This feature-length comedy relocates them from a faceless corporate workplace to a grand hotel – but don’t worry, they’re still the same weed-addled slackers you know and love. Workaholics man-boys Anders Holm, Blake Anderson and Adam DeVine are making a career pivot. Everyone, however, shares in pride for their home. Some see a powder keg others, a resilient community waiting for a comeback. This documentary series attempts to form a panoramic portrait of a city in flux, giving a voice to locals from all walks of life. And since the town’s water supply was changed to the Flint River in 2014, lead contamination has deprived the people of easy access to a basic human necessity. Once a booming center of industry and stronghold of the middle class, the Michigan city of Flint now serves as a microcosm for America’s institutional ills. (Our standard TV choices for March can be found here.) Here’s what you’ll be streaming this month. Plus Netflix is raising the curtain on the latest vehicle for the Workaholics boys and a new chapter for Marvel’s toughest gumshoe, while Hulu goes sci-fi and Crackle gets in the game with an antihero drama for the Breaking Bad set. March is a good month for documentary fans: No less than four intriguing new nonfiction projects go online, spanning such eclectic subjects as an Oregon commune, the cuteness of penguins, the vibrant world of hip-ho, and the ongoing public crisis in Flint.
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