Santa Clarita Diet - Season 1 -

Blood splatter meets witty repartee. The show never lingers on horror for horror’s sake, instead blending graphic kills with punchlines about HOA violations, awkward neighbor encounters, and teenage eye-rolls.

Their teenage daughter Abby discovers the secret mid-season. Instead of running away, she becomes the family’s sharpest strategist—and the one who points out how much less stressed her mom is since becoming undead. Santa Clarita Diet - Season 1

Horror Comedy / Dark Satire / Zombie Domestic Drama Key Features: 1. “Sheila’s Transformation Arc” From overworked, slightly repressed realtor to liberated, hyper-confident predator with a moral code. Watch her discover new rules: no eating innocent people, no rotting, and no missing PTA meetings. Blood splatter meets witty repartee

No slow shambling. No brainless moaning. Instead: heightened senses, accelerated healing, and a 24-hour digestion window. If Sheila eats well, she looks great. If she doesn’t, she starts to… flake. Bonus Feature (Disc/Streaming Extra): “Fruitful Dialogue: The Art of Saying ‘I Love You’ While Holding a Severed Finger” A 6-minute featurette with creators Victor Fresco and stars Drew Barrymore & Timothy Olyphant on balancing marital sweetness with cannibalism. Series Mood Board Keywords: Blood-spattered aprons • Real estate open houses gone wrong • Teen sarcasm as a love language • California beige aesthetic vs. bright red gore • “It’s not a phase, mom—wait, actually it is.” Would you like this reformatted as a press release, Netflix-style title card, or DVD back-cover blurb? Instead of running away, she becomes the family’s

A suburban mom and real estate agent’s life is upended when she suddenly stops aging, loses her heartbeat, and develops a powerful craving for human flesh—forcing her and her loving husband to navigate parenting, neighbors, and a very unconventional diet.

TV Series – Season 1 (10 episodes, ~30 min each)

Nathan Fillion’s cameo as a truly vile neighbor, plus a Serbian mob subplot, ensures the family’s problems aren’t just digestive. By Episode 8, the show shifts from “Can they hide it?” to “Who gets eaten next?”