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Saturday, April 4, 2026
The Observer

New to Your Queue

"Conan O'Brien Can't Stop"

After getting the boot from NBC as the host of "The Tonight Show," Conan O'Brien was legally prohibited from appearing on television for months after his departure. He ultimately found a home at TBS, but during his TV-hiatus, Conan took his comedy on the road with "The Legally Prohibited from Being Funny on Television Tour." This documentary follows Conan as he prepped the tour and took it around the country for a string of completely sold-out shows. The unprecedented look into Conan's life is equally hilarious and moving as he puts the pressure on himself to bring the funny.

"Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father"

A man is killed, and his best friend makes a tribute to his unborn son through interviews with his closest friends and family. If you want to properly experience this documentary, that's all you should know going into it. What will result is the most heartfelt, shocking and thrilling hour-and-a-half you'll ever experience watching a film. This true-crime tour de force pulls you in from the first seconds and never lets you go, even long after it's done. Twist after twist leaves viewers emotionally raw and exhausted at the end, but the experience is so worth it. And once more, don't look up any other details before watching.

"The Big Lebowski"

This film is, simply put, a cult classic. The movie is directed by the Coen brothers before they became Academy Award winners, and stars Jeff Bridges and John Goodman in what might be their finest roles. The story is an absurd mystery, drawing from the classic film-noir the Big Sleep. It follows the Dude, or El Duderino if you're not into the whole brevity thing, a laid back old hippie who just wants compensation for a destroyed rug that really tied the room together.

"Breakfast at Tiffany's"

Everyone knows Audrey Hepburn's classic film, "Breakfast at Tiffany's." It has a mammoth presence in pop-culture 50 years after its release and is as iconic now as it was then. But how many of you have actually seen it? Netflix is there to fix this problem with its recent addition to Watch Instantly. Grab some tissues and your favorite pearls for a look back at the classiest of films.

"Valentino: The Last Emperor"

This intimate portrait of the famed Italian fashion house exposes the complicated process of designing impeccably beautiful clothing. Valentino himself is the picture of diva-ness, and in all honesty, it's fantastic. Who could possibly pull off having five pugs dripping in diamonds? Valentino, that's who.