Newest TV Show BuzzVerdict

Ranking of Kings

4.4

Ranking of Kings looks like a children's storybook and hits like an emotional freight train. WIT Studio's adaptation of Sosuke Toka's manga follows Bojji, a deaf and seemingly powerless prince, through a fantasy kingdom full of betrayal, hidden agendas, and unlikely kindness. The simple art style hides sophisticated storytelling, and the show's ability to make you cry over characters you've known for minutes is remarkable. Late-season pacing wobbles and an overstuffed cast keep it from sticking every landing, but the emotional core never wavers.

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Ranking of Kings

4.4

2021 · 1 Season · Fuji TV · Fantasy / Adventure / Drama

Ranking of Kings looks like a children's storybook and hits like an emotional freight train. WIT Studio's adaptation of Sosuke Toka's manga follows Bojji, a deaf and seemingly powerless prince, through a fantasy kingdom full of betrayal, hidden agendas, and unlikely kindness. The simple art style hides sophisticated storytelling, and the show's ability to make you cry over characters you've known for minutes is remarkable. Late-season pacing wobbles and an overstuffed cast keep it from sticking every landing, but the emotional core never wavers.

Re:Zero

4.3

2016 · 4 Seasons · TV Tokyo · Fantasy / Thriller / Drama

Re:Zero takes the isekai genre and twists it into something deeply punishing. Subaru Natsuki can't stay dead, and the show uses that premise to explore trauma, obsession, and the cost of being the only person who remembers every failed timeline. White Fox's adaptation is emotionally intense, beautifully animated in its biggest moments, and willing to let its protagonist suffer in ways most shows wouldn't dare. Pacing issues and a protagonist who can be hard to root for in certain arcs keep it from perfection, but this is one of the most ambitious fantasy anime of the past decade.

X-Men '97

4.5

2024 · 1 Season · Disney+ · Animation, Action, Sci-Fi

X-Men '97 pulls off something that revival series almost never manage: it honors the original while standing confidently on its own. The animation is a massive upgrade, the storytelling carries genuine emotional stakes, and the show isn't afraid to push beloved characters into uncomfortable territory. A handful of rushed character arcs and the occasional fan-service nod that lands with a thud are the only real stumbles. This is the rare continuation that makes both longtime fans and newcomers understand why these characters mattered in the first place.

X-Men: The Animated Series

4.1

1992 · 5 Seasons · Fox Kids · Animation, Action, Sci-Fi

X-Men: The Animated Series brought Marvel's mutants to a massive audience with a level of narrative ambition that Saturday morning cartoons rarely attempted. Its willingness to adapt complex comic book storylines, tackle themes of prejudice and identity, and treat its audience as capable of following serialized drama set a standard that superhero animation measured itself against for years. The final season's production collapse is painful, and the animation never matched the quality of the writing throughout the run. But the storytelling confidence and emotional weight of its best arcs, from the Dark Phoenix Saga to the Sentinel conflicts, represent something truly special in the history of animated television.

Bocchi the Rock!

4.5

2022 · 1 Season · Tokyo MX · Comedy / Music / Slice of Life

Bocchi the Rock! takes the well-worn premise of a socially anxious teenager joining a band and turns it into one of the most visually inventive and emotionally resonant anime comedies in recent memory. CloverWorks delivered something special with its wild animation experiments, and the show's ability to make social anxiety both hilarious and deeply relatable struck a chord with an enormous audience. It's only 12 episodes and occasionally leans too hard into repeated gags, but those are small complaints against a show this creative and this warm.

Frieren: Beyond Journey's End

4.5

2023 · 2 Seasons · Nippon TV · Fantasy / Adventure / Drama

Frieren: Beyond Journey's End takes the aftermath of a classic fantasy quest and turns it into something quietly extraordinary. It's a story about an immortal elf learning what human connections mean only after the people she traveled with have grown old and died, and that premise delivers emotional weight that most anime can't touch. The deliberate pacing won't work for everyone, and viewers looking for constant action will find themselves waiting. But for those willing to match Frieren's unhurried rhythm, this is one of the most rewarding anime of the decade.

