Dragons are about to eat your weekend. HBO Max‘s House of the Dragon returns for season 3 on June 21, and depending on who you ask, it’s the most anticipated thing landing on any streaming service all year. The small catch, though: it arrives on the last day of this post’s window, which makes this week more about prepping—rewatching season two (or at least the last few episodes), remembering which Targaryen wants which other Targaryen dead, names, illegitimate children, etc. But if Westeros isn’t your favorite destination, HBO Max is hardly short on other new shows to watch, either.
Beyond the dragons, I’ve also highlighted a chiseled-jaw-dropping documentary about new-age models that’s climbing the charts, plus the 42nd season of a long-running kitchen showdown show that’s a perfect palate cleanser before (or after) all the fire-breathing begins.
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House of the Dragon (Season 3)
Critics are already calling this the most action-packed season yet
If A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms was a slightly kinder, gentler Game of Thrones spinoff, prepare yourselves for what critics have said promises to bring George R.R. Martin’s monstrous franchise roaring back to its fiery, bloody true form—the third season of House of the Dragon, which premieres June 21st. Adapted from Martin’s Fire & Blood, House of the Dragon has been bringing to life the story of legend that is the Dance of the Dragons, a brutal civil war between a Targaryen royal family torn in two over a contested Iron Throne.
While season two took some criticism for feeling a bit slow and short (only eight episodes), season 3 is wasting no time making up for it. Episode one opens with the highly anticipated Battle of the Gullet, which, in Game of Thrones lore, is known as one of the bloodiest sea battles in all history, featuring dragon-on-dragon clashes, and a naval battle between the mighty Velaryon fleet (the Blacks) and the warships of the Triarchy, a fleet of allied cities fighting on behalf of the Greens. At the heart of all this conflict are estranged besties Queen Rhaenyra Targaryen (Emma D’Arcy) and Queen Alicent Hightower (Olivia Cooke), each fighting for their claims, Alicent’s menacing son Aemond (Ewan Mitchell), and Rhaenyra’s loyal uncle/husband Daemon (Matt Smith).
Know Your Game of Thrones Lore
Trivia challenge
From the Red Wedding to the Dance of the Dragons — how well do you know
Westeros?
CharactersBattlesMomentsHousesLore
Characters
The fan theory ‘R+L=J’ refers to the true parentage of which Game of Thrones
character?
Snow, revealing that Jon is not Ned Stark’s bastard but a trueborn Targaryen heir. This was one of the
most celebrated fan theories in TV history, eventually confirmed in Season 7.
Targaryen and Lyanna Stark. Ned Stark kept this secret to protect his nephew from Robert Baratheon’s
wrath, making it one of the show’s biggest reveals.
Moments
The Red Wedding saw the massacre of which Stark and his allies at the Twins?
most of his bannermen were slaughtered at the Twins by the treacherous Walder Frey and Roose Bolton. The
event, known as the Red Wedding, shocked audiences worldwide and remains one of TV’s most infamous
moments.
the North, along with his mother Catelyn and his wife Talisa. Orchestrated by Walder Frey and Roose
Bolton, it ended the Stark rebellion in one brutal night.
Characters
Which Targaryen queen is at the center of the civil war known as the Dance of the
Dragons in House of the Dragon?
fought her half-brother Aegon II for the Iron Throne in the devastating civil war called the Dance of
the Dragons. House of the Dragon chronicles her rise and the conflict that tore the Targaryen dynasty
apart.
Dragons. She was declared heir by her father Viserys I, but her claim was contested by her half-brother
Aegon II, igniting a devastating dragon-fueled civil war.
Battles
The Battle of the Gullet, a pivotal naval conflict in House of the Dragon, saw the
Triarchy fleet face off against which Targaryen forces?
the Triarchy attacked the Gullet strait, and Rhaenyra’s forces — including her sons riding dragons —
fought to defend it. It was a devastating battle with enormous losses on both sides, including the death
of one of Rhaenyra’s sons, Lucerys.
including Velaryon ships and dragon riders among her sons, clashing with the Triarchy fleet. It was a
catastrophic engagement that highlighted the horrific cost of the Dance of the Dragons.
Characters
Ser Duncan the Tall, the protagonist of A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, eventually
rose to hold which prestigious position?
Kingsguard, one of the highest honors a knight could achieve in Westeros. His squire, the young boy
called ‘Egg,’ was none other than Aegon V Targaryen, who would go on to become king.
Kingsguard. His adventures as a hedge knight are chronicled in George R.R. Martin’s Tales of Dunk and
Egg novellas, which serve as the basis for A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms.
Lore
What is the meaning behind the iconic Stark words ‘Winter is Coming’?
‘Winter is Coming’ is a somber warning — a reminder that hardship is always on the horizon and that one
must always be vigilant and prepared. It reflects the pragmatic, stoic nature of House Stark and the
brutal climate of the North.
complacent, as dark and hard times are always approaching. It stands apart from other house words by
being a caution rather than a boast, embodying the Stark family’s grim but honorable worldview.
Battles
The Battle of the Bastards in Season 6 of Game of Thrones saw Jon Snow fight to
reclaim Winterfell from which villain?
Bolton, the sadistic lord who had seized Winterfell and held Jon’s brother Rickon captive. Jon’s forces
were nearly overwhelmed before Sansa’s timely arrival with the Knights of the Vale turned the tide, and
Ramsay was ultimately fed to his own hounds.
Ramsay was one of the show’s most despised villains, and his defeat — followed by Sansa feeding him to
his own starving hounds — was one of Game of Thrones’ most satisfying moments.
Characters
Daenerys Targaryen’s dragons were named after people important to her. Which of the
following is NOT one of her dragon’s names?
Aegon the Conqueror — not one of Daenerys’s dragons. Her three dragons were Drogon (named after Khal
Drogo), Rhaegal (named after her brother Rhaegar), and Viserion (named after her brother Viserys).
Conqueror’s legendary Black Dread, long dead by the time of Game of Thrones. Daenerys’s three dragons
were Drogon, Rhaegal, and Viserion, each named after a man significant in her life.
Your Score
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The first two seasons of House of the Dragon have earned the show a combined 14 Emmy nominations with two wins, and so far, early reviews of season three have it at a whopping 97% on Rotten Tomatoes. Take this week to get up to speed with what happened at the end of last season, before all the new madness begins on Sunday. In the meantime, I’ll just leave this quote from after the Battle of the Gullet here for you: “If this be victory, I hope I never see another.”

