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In a dramatic atmosphere, this television series drama revolves around the life inside a jail, where life is hard, according to Piper Chapman, who after being accused of sending money across borders for her girlfriend, the thing that leads her to be sentenced to one year at prison.
I asked myself if I hadn't had my fill of the whole thing... And then there would be a great scene, or even just a reminder of how much I enjoyed spending time in the company of Nicky or Gloria, and I happily kept going.
The good news -- for us, if not for the long-suffering female inmates of Litchfield -- is that Season 6 is a return to near-peak form for a series that helped put Netflix on the map.
The show enters its sixth season, however, looking like a fashion that's faded out of style, one that hasn't cleared the prison walls but which, in TV terms, has pretty clearly jumped the shark.
For all its faults, this is still compelling viewing. The cast are wonderful, and the writing sharp as a tack. And for all the discomfort of watching this brutality and injustice, the sombre tone is not unearned.
If you don't have the patience to wait out the bumpy beginnings (and middles), I don't blame you. But in Season 6, just as in past seasons, something good awaits the persistent.
Time moves faster in this new 13-part run, though it's not always easy to tell - and surely, in real life, only prison can rival the dullest school lessons when it comes to the agonisingly slow passage of time.
Orange Is the New Black remains a worthwhile series... But the show's commitment to telling all of its stories has become wildly overgrown, like a tree desperately in need of pruning.
It's definitely -- especially for early fans -- something that's still worth watching, and tells so many stories that deserve to be told. There's a lot of stumbling throughout, but there are glimmers of its old spirit.