Made in Abyss

4.0

2017 · 2 Seasons · AT-X / Tokyo MX · Adventure / Fantasy / Drama

Made in Abyss creates one of the most compelling fictional worlds in anime history and then dares its characters, and its audience, to keep descending into it. The Abyss itself is a masterwork of environmental storytelling, gorgeous and terrifying in equal measure, with Kevin Penkin's soundtrack elevating every moment of wonder and dread. The show's willingness to inflict real suffering on its young protagonists gives the adventure genuine stakes but also pushes into territory that many viewers find deeply uncomfortable. Whether that discomfort represents brave storytelling or unnecessary provocation depends on your tolerance and your trust in the narrative. For those who can engage with it on its own terms, this is an unforgettable piece of anime that stays with you long after you stop watching.

Mushoku Tensei: Jobless Reincarnation

4.4

2021 · 2 Seasons · Tokyo MX · Fantasy / Adventure / Drama

Mushoku Tensei set a new visual standard for isekai anime when it debuted in 2021, and Studio Bind's dedication to the source material shows in every frame. The world-building is rich, the character growth is patient and detailed, and the animation quality is consistently outstanding. Its protagonist's past and some uncomfortable fan-service moments create a barrier that not every viewer can or should get past. For those who engage with it, this is one of the most fully realized fantasy anime ever produced.

One Punch Man

3.5

2015 · 2 Seasons · TV Tokyo · Action / Comedy / Parody

One Punch Man's first season is a near-perfect piece of action comedy that deconstructs superhero storytelling with brilliant wit and some of the best animation TV anime has ever produced. The problem is that the second season exists alongside it. A studio change from Madhouse to J.C.Staff resulted in a dramatic drop in visual quality that stripped the series of its most celebrated trait, leaving strong writing and expanded character work to carry a show that had previously excelled on every front. Taken together, the two seasons represent a series that reached extraordinary heights and then couldn't maintain them, making it both one of the most exciting and most frustrating anime experiences available.

Oshi no Ko

4.3

2023 · 3 Seasons · Tokyo MX · Drama / Mystery / Thriller

Oshi no Ko opened with one of the most talked-about premiere episodes in recent anime history, and the show that followed has largely lived up to that introduction. Aka Akasaka's unflinching look at the Japanese entertainment industry, wrapped in a reincarnation mystery, delivers sharp writing and genuine emotional weight. The pacing wavers after its explosive start, and some arcs feel more like industry commentary than plot progression. When it's focused, though, Oshi no Ko cuts deeper than most anime dare to go.

Spy x Family

4.0

2022 · 3 Seasons · TV Tokyo · Action / Comedy / Slice of Life

Spy x Family builds its entire premise around a fake family where every member is hiding something, then spends its runtime making you care about them like they're real. The combination of Cold War spy action, a telepathic child's chaotic misadventures, and a found-family heart gives the show a range that most anime comedies never attempt. It leans heavily on its comedic formula and the overarching spy plot moves forward at a crawl, which limits its ceiling. But the character chemistry is irresistible, the animation quality is strong, and Anya Forger might be the most universally beloved anime character in years. It's the rare show that works for hardcore anime fans and complete newcomers alike.

Undone

4.0

2019 · 2 Seasons · Amazon Prime Video · Animation / Drama / Fantasy / Comedy

Undone is one of the most visually inventive and thematically ambitious animated series of recent years, using its rotoscope technique not as a gimmick but as an essential storytelling tool that mirrors its protagonist's fractured relationship with reality. Rosa Salazar's performance anchors a show that's simultaneously funny, heartbreaking, and philosophically rich. The second season expands the story in ways that don't always match the first season's focus, and the deliberate ambiguity will frustrate viewers who want clear answers. But as an exploration of family, trauma, mental health, and the nature of perception, Undone does things that no other show is attempting.

