For people who love small dogs, there may be no pooch more appealing than one of the teacup dog breeds. After all, while ...
It’s a good time to be a horror-series fan, especially if you like the subgenre that shows like FROM or Peacock’s new show Teacup fit into ... as has a neighbor’s dog.
Peacock’s Teacup is unlike any other horror show — because it doesn’t try to be. During an exclusive interview with Us Weekly, creator Ian McCulloch and several cast members discussed what ...
The upcoming TV series Teacup on Peacock tackles a number of obstacles faced by our protagonists, some of which are relatable for every viewer and some of which are more otherworldly in nature.
I couldn’t have said it better myself. The moment a big, black, menacing dog appears in the opening minutes of Teacup Season 1 Episode 1, you know things aren’t headed anywhere good.
There’s a woman in the woods outside the farm, bloodied, frantic, and restrained, being pursued by a fearsome black dog. She’s babbling ... (Most of Teacup’s episodes are blessedly compact ...
ATLANTA — Peacock’s “Teacup” by title alone sounds like a ... Two families arrive, one with a sick horse and another missing their dog. McNab, in a chemical respirator, pops up and creates ...
Adapted from Robert McCammon’s best-selling novel Stinger by Ian McCulloch (Yellowstone, Chicago Fire), Peacock’s Teacup follows the families inhabiting a cluster of farms in rural Georgia who ...
Enter Teacup, a series reminiscent of the works of Stephen King and From, but with its own unique twists that keep it feeling dangerous. Based on the novel Stinger by Robert R. McCammon ...
In Ian McCulloch's new horror series Teacup, loosely adapting the novel Stinger by author Robert McCammon and produced by horror auteur James Wan, that visually memorable moment is by far the ...
By Daniel Fienberg Chief Television Critic At the polite urging of Peacock, I can’t tell you much about their new thriller-type-thing, Teacup. I can’t tell you what the series is actually ...
Filming the Peacock sci-fi series “Teacup,” in which residents of a farm in rural Georgia must band together to survive after a series of bizarre events, meant a lot of night shoots and ...