is initially annoyed by the noise from her hip, 20-something downstairs neighbor, Lisette.
: Her daughter Lily accidentally walks in on her and Harry in a compromising position.
Che’s "comedy" set involves talking about their non-binary identity while vaping. The audience inside the show laughs. The audience in my living room? Silence. The crisp audio reveals that the laugh track is mixed way too high, trying to convince us this is funny. It is not. It is a war crime against timing.
Here is where the DSRIP clarity works against the show. In standard definition, you might miss the sheer terror in Steve’s eyes when Miranda lies about where she’s going. In this rip, you see the pores on his skin. You see the resignation.
But the real emotional weight often lands on Miranda. By Episode 8, her trajectory—leaving her corporate job, navigating a divorce, and exploring her sexuality with Che Diaz—is in full, chaotic swing. Watching these dramatic beats on a "DSRip" copy somehow makes the voyeurism feel more real. Without the crystal-clear 4K HDR sheen of HBO Max, the show feels less like a glossy product and more like a confessional tape.