Air Date: This update includes reliability improvements to Windows Update Service components in all editions of Windows 10, version , , , , , , , , , , 20H2, and 21H1.
Fri, Mar 31, 60 mins. How it locks people in fear. Free Download. Browse episodes of the vh1 TV shows on now. Tape 1, Side A. Your content must be non-commercial and must not charge a fee, seek monetary contributions, or offer any goods or services for a fee or other consideration. Season 2. Season 4 is the final season of Netflix's 13 Reasons Why. Hannah Baker recently moved to town and is hoping to start over beginning with school.
What you should look at these providers will tell you this article. This is one of many reasons to always protect yourself with the Surfshark VPN For instance, if you search uTorrent movie download sites for a season of the popular TV series Find the complete list of songs from 13 Reasons Why - Season 2, with scene descriptions, sorted by episode. Services and Software. Download 13 Reasons Why? Season 3 p [Eng - Hin] Dual Audio.
Become a champion of Azeroth in World of Warcraft, and defend an ever-changing world at war. Well, buckle up, buttercup, because the Netflix drama is back for a third season — and life at Liberty High is more hopeless than ever. Season 3. Agents of S. X Lossless Decoder version A quick-witted and kind-hearted collaborator, Rick endowed the character with a trademark bellow and bootfulls of idiotic charm. Rick May, the inimitable voice of the Soldier for thirteen years, many shorts and countless updates, passed away this April at age To download using BitTorrent, use your favorite BitTorrent client.
TvShows4Mobile - The only site to free download your all favorite english tv series and season in compatible mobile format HD Mp4, Mp4 and 3gp , have fun downloading. Index of 13 Reasons Why Season 2 p. S01 LostFilm. We currently have 2,, subtitles for 61, movies and 7, series in languages in our database of which 64, are made by the community, , are adapted for hearing impaired and hard-of-hearing SDH viewers. Follow the instructions below to download this show.
Season 1 of 13 Reasons Why consists of thirteen episodes. TV avi, Size : 1. Cancel anytime. Selena Gomez 02 lovely 03 Start Again feat. Creator: Brian Yorkey. Download on Android or iOS. Here we are, a new year, and all kinds of art to show! Lets see what sort of great thing. Jessica and Alex skip school together. After discovering Jessica had been contacted by Justin, Clay finds him homeless in Oakland with Tony's help. With no other option, Clay lets Justin stay in his bedroom with him.
Skye's parents move her to a psychiatric facility, and tell Clay not to contact her. Tyler meets the rest of Cyrus' friends while Bryce is asked to testify. Marcus lies about what happened with Hannah the night they went out on Valentine's Day during his testimony in order to protect his reputation and briefly mentions Bryce, angering him. Cyrus and Tyler hear of Marcus' lies and prank him, going to a nearby field afterwards to shoot guns. Clay finds out that Justin has been taking heroin and he and Sheri help him onto the path to sobriety.
Jessica shows the threatening note she was left before her testimony to Mr Porter. Alex continues to be frustrated about not being able to remember anything and asks Clay for the tapes, who sends them to him. Jessica and Alex skip school and share a kiss. Clay also finds a second Polaroid photograph in his locker, which shows Bryce having sex with an unconscious girl, alongside a note saying 'he won't stop'.
Tyler is confronted by Mr. Porter, who suspects he was behind the pictures of Jessica found in the classroom before her testimony, but he denies involvement. Ryan testifies and talks about Hannah's poems, saying they were written about Justin and that she and Justin maintained contact even after falling out. Afterwards, Olivia invites Ryan to help her decipher Hannah's poems for additional clues, but Ryan soon leaves after Olivia mentions missing pages in Hannah's journal, which Ryan had torn out.
Clay realizes the Polaroid photos were taken at school and attempts to find out where. Jessica attends her first group therapy session. Porter finds a brick thrown through his car window, with a threatening note attached; he later confronts Justin's mother and is arrested after a violent incident with her boyfriend.
Zach testifies and reveals that he and Hannah had a romantic relationship the summer before she died, but they kept it secret. After the testimony, Clay reacts angrily and confronts Zach, ignoring his apologies, while Bryce teases Zach about his relationship, prompting a small fight between them.
Justin returns to school and talks to Jessica, but she asks him to leave. He then faints after seeing Bryce, and on his return to Clay's house, has to hide as someone breaks in, at which point Clay's parents find out he has been staying there, but allow it to continue. During Clay's testimony, he is forced to reveal he and Hannah did drugs at a small party one night and spent the night together, and Clay ignored a comment Hannah made the next morning about wanting to die. Alex's birthday party at the arcade is derailed after a number of arguments break out.
When Clay leaves the birthday party, he finds a Polaroid photograph left on his car, with a note reading 'The Clubhouse'. After reading comments posted online about his testimony, Clay anonymously uploads Hannah's tapes to the Internet.
The baseball team pays tribute to Jeff Atkins. After the release of the tapes, Bryce returns to school to find his locker vandalized and his 'confession tape' Clay recorded being shared among students. After Marcus is blackmailed, he calls Bryce a rapist during a speech at a ceremony, in front of a large group of parents and students, in order to protect his own reputation.
