and it is both hilarious and a not so thinly veiled criticism on modern life (at one point he wants to snack out of the room bar but needs to pay microtransaction style for it).
I only watched the first 2 episodes now out of 10 but the show also has a season plot where it's made evident that is death was not really an accident.
It is very funny both in itself and the way it criticizes society - at one point the female co-lead of the show has a Tinder like hookup for the night, they talk about protection (you automatically assume condoms and they do pullout condom style packets) and it turns out to be small bodycams where they each record that they consent to sex and they afterwards grade each other online eager to get that 5 star rating as if it was Yelp - both funny and a bit thought provoking.
I'm continue watching now but i didn't have this much fun with an original show in a while. Check it out.
The show is set in the near future (2033) and a technology is available to upload your consciousness into a virtual environment, making a person effectively immortal.
The lead, Robbie Amell (brother of Stephen Amell of Arrow fame and he himself had a small role in the Arrowverse too), plays a programmer whose automatic car malfunctions and kills him.
He is uploaded to a lakeside luxury hotel and starts to deal with "afterlife" and it is both hilarious and a not so thinly veiled criticism on modern life (at one point he wants to snack out of the room bar but needs to pay microtransaction style for it).
I only watched the first 2 episodes now out of 10 but the show also has a season plot where it's made evident that is death was not really an accident.
It is very funny both in itself and the way it criticizes society - at one point the female co-lead of the show has a Tinder like hookup for the night, they talk about protection (you automatically assume condoms and they do pullout condom style packets) and it turns out to be small bodycams where they each record that they consent to sex and they afterwards grade each other online eager to get that 5 star rating as if it was Yelp - both funny and a bit thought provoking.
I'm continue watching now but i didn't have this much fun with an original show in a while. Check it out.