Chainsaw Man

3.5

2022 · 1 Season · TV Tokyo · Action / Dark Fantasy / Horror

Chainsaw Man arrived as one of the most anticipated anime adaptations of its era and delivered something markedly different from what many fans expected. MAPPA's cinematic approach created a visually distinctive series with a moody, grounded atmosphere and excellent voice work, but that same stylistic choice became the center of a fierce debate among manga readers who wanted something faster and more vibrant. The writing remains sharp and the characters compelling, but the adaptation's deliberate restraint left a meaningful portion of the fanbase feeling the anime missed the manga's raw energy. It's a strong show that will land perfectly for some viewers and feel like a near miss for others.

Dandadan

4.0

2024 · 1 Season · MBS / TBS · Supernatural / Action / Comedy / Romance

Dandadan throws ghosts, aliens, teenage romance, and absurdist comedy into a blender and somehow produces something that feels completely coherent. Science SARU's animation is jaw-dropping, the chemistry between its leads carries real emotional weight alongside the chaos, and the show's willingness to be weird without apologizing for it makes every episode feel unpredictable. The breakneck pacing occasionally leaves character development behind, and certain mature elements won't land for everyone. But as a pure shot of creative energy, Dandadan is the most exciting new anime to arrive in 2024.

Mob Psycho 100

4.5

2016 · 3 Seasons · Crunchyroll · Animation / Action / Comedy / Supernatural

Mob Psycho 100 is one of the rare anime that gets better with every season and sticks the landing when it matters most. It wraps profound messages about self-acceptance and emotional growth inside some of the most inventive animation the medium has produced, and it does it without ever feeling like it's lecturing you. The humor is sharp, the action is spectacular, and the heart underneath it all is completely genuine. Three seasons wasn't many, but the show used every one of those 37 episodes to say exactly what it wanted to say.

Pantheon

4.0

2022 · 2 Seasons · AMC+ · Animation / Sci-Fi / Drama / Thriller

Pantheon is the kind of show that deserved a bigger audience and got buried by a streaming platform that didn't know what to do with it. Its exploration of digital consciousness, corporate power, and what makes a person a person is handled with the kind of philosophical seriousness that most animated series wouldn't attempt. The slow start is real, and the technical jargon can be dense, but the payoff across both seasons justifies the patience required to get there. This is smart, ambitious science fiction that treats animation as a legitimate vehicle for adult drama.

Smiling Friends

4.2

2022 · 3 Seasons · Adult Swim · Animation / Comedy / Absurdist

Smiling Friends packed more creative energy into its 11-minute episodes than most shows manage in an hour. The mixed-media animation was constantly surprising, the humor landed with the kind of density that rewards rewatching, and the show never lost the handmade quality that made it feel like nothing else on television. It ended after three seasons by choice rather than decline, which is the rarest kind of exit in animation. For a show about making people smile, it turned out to be pretty good at it.

Solar Opposites

3.5

2020 · 6 Seasons · Hulu · Animation / Comedy / Sci-Fi

Solar Opposites is a show at war with itself. Its main storyline delivers reliable animated comedy that coasts on rapid-fire gags and alien absurdity without ever becoming essential viewing. Its Wall subplot is something entirely different: a sprawling, inventive story-within-a-story that earned a level of investment the primary narrative never matched. Six seasons and 63 episodes produced plenty of laughs, but the show's most lasting legacy might be proving that its best idea deserved to be its own series.

Star Wars: The Clone Wars

4.0

2008 · 7 Seasons · Cartoon Network / Disney+ · Animation / Action / Adventure / Sci-Fi

Star Wars: The Clone Wars transformed a gap between two movies into one of the most expansive storytelling achievements in the franchise. Its best arcs deliver drama, moral complexity, and emotional weight that stand alongside anything in the films. Getting to those arcs means pushing through a significant amount of filler and accepting that the show's anthology format creates an uneven viewing experience by design. For anyone willing to meet it on those terms, Clone Wars adds layers of depth to the Star Wars universe that nothing else in the franchise has matched.