Clay finally contacts Skye again and meets with her at the psychiatric facility, but she tells him she is moving to a different state. Justin overdoses on heroin, but Alex saves his life — he then returns to his mother's home. The release of the tapes gets Clay in trouble with his parents.
When testifying, Mr. Porter reveals that since Hannah's death he has come to believe that Hannah was raped by Bryce. He then emotionally apologizes to Hannah's mother for the part he played in her suicide. Justin steals money from his mother's boyfriend, and when confronted by his mother, leaves her some suggesting she leave too in order to escape the relationship.
Bryce confronts and threatens Clay under the assumption that it was Clay who blackmailed Marcus into publicly accusing Bryce of rape. Later, Clay is violently beaten at school by four masked students. He is then approached by Cyrus who invites him to join him and Tyler in vandalizing the school that evening, but when he does, he sees a group of students entering a storage shed next to the baseball field, which he correctly guesses is the location of The Clubhouse.
He texts Justin and they reconvene. Meanwhile, Olivia contacts a girl, Sarah, and her mother and asks them not to testify. Tony is asked to testify, but chooses not to reveal that Hannah left him her tapes because he owed her a favor after she helped him evade arrest.
During Sarah's testimony, she reveals Hannah was part of a trio of girls who bullied her at another high school. After an argument between Tyler and Mackenzie, his friendship with Cyrus breaks down. Offering marijuana, Sheri tempts some male students into taking her to The Clubhouse, where Bryce takes a picture of her and two other boys on a Polaroid camera, placing the photograph in a box filled with many others.
She learns the code to unlock the door and shares it with Clay and Justin. During a baseball game, Zach confronts Bryce, tells him he knows Hannah was not lying, and quits the game. He goes to The Clubhouse to find Clay and Justin there, and hands Clay the box of Polaroid photographs taken in the Clubhouse, confessing that it was him who had given Clay the first three photographs.
Clay also finds a picture of Hannah. While testifying, Bryce lies and claims that he and Hannah had a casual sexual relationship, and that she falsely accused him of rape after he brought an end to it. When Bryce returns to school, Justin attacks him and a fight breaks out, which evolves into a mass brawl. The box of Polaroid photographs taken from The Clubhouse is stolen from Clay's car, and Alex is sent a package containing a gun and a threatening letter.
Bryce's mother later asks him whether he was telling the truth in his testimony, and, after being pressed, he confesses to raping Hannah. Flashbacks reveal that Bryce wanted a relationship with Hannah and was rejected himself. Clay becomes mentally tormented by hallucinations of Hannah, to the point where he contemplates both murdering Bryce and killing himself, but Justin manages to calm him down.
Justin receives a death threat before going to testify, but he tells of Bryce raping Jessica during his testimony nonetheless. After Alex realizes that Montgomery is responsible for intimidating people during the trial, Alex, Clay, Justin, Tony, Zach, and Scott confront Montgomery and he admits to stealing the box of Polaroid photos.
However, after Montgomery takes Alex to a deserted location to retrieve them, he reveals he was lying and escapes. As a result, Jessica is encouraged by her friends to report her case of sexual assault to the police. After the Baker trial concludes and the jury finds the school district not responsible for Hannah's death, both Bryce and Justin are arrested outside the courtroom for their involvement in Jessica's rape.
Porter is fired after a performance review, and Tyler is placed on a diversion program after one of his social media posts reveals it was him who vandalized the school. Universal Studios purchased film rights to the novel on February 8, , with Selena Gomez cast to play Hannah Baker. On May 7, , it was announced that Netflix had renewed the series for a second season. On June 6, , Netflix renewed the series for a third season, which is set to be released in Filming for the series took place in the Northern Californian towns of Vallejo, Benicia, San Rafael, Crockett and Sebastopol during the summer of Filming for the second season began on June 12, , [23] but was briefly halted in October in response to the then-ongoing Northern California wildfires happening around the areas where the series was being filmed.
Filming for the third season began on August 12, , but was halted due to another wildfire until December Jumpshot, which 'analyzes click-stream data from an online panel of more than million consumers', looked at the viewing behavior and activity of the company's U.
Netflix viewers who watched at least one episode of the season. The first season has received positive reviews from critics, with much of the praise for the series being aimed at its acting, directing, story, visuals, improvements upon its source material, and mature approach to dark and adult subject matter. The website's critical consensus reads, ' 13 Reasons Why complements its bestselling source material with a gripping look at adolescent grief whose narrative maturity belies its YA milieu.
The acting, particularly Katherine Langford as Hannah and Dylan Minnette as Clay, was frequently mentioned and widely lauded in several reviews. Minnette's Clay is, by design, a much more stoic and reserved character Feinberg of The Hollywood Reporter also praises both actors: 'Langford's heartbreaking openness makes you root for a fate you know isn't possible.
The actress' performance is full of dynamic range, setting it against Minnette's often more complicated task in differentiating between moods that mostly go from uncomfortable to gloomy to red-eyed, hygiene-starved despair. Ryan of Variety also gave praise to not only the two leads, but also the supporting cast of actors, particularly Kate Walsh's performance as Hannah's mother, which Ryan describes as 'career-best work'. Another aspect frequently mentioned within reviews was the series' mature and emotional approach to its dark and adult subject matter.
