The show’s central engine is the Tejada family. Monet Tejada (Mary J. Blige, in a star-making performance) is the matriarch you never want to disappoint. She’s sophisticated, ruthless, and heartbreakingly pragmatic. Her sons, Cane (Woody McClain) and Dru (Lovell Adams-Gray), and daughter Diana (LaToya Tonodeo), each want a piece of Tariq. Blige commands every frame; her whisper is more threatening than any scream. When she tells Tariq, “You’re not Ghost’s son anymore. You’re mine,” it’s not a threat—it’s a receipt.
Six weeks after his father’s death, Tariq St. Patrick is cut off from the family fortune, running a dangerous student-body drug ring at an Ivy League school, while trying to keep his mother out of prison and his own hands clean. power book ii: ghost s01 aiff
★★★★ (4/5) Best for: Fans of The Sopranos , Snowfall , and anyone who loves watching smart people make terrible decisions. Key episode: Episode 8, “Family First” (Mary J. Blige’s monologue about motherhood will haunt you). The show’s central engine is the Tejada family
While Tariq stumbles through his education, the women of Ghost Season 1 deliver the emotional and narrative power. Tasha, confined to house arrest, gives Naturi Naughton her most nuanced material yet. She’s no longer Ghost’s queen; she’s a caged animal negotiating her children’s future with phone calls and coded language. Her scene opposite Mary J. Blige is a masterclass in restraint—two apex predators circling, neither willing to blink. When she tells Tariq, “You’re not Ghost’s son anymore