What To Watch: Dakota Johnson In Persuasion, John Cho Plays Single Dad, Beyond Salem Finale And More

On TV this Friday: Dakota Johnson and John Cho headline streaming movies, Nathan Fielder stages the first in a series of peculiar rehearsals, and Days of Our Lives: Beyond Salem wraps Season 2. Here are 10 programs to keep on your radar; all times are Eastern. (Also check out our weekly TVLine-Up of premieres and finales, plus our monthly streaming guide.)

Showtimes for July 15, 2022

ET

Black Bird

Apple TV+

When Jimmy initiates a friendship with Larry, new holes in Larry's stories are uncovered.

Days of Our Lives: Beyond Salem

Peacock

Season 2 finale: All hell breaks loose at the DiMera gala; Ben and Ciara say their goodbyes to Hope.

Don't Make Me Go

Prime Video

Movie premiere: A single dad (Cowboy Bebop's John Cho) and his teenage daughter (Mia Isaac) embark on an unforgettable road trip.

For All Mankind

Apple TV+

As Danielle and Ed set up Martian bases, a crew member’s revelation causes rising tensions on Mars and Earth.

Loot

Apple TV+

The Wells Foundation team attends a ceremony where Molly is set to receive an award for her charity work. (Already renewed for Season 2!)

Love Accidentally

Freevee

Movie premiere: Two advertising execs (played by Dollface's Brenda Song and The Haves and the Have Nots' Aaron O'Connell) strike up a phone-only relationship without daring to ask who the other is.

Persuasion

Netflix

Movie premiere: Dakota Johnson (Fifty Shades of Grey) and Cosmo Jarvis (Peaky Blinders) play Anne Elliot and Captain Frederick Wentworth in this adaptation of Jane Austen's very last novel; Richard E. Grant (Loki) and Henry Golding (Crazy Rich Asians) co-star.

Physical

Apple TV+

With Danny and Greta's support, Sheila makes an entirely unexpected decision.

Zombies 3

Disney+

Threequel premiere: Zed and Addison's perfect senior year is interrupted by the arrival of a group of intergalactic aliens. Boy, talk about transfer students!

ET

The Rehearsal

HBO

Series premiere: Nathan Fielder's social experiment allows ordinary people to prepare for life's biggest moments by "rehearsing" them in simulations of his own design. (Read review.)

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