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BOB MARLEY: ONE LOVE Featurette

#SILICONVALLEY Season 2 On Blu-ray & Digital HD April 19th

Emmy®-winning HBO® Series Available on Blu-rayTM and DVD April 19, 2016 Full Season Available Now on Digital HD. Silicon Valley , one of the hottest shows on television, has been hailed as “excellent and poignant” (Rolling Stone) and “one of the smartest comedies” (Newsday). The hilarious show takes a comic look at the modern-day epicenter of the high-tech gold rush, where the people most qualified to succeed are the least capable of handling success. A collaboration between Mike Judge and Alec Berg, who each direct five episodes, the series returns to Blu-ray with Digital HD ($34.98) and DVD ($26.95) when Silicon Valley: The Complete Second Season debuts April 19th. All ten episodes are also available now on Digital HD. After taking the tech world by storm last season at TechCrunch Disrupt, Richard and rest of the Pied Piper team – Erlich, Jared, Dinesh and Gilfoyle – look ahead to a bright and profitable future. But their success may be in jeopardy, thanks to big changes at Ra

2015 TV Winners and Losers

A look back at the highs and lows of 2015 television. By Brandon Wolfe Winners 1. Fargo (FX) Last year’s biggest surprise has evolved into television’s most consistently excellent and creatively energized series. In its second year, Fargo unleashed a boldly complex, tightly interwoven narrative concerning a brutal gang war in 1979, the hapless couple (Jesse Plemons and Kirsten Dunst) who unwittingly ignite the fuse between the warring factions and the decent cop (Patrick Wilson) trying to keep order amidst the chaos and bloodshed. With a knockout cast, superb humor, delightful characters, defiant weirdness (those UFOs!) and more Coen Brothers references than you can shake a snow shovel at, Fargo is the best thing on the air right now, you betcha. 2. Justified (FX) After a penultimate season that seemed muddled and confused, FX’s contemporary Western came roaring back with its guns a-blazing, brimming with renewed purpose. The ballad of Raylan Givens (Timothy Olyphant) and