The Legend of Korra

3.8

2012 · 4 Seasons · Nickelodeon · Animation / Action / Adventure / Fantasy

The Legend of Korra is a bold sequel that chose to forge its own identity rather than repeat what came before, and that decision is both its greatest strength and the source of most of its problems. When the show is at its best, particularly across its third and fourth seasons, it delivers some of the richest storytelling in American animation. When it stumbles, mostly in its second season, the drop in quality is hard to ignore. The result is a series that rewards patience and never plays it safe, even when playing it safe would have been the easier path.

The Venture Bros.

4.5

2003 · 7 Seasons · Adult Swim · Animated Comedy / Action-Adventure

The Venture Bros. spent seven seasons and a wrap-up film building one of the richest, funniest, and most emotionally rewarding universes in adult animation. Its character development puts most prestige dramas to shame, its comedy remains endlessly quotable, and its willingness to let characters truly change gave it a depth that no other superhero parody has matched. The long hiatuses between seasons tested patience, and the show's density makes it impenetrable for casual viewers, but for anyone willing to commit, this is one of the finest animated series ever produced.

Trailer Park Boys

3.8

2001 · 12 Seasons · Showcase / Netflix · Comedy / Mockumentary

Trailer Park Boys produced some of the funniest, most quotable comedy in Canadian television history during its original Showcase run. Its mockumentary format, improvised feel, and the trio of Ricky, Julian, and Bubbles created something that felt completely genuine in its absurdity. Netflix's revival kept the characters alive but lost the creator and much of the sharpness that made the early seasons special, trading simple, effective storytelling for increasingly convoluted plots. At its best, this show is worth seeking out without question. Knowing when to stop watching is the real challenge.

Blue Eye Samurai

4.5

2023 · 1 Season · Netflix · Animation, Action, Drama

Blue Eye Samurai is a stunning achievement in adult animation, combining gorgeous hand-crafted visual design with a revenge narrative that hits hard and rarely lets up. The fight choreography alone would justify a watch, but the layered exploration of identity, belonging, and the cost of vengeance elevates this far beyond a simple action series. Some character choices lack consistency and the show occasionally leans too heavily on graphic content, but these are minor blemishes on an otherwise exceptional first season. For anyone who's ever wished animated storytelling for adults would aim higher, this is proof that it can.

Harley Quinn

4.2

2019 · 5 Seasons · Max · Animation, Comedy, Action

Harley Quinn is the rare comic book adaptation that found its voice early and kept refining it across five seasons. Its Harley is chaotic, violent, vulnerable, and laugh-out-loud funny, and the show built an entire Gotham around her that feels more alive than most live-action versions. The Harley and Ivy relationship gives the series an emotional core that grounds even its most absurd moments. Later seasons don't quite reach the heights of the second and third, and the violence occasionally tips from darkly comic into gratuitous. But as a complete package, this is one of the most entertaining and emotionally satisfying animated shows DC has produced.

Hazbin Hotel

3.8

2024 · 2 Seasons · Amazon Prime Video · Animation, Musical, Comedy

Hazbin Hotel is a show bursting with creative ambition and musical talent, brought down by a pacing problem it hasn't fully solved. The character designs are memorable, the songs range from catchy to flat-out impressive, and the premise of a rehabilitation hotel in Hell offers endless comedic and dramatic potential. But cramming major character arcs into single episodes leaves emotional beats feeling like plot checkboxes rather than earned moments. There's a great show in here fighting to get out, and when individual scenes click, the energy is undeniable. It just needs more room to breathe.

Love, Death & Robots

4.0

2019 · 4 Seasons · Netflix · Animation, Sci-Fi, Anthology

Love, Death & Robots is animated science fiction at its most ambitious and its most inconsistent. When an episode connects, combining a compelling story with a distinctive animation style, the results can be breathtaking. When it doesn't, you're left with a technically impressive but emotionally hollow exercise. The anthology format means both experiences are inevitable, often within the same volume. Four seasons in, the show remains the best showcase for the range and potential of adult animation on any streaming platform, even if it has never quite achieved the consistency that would make it a masterpiece.

