TV

5 reasons to switch from ‘Homeland’ to ‘The Americans’

Remember when โ€œHomelandโ€ was really, really good? When Brody was still alive and Claire Danes had not yet worn out her wild-eyed welcome with her CIA colleagues? Itโ€™s still possible to recapture that lost magic by watching โ€œThe Americans,โ€ another series full of sexy intrigue and foreign-relations drama, which kicks off its second season Wednesday on.

Here are 5 reasons why you should st๐Ÿƒart watching t๐Ÿ”ฏhis show:

It has a fantastic premise


Russian spies infiltrate the DC suburbs and enjoy a seemingly banal existence as Phillip and Elizabeth Jennings (Matthew Rhys and Keri R๐Ÿ”ฏussell), a couple of married travel agents with two kids and a demanding espionage sched๐’‰ฐule. Fun setup, but that could never happen in real life, right? It could and did. โ€œThe Americansโ€ was inspired by real-life Russian Foreign Intelligence Service agents Lydia and Vladimir Guryev, who posed for 15 years as Cynthia and Richard Murphy of Montclair, NJ. The โ€œMurphysโ€ were discovered and arrested, along with eight fellow spies, in 2010 (their beige colonial was put on the market last spring by the US Marshals Service.)

The best is yet to come

Itโ€™s not much of a stretch to say that โ€œHomelandโ€™sโ€ best days are behind it; after all that has transpired, all the terrorists killed and plots foiled and loves lost and won and hung in a public square in Tehran, where will it go from here? Is Carrie Mathison (Danes) going t๊ฆ†o put a new spin on the Mommy Wa๐ŸŒŸrs as a single mother now heading up the Istanbul bureau of the CIA? While the showโ€™s next steps are anyoneโ€™s guess, โ€œThe Americansโ€ is just getting started, with only one exquisitely paced season under its belt. It opts for the slow burn, gathering tension as the season progresses.

The soundtrack rocks

“The Americans” stars Keri Russell and Matthew RhysFrank Ockenfels/FX

Songs that have been long since dismi๐Ÿ’›ssed as easy listening fare are given new life on ๐Ÿ’›the show, from Fleetwood Macโ€™s to by Juice Newton to Peter Gabrielโ€™s creepy Cold War hit,

That early โ€™80s vibe

Set in 1982 in the DC suburbs, the decor of the Jennings house is so spot-on, youโ€™ll think you stepped back intoโ€‰. . .โ€‰1982 in the DC suburbs. Even more true-to-life? Most of the stuff youโ€™ll see around the house is actually from the early โ€™70s. โ€œWe figured, the Jennings would have gotten โ€˜marriedโ€™ in the early โ€™70s and would have purchased their pieces then,โ€ says set decorator Andrew Baseman. โ€œThen you have an added layer: [The house and everything in it] is a history that Russians are creating, Russians pretending to be Americans pretending to be m๊ง…arried, and theyโ€™re best friends with an FBI agent, so nothing can be off.โ€ As for the fashion, while โ€œ1982โ€ and โ€œsuburbsโ€ donโ€™t exactly conjure up chic, the show does for turtleneck sweaters what โ€œScandalโ€ does for white pantsuits; you know th๐†eyโ€™re not a good idea, but youโ€™ll want them anyway. Russell and Rhys make suburban domesticity look very stylish indeed.

There is life after โ€œFelicityโ€


Just as Claire Danesโ€™ turn as Carrie has all but erased memories of her โ€™90s teen-angst drama show โ€œMy So-CเนŠalled Life,โ€ the stunning Russell is so convincing as a reserved Soviet agent/suburban mom, youโ€™ll have to remind yourself that this the same person who played wholesome college student Felicity Porter on โ€œFelicity.โ€ Added bonus: Her chemistry with co-star Matthew Rhys is so great, theyโ€™re rumored to be dating in real life, although Rhys denies it (a recent headline on read โ€œEven My Mom Thinks Iโ€™m Dat๐ŸŒœing Keri Russell, Says Her Costar Matthew Rhys.โ€)