Season 2 started with three recap episodes back-to-back, which I've never seen anyone do before.
The only thing that comes to mind is the Endless Eight, which will likely never be surpassed as an example of just how lazy Japanese animators can be.
In other news, I recently started watching Black Lightning. Big surprise, it's about a black superhero fighting for racial justice in a black neighborhood being oppressed by white assholes.
Other than this predictable and utterly worn-out premise, the show is fairly average among other superhero shows currently being produced. I feel like the vocal music is entirely excessive, playing loudly in every scene, but other than that it's totally watchable.
The second half of The Tick season 1 was recently released. Spoiler Alert: Tick is not a robot.
There was some criticism, mostly that it failed to live up to expectations set by the original cartoon, and I can understand that. Still, on the whole, I enjoyed the show and hope for renewal. EDIT: I just checked, Amazon has green-lit The Tick for season 2! ETA 2019.
Counterpart. It's a show about a universe that split into two timelines, with the division occurring relatively recently. One side is basically identical to our real world. The other side has suffered some harsh setbacks in recent decades, leaving them less developed technologically and economically, and making them somewhat jealous and suspicious of our side, and resulting in spies and assassins being sent across. The show dramatically reveals stories of various individuals, their histories, motives, and experiences. Some viewers have given the show rave reviews, claiming it's the best thing on TV right now. Personally, I find the episodes extremely hit-or-miss. Some episodes just bore me...but others can be very interesting.
The Opposition. I binge watched episodes from recent months, and now look forward to the new episodes most weeknights. It's basically Comedy Central's long overdue response to The Colbert Report ending.
Comedy Central has been going downhill ever since they lost Colbert. Jon Stewart bailed on The Daily Show, then Nightly Show bombed, then they lost Chris Hardwick and for a while it looked like the channel would never recover. But now they finally have something humorous in their lineup again.