Scavengers Reign

4.3

2023 · 1 Season · Max · Animation, Sci-Fi, Drama

Scavengers Reign is one of the most visually original animated series to arrive in the streaming era, building an alien world so richly detailed that the planet itself becomes the show's most compelling character. Its commitment to showing rather than telling makes for an immersive, almost hypnotic viewing experience. Character depth doesn't always match the worldbuilding, and the deliberate pacing will lose viewers who need more narrative momentum, but nothing else on television looks or feels like this. Its cancellation after one season means the story remains unfinished, which stings, but what exists is remarkable enough to stand on its own.

The Great

4.0

2020 · 3 Seasons · Hulu · Satirical Dark Comedy / Historical Drama

The Great is a gleefully irreverent take on Catherine the Great's rise to power, carried by two lead performances that elevate every scene they inhabit. Elle Fanning and Nicholas Hoult have the kind of on-screen chemistry that makes you forget you're watching actors, and Tony McNamara's writing is sharp enough to make the absurdity of 18th-century Russian court politics feel fresh and funny across three seasons. The show occasionally struggles with pacing in its middle stretches, and its commitment to anti-historical chaos can leave viewers wanting more substance beneath the wit. Those who connect with its wavelength will find one of the most entertaining period shows of the 2020s, and one that was cancelled before it ran out of ideas.

The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

4.1

2017 · 5 Seasons · Amazon Prime Video · Comedy, Drama, Period

The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel is a gorgeously produced period comedy that lives and dies by its rapid-fire dialogue and Rachel Brosnahan's magnetic lead performance. Its first two seasons are exceptional television, with sharp writing, stunning production design, and a propulsive energy that makes each episode fly by. Later seasons repeat familiar story beats and lose some momentum, but the show never stops being entertaining to watch or beautiful to look at. A final season course-correction delivers a satisfying conclusion that honors the character's journey. If you love fast-talking comedies with heart and style to spare, Maisel delivers both in abundance.

The Other Two

4.0

2019 · 3 Seasons · Comedy Central / Max · Comedy / Satire

The Other Two is one of the sharpest comedies about fame and family from the past decade, following two floundering adult siblings as their teenage brother becomes an overnight internet celebrity. Across three seasons, the show evolved from grounded showbiz parody into increasingly surreal satire while never losing sight of the very real insecurities driving its characters. It's laugh-out-loud funny, surprisingly moving, and one of the most under-seen comedies of its era.

The Rehearsal

4.3

2022 · 2 Seasons · HBO · Docu-Comedy / Reality Experiment

The Rehearsal is unlike anything else on television, a show that uses elaborate simulations and meticulous planning to explore whether human connection can be engineered, and in the process reveals more about loneliness, control, and empathy than most conventional dramas manage. Nathan Fielder built something truly innovative here, blending comedy and philosophy in ways that make you laugh and then make you deeply uncomfortable about having laughed. Legitimate ethical concerns about its treatment of participants are impossible to dismiss, and the show's ambiguity about its own intentions can feel like evasion rather than art. But as a piece of television that expands the boundaries of what the medium can do, it's extraordinary.

Samurai Jack

4.5

2001 · 5 Seasons · Cartoon Network / Adult Swim · Animated Action-Adventure / Science Fantasy

Samurai Jack remains one of the most visually inventive animated series ever produced. Genndy Tartakovsky's masterful use of minimal dialogue, cinematic composition, and bold graphic design pushed the medium forward in ways that still haven't been surpassed. The original four seasons are nearly flawless in their execution. The revival's final season delivers darker themes and a satisfying character arc for Jack, but a rushed finale and uneven pacing in its back half prevent it from reaching the heights of what came before. As a complete work, this is still a landmark achievement in animated storytelling.

Shoresy

4.2

2022 · 5 Seasons · Crave / Hulu · Sports Comedy

A Letterkenny spinoff that had no business being this good, Shoresy turned a one-note trash-talking hockey player into the center of one of the sharpest sports comedies on television. The rapid-fire dialogue hits hard, the locker room ensemble brings genuine warmth, and the show's quiet commitment to representing Indigenous characters and women in positions of authority gives it substance that most comedies in this lane never attempt. Some padding issues creep in during later seasons, and the shift away from the character's signature verbal sparring has divided longtime fans. But five seasons deep, the show keeps finding new ways to tell stories about teamwork, loyalty, and a scrappy hockey team that refuses to fold.