This was favorably reviewed by critics, such as Miller of Indiewire , particularly her statement that 'the adult edges to this story ring with honesty and truth.
Numerous critics also praised several other aspects of the series. Feinberg highlighted the series' directors, saying: 'A Sundance-friendly gallery of directors including Tom McCarthy, Gregg Araki and Carl Franklin keeps the performances grounded and the extremes from feeling exploitative', [37] while Gilbert of The Boston Globe praised the storytelling: 'The storytelling techniques are powerful The background on the show keeps getting deeper, richer.
Conversely, the series has also received criticism over its portrayal of teen angst. Mike Hale of The New York Times wrote a critical review, writing, 'the show doesn't make [Hannah's] downward progress convincing.
It too often feels artificial, like a very long public service announcement. Writing for The Guardian , Rebecca Nicholson praised some aspects of the series, including the performances from Minnette and Walsh, but was troubled by much of the plot, writing, 'a storyline that suggests the love of a sweet boy might have sorted all this out added to an uneasy feeling that stayed with me'.
Nicholson was skeptical that the series would appeal to older viewers, unlike other series set in high school such as Freaks and Geeks and My So-Called Life : 'It lacks the crossover wit of its forebears It's too tied up in conveying the message that terrible behaviour can have horrible consequences to deal in any subtleties or shades of feeling.
It's largely one-note — and that note is horrifying. Washington Post television critic Hank Stuever wrote a negative review, finding 13 Reasons Why 'contrived' and implausible: 'There are 13 episodes lasting 13 super-sullen hours — a passive-aggressive, implausibly meandering, poorly written and awkwardly acted effort that is mainly about miscommunication, delivering no more wisdom or insight about depression, bullying and suicide than one of those old ABC Afterschool Specials people now mock for being so corny.
The story David Wiegand of the San Francisco Chronicle gave the series a tepid review, saying that it was plagued by character inconsistencies, particularly Hannah. He praised Langford's 'stunning performance' but noted, 'There are times when we simply don't believe the characters, when what they do or say isn't consistent with who we've been led to believe they are At times, [Hannah] is self-possessed and indifferent at best to the behavior of the popular kids.
At other times, though, relatively minor misperceived slights seem to send her into an emotional tailspin. No doubt, teenagers embody a constant whirl of conflicting emotions, but the script pushes the bounds of credibility here and there.
The second season received largely mixed to negative reviews from critics, with criticism aimed at the poor execution of its topics; many declared it unnecessary. The site's critical consensus states, 'By deviating from its source material, 13 Reasons Why can better explore its tenderly crafted characters; unfortunately, in the process, it loses track of what made the show so gripping in the first place.
Catherine Pearson from DigitalSpy wrote a negative review, calling the season 'even more problematic' than the first. She ends the review saying that, 'Unrelenting depression seems to shroud the season, briefly lifted only to collapse back down as the show's thirteenth episode, once again, delivers a deeply disturbing scene of suffering.
A scene in which the character Tyler is attacked and sexually assaulted during the finale also caused controversy from fans and critics of the series, with some describing it as 'unnecessary' and 'traumatizing'. Some medical professionals, school officials, and others who work with youth said that the series violated guidelines for depicting suicide in the media, and was resulting in an increase in suicidal and self-harming behavior.
Netflix responded by adding strong advisory warnings prior to the first, twelfth, and thirteenth episodes. The superintendent of Palm Beach County, Florida schools reportedly told parents that their schools had seen an increase in suicidal and self-harming behavior from students, and that some of those students 'have articulated associations of their at-risk behavior to the 13 Reasons Why Netflix series'.
The Australian youth mental health service for 12—25 year-olds, Headspace, issued a warning in late April over the graphic content featured in the series, due to the increased number of calls to the service following the series' release in the country. They accompanied its presentation with additional warnings and viewer advice, and ensured that counselling referrals were included and not easily skipped at the conclusion of each episode, even including an Australian accent in the voice over for those referrals every fifth episode.
In April , the National Association of School Psychologists NASP in the United States released a statement regarding the series, saying: 'Research shows that exposure to another person's suicide, or to graphic or sensationalized accounts of death, can be one of the many risk factors that youth struggling with mental health conditions cite as a reason they contemplate or attempt suicide.
As it turned out, there were many reasons: conflicts with peers, and problems with parents. However, the main reason was he, Clay Jensen. Gradually, the main character realizes how indifferent, dishonest and mean he was. Without realizing it, he pushed Hannah to a rash, terrible act. Listening to the record, the young man returns to their numerous meetings with thoughts, trying to match everything that the deceased girl says from recorded tapes with real facts.
The sense of guilt gnaws at the protagonist, because it is because of him that the successful Hannah committed suicide. However, life does not stand still: Clay needs to attend lessons, communicate with peers, think about the future.
Even a potential girlfriend appears on the horizon, but the young man is not able to make a romance.
0コメント