Network
HBO
Cast
Matt Smith, Fabien Frankel, Emma D’Arcy, Steve Toussaint, Olivia Cooke, Rhys Ifans, Matthew Needham, Kurt Egyiawan, Sonoya Mizuno, Solly McLeod, Patrick Sass, Paddy Considine, Graham McTavish, Sian Brooke, David Horovitch, Bill Paterson, Gavin Spokes, Michael Carter, Steffan Rhodri, Elliott Tittensor, Luke Tittensor, Garry Cooper, Julian Lewis Jones, David Hounslow, Frankie Wilson, Mikhail Sen, Rhys Parry Jones, Gary Raymond, Andrew Bicknell
Showrunner
George R.R. Martin
Directors
Clare Kilner, Geeta Patel
Writers
Gabe Fonseca
Franchise(s)
Game of Thrones
Main Genre
Adventure
Creator(s)
George R. R. Martin
Producers
Angus More Gordon, Alexis Raben, Karen Wacker
Seasons
3
Story By
George R.R. Martin
Streaming Service(s)
MAX
Executive Producer(s)
Ron Schmidt, George R. R. Martin, Miguel Sapochnik, Sara Hess, Vince Gerardis, Alan Taylor, Jocelyn Diaz, Kevin De La Noy, Loni Peristere, Melissa Bernstein
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Bring Me The Beauties: A Model Cult
Supermodels, an alien guru, and a real cult
One of the most bizarre and fascinating documentary series I’ve watched in a long time, Bring Me The Beauties: A Model Cult is a trippy, three-part HBO original documentary that has been climbing the streaming service’s charts and has a perfect Rotten Tomatoes score. Decades in the making, the series largely centers on Hoyt Richards, who, during the height of the 1980s, was (and is) considered by many to be the world’s first male supermodel—and, quietly, a devoted member of a weird new-age cult.
That group was Eternal Values, and its leader, a gorgeous, well-to-do New York socialite named Frederick von Mierers, who had his followers believing that he was a “walk-in,” an alien from the star Arcturus living in von Mierers’s body. Von Mierers preached empathy and the importance of youth and beauty to his followers—which included many young models and professionals—while also relieving them of their money.
Directed by Chris Smith, the man behind Fyre, Bad Vegan, and the Emmy-winning 100 Foot Wave, Bring Me The Beauties uses excellently hazy, 80s-style archival footage, private recordings, and clips from Eternal Values’ cable access TV show, and candid interviews from Richards and many other cult members to illustrate the extent of von Mierers’s grip and influence over the group.
Network
HBO
Cast
Hoyt Richards, Frederick von Mierers
Directors
Chris Smith
Main Genre
Documentary
Producers
Nancy Abraham, Lisa Heller, Sara Rodriguez
Seasons
1
Executive Producer(s)
Chris Smith, Lisa Heller, Nancy Abraham, Ryann Fraser, Sara Rodriguez
1
Beat Bobby Flay (Season 42)
Wannabe chefs keep coming for the king of Food TV
Season 42 of this long-running staple of a Food Network cooking series has landed on HBO Max (Food Network is already a season or two ahead of streaming), just in time to offer some low-stakes, hunger-inducing programming to settle your nerves after all those fire-breathing dragons. But don’t let celebrity chef/host Bobby Flay’s calm, cool demeanor fool you; when he’s got two competing chefs vying to take him on in a battle to outcook him, the gloves always come off.
Let’s back up a bit—Beat Bobby Flay‘s premise is simple: two professional chefs from around the country and from a range of restaurants, from high-end to catering businesses, arrive to first go head-to-head to create a dish featuring a secret ingredient chosen by Flay. A pair of celebrity judges, from Food Network personalities to other pro chefs to actors, musicians, and more, decides the winner who then takes on Flay in the show’s main event. The winner gets to pick the dish they make, in the hopes that it’s a specialty that the quick-witted Flay might struggle with, again judged blindly by the celebrity guests.
It’s a Food Network mainstay that’s been going since 2013 for a reason—the charismatic Flay is fun, there are loads of good-natured trash talking, and the guests are usually good, too, with some examples including SNL cast members Colin Jost, Heidi Gardner, and Ego Nwodim. All seasons up to 42 are available, should you want a supreme binge-watch, or you can just jump around as you see fit.

Network
Food Network
Cast
Bobby Flay, Alex Guarnaschelli, Scott Conant, Anne Burrell, Sunny Anderson, Michael Symon, Katie Lee, Geoffrey Zakarian
Directors
Michael McNamara
Main Genre
Game Show
Seasons
43
For the good of the realm
Whether you’re bracing for the spectacle of Westerosi dragons or just want something gently simmering on the stove (see what I did there?), hopefully the suggestions above offer some options. If not, the streaming roundups on How-To Geek are always serving up fresh picks for whatever mood strikes next.

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