Spider-Man: The Animated Series

3.9

1994 · 5 Seasons · Fox Kids · Animation, Action, Sci-Fi

Spider-Man: The Animated Series brought the web-slinger to television with ambitious multi-episode arcs, strong voice performances, and a willingness to tackle the character's deeper themes of responsibility and sacrifice. For many fans, it remains the definitive animated version of Peter Parker. Heavy censorship from the Fox network crippled the action sequences, the animation relied too much on recycled footage, and the CGI cityscapes have aged poorly. These limitations hold it back from matching the best of its era. But the storytelling ambition and the emotional core of Peter Parker's journey give the series a lasting appeal that technical shortcomings can't entirely diminish.

SpongeBob SquarePants

4.2

1999 · 16 Seasons · Nickelodeon · Animation, Comedy

SpongeBob SquarePants produced one of the greatest runs in animated television history during its first three seasons, establishing characters and comedy that became permanently embedded in pop culture. The decline after creator Stephen Hillenburg stepped back is real and well-documented, with several middle seasons delivering mean-spirited, creatively bankrupt episodes that bear little resemblance to what came before. Later seasons recovered some ground but never fully recaptured the original magic. At its best, nothing in animated comedy touches it. The problem is that its best represents only a fraction of what the show eventually became.

The Afterparty

3.7

2022 · 2 Seasons · Apple TV+ · Comedy / Mystery

A murder mystery comedy built on a clever structural gimmick: each episode retells the same night through a different character's perspective, and each perspective transforms the entire episode into a different film genre. Season one pulls this off with infectious energy, a stacked ensemble, and a whodunit that actually rewards close attention. Season two repeats the formula at a wedding with diminishing returns, swapping out most of the cast and leaning harder into genre parody without the character depth that made the first year work. The cancellation after two seasons felt inevitable given the second season's quieter reception, but the first season remains one of the most inventive comedy experiments Apple TV+ has produced.

Platonic

3.8

2023 · 2 Seasons · Apple TV+ · Comedy

A buddy comedy about platonic friendship between a man and a woman that refreshingly refuses to turn into a romance. Rose Byrne and Seth Rogen have the kind of natural, combustible chemistry that makes every scene together feel effortless, and their dynamic as two friends navigating separate midlife crises provides the show with a reliable comic engine across two seasons. The supporting cast gets pushed to the margins by the central pairing's dominance, and the show sometimes chooses gentle amusement over genuine insight into the midlife anxieties it raises. But the second season tightened up considerably, and when Platonic commits to being a hangout comedy about two people who make each other's lives simultaneously better and worse, it's one of the most purely enjoyable shows on streaming.

Pose

4.0

2018 · 3 Seasons · FX · Drama

Pose brought New York's ballroom scene to television with a cast that made history and performances that demand attention, most notably from Billy Porter and Michaela Ja Rodriguez. The show's emotional ambition runs high, and when it connects, it delivers moments of genuine power that few series from its era can match. Ryan Murphy's tendency toward grand emotional gestures occasionally tips into heavy-handed territory, and the storytelling can lean on dramatic shortcuts when subtlety would have served better. Those flaws never overshadow what Pose accomplished: a three-season run that expanded who gets to be at the center of a prestige drama, told with warmth, fury, and a deep love for its characters.

Primal

4.4

2019 · 3 Seasons · Adult Swim · Animation / Action / Horror / Drama

Primal is one of the most remarkable achievements in modern animation, a series that tells a deeply emotional story about grief, survival, and unlikely companionship without a single word of dialogue. Genndy Tartakovsky's visual storytelling is operating at a level that makes most animated shows look timid by comparison, and the bond between Spear and Fang is as affecting as any relationship on television. The second season's shift toward more fantastical elements divided some fans, and the relentless violence won't be for everyone. But when Primal is firing on all cylinders, there is nothing else like it on TV.

Regular Show

4.2

2010 · 8 Seasons · Cartoon Network · Animation, Comedy, Fantasy

Regular Show took the simplest possible premise and turned it into something brilliantly unpredictable. Two slackers try to avoid work, and somehow every episode escalates into cosmic chaos, supernatural threats, or interdimensional warfare. The 80s and 90s nostalgia gives it a warm, specific personality, the character relationships feel genuine, and the humor lands with remarkable consistency across eight seasons. Some episodes blur together due to a repetitive structure, and the final season's space setting divided fans, but the show's ability to find real emotion inside absurd situations makes it one of Cartoon Network's finest achievements.

Mythic Quest

3.5

2020 · 4 Seasons · Apple TV+ · Workplace Comedy

Mythic Quest spent four seasons inside a fictional game studio and found something surprisingly affecting beneath the workplace comedy formula. The show's standalone episodes rank among the best individual episodes of any comedy in the 2020s, and the ensemble cast built a dynamic that grew richer with each season. Its week-to-week plotting could feel loose and aimless at times, and the later seasons occasionally struggled to find new directions for characters whose arcs had already peaked. Low viewership ultimately ended the show before its time, but what it left behind is a workplace comedy with more heart and ambition than its modest reputation suggests.

Over the Garden Wall

4.7

2014 · 1 Season · Cartoon Network · Animation, Fantasy, Mystery

Over the Garden Wall is a nearly perfect piece of animated storytelling. In just ten episodes totaling under two hours, it builds a haunting fairy-tale world, develops genuine emotional depth between its two leads, and delivers a narrative that rewards multiple viewings with new layers of meaning. The folk-inspired soundtrack by The Blasting Company is extraordinary, the visual design evokes classic illustration traditions, and the story knows exactly when to end. Minor quibbles about humor that occasionally falls flat or episodes that feel more atmospheric than substantive barely register against the cumulative power of the whole. This is the rare show that does everything it sets out to do and never overstays its welcome.

Phineas and Ferb

4.3

2007 · 4 Seasons · Disney Channel · Animation, Comedy, Musical

Phineas and Ferb turned a simple summer vacation premise into one of the smartest and most consistently entertaining animated comedies of its generation. Its songs are absurdly catchy, its humor works on multiple levels, and the Perry and Doofenshmirtz dynamic is one of the best comedic pairings in animation history. The formula gets repetitive if you binge too many episodes back to back, and the show never really evolves beyond its established structure. But within that structure, it operates at a level of craft and wit that most children's shows can only dream of reaching.

Physical

3.6

2021 · 3 Seasons · Apple TV+ · Dark Comedy / Drama

A dark comedy set in 1980s San Diego that follows a housewife's transformation through aerobics, driven by one of the most committed performances in recent television. Rose Byrne carries every scene with a ferocity that elevates material which can be difficult to sit with, playing a woman whose polished exterior conceals an internal life of relentless self-punishment. The show improved dramatically from a polarizing first season to a stronger second and third year, but it never fully escaped the challenge of asking audiences to spend extended time inside a character's cruelest thoughts about herself. A hidden gem for viewers who appreciate unflinching character work, and too uncomfortable for those who don't.

Letterkenny

4.0

2016 · 12 Seasons · Crave / Hulu · Comedy

Twelve seasons of rapid-fire wordplay, small-town Canadian life, and characters so deeply committed to their bit that the bit becomes something close to art. Letterkenny's best episodes are unlike anything else in comedy television, powered by a writing style that treats dialogue as a competitive sport and a cast that delivers it with flawless timing. The show lost some momentum in its middle seasons when the formula started showing its seams, but it found its way back for a strong finish. For anyone willing to tune their ear to the rhythm and accept that plot is secondary to conversation, this is one of the sharpest comedies of the past decade.

Loot

3.3

2022 · 3 Seasons · Apple TV+ · Comedy

A workplace comedy that coasts almost entirely on Maya Rudolph's charm and the strong chemistry of its supporting ensemble. Rudolph plays a newly divorced billionaire who discovers her own charitable foundation, and the fish-out-of-water premise generates reliable laughs without ever digging deep enough into its satirical potential. The show wants to comment on wealth inequality but treats its billionaire protagonist with too much affection to land any real punches. Three seasons in, Loot remains a pleasant, lightweight comedy that never quite becomes the sharper show its premise promises, carried by a cast that deserves writing with more bite.

Castlevania

4.2

2017 · 4 Seasons · Netflix · Animation / Action / Dark Fantasy / Horror

Castlevania did something the entire entertainment industry had spent decades failing at: it turned a video game into a great television show. Four seasons of gorgeous animation, morally complex characters, and action choreography that set a new standard for the medium. The pacing stumbles in the back half, particularly once Dracula exits the stage, and some storylines in seasons three and four feel stretched thin. But the highs are extraordinary, the character work is far deeper than anyone expected from a Konami adaptation, and the fight sequences alone are worth the price of entry. This is the show that proved video game stories could work on screen.

Cyberpunk: Edgerunners

4.3

2022 · 1 Season · Netflix · Animation / Action / Science Fiction / Drama

Cyberpunk: Edgerunners is a devastating ten-episode sprint through a world that chews people up and spits them out, animated by Studio Trigger with a visual energy that makes Night City feel more alive than the game ever managed. David Martinez's arc from desperate kid to doomed legend is a tragedy told at full speed, and the emotional gut-punch of the finale lands harder than most anime manage in three times the episode count. The compressed runtime leaves some character development feeling thin, and the middle episodes rush through material that could have used more room to breathe. But as a self-contained story about ambition, love, and the cost of trying to be somebody in a city that doesn't care, it's one of the best anime of its year.

I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson

4.3

2019 · 3 Seasons · Netflix · Sketch Comedy

I Think You Should Leave carved out a unique space in comedy by perfecting a formula nobody else could pull off: take a recognizable social situation, add one person who refuses to acknowledge reality, and escalate until the whole thing collapses into surreal chaos. Tim Robinson's commitment to his characters, the show's razor-sharp brevity, and its gift for producing endlessly quotable moments made it a cultural phenomenon that far outpaced its modest runtime. Season three shows signs of formula fatigue, and the hit-to-miss ratio is inherently uneven in sketch comedy, but at its best this is the funniest show of its era.

Dickinson

3.5

2019 · 3 Seasons · Apple TV+ · Comedy-Drama

Dickinson took one of American literature's most studied figures and turned her into a rebellious young woman fighting for creative freedom in a world that had no interest in giving it to her. Hailee Steinfeld's performance grounds the show's wildest instincts, and the best episodes find a real emotional charge in the collision between Emily's ambitions and her era's constraints. The anachronistic approach that defines the series is also its most divisive element: the modern music, contemporary language, and tonal shifts between comedy and drama don't always coexist cleanly, and some stretches feel more interested in being clever than in being coherent. It's a show that swings big and connects often enough to justify the misses, earning its Peabody Award through sheer creative commitment.

Family Guy

3.5

1999 · 24 Seasons · Fox · Animated Sitcom

Twenty-four seasons in, Family Guy occupies a strange spot in television. Its best years produced some of the funniest animated comedy of the 2000s, with a willingness to go places other shows wouldn't touch. The worst stretches leaned so hard on the cutaway format and shock value that entire episodes felt like a string of loosely connected sketches held together by nothing. The show has survived cancellation, cultural shifts, and a fanbase that can't seem to agree on whether it's still worth watching, which might be the most Family Guy thing about it.

American Dad!

3.8

2005 · 22 Seasons · Fox / TBS · Animated Sitcom

American Dad! spent its early years trying to escape its creator's shadow, and somewhere around season four it succeeded completely. Roger's limitless personas became the engine for the show's best episodes, the Smith family dynamics found a groove that balanced absurdity with genuine emotional stakes, and the writing pivoted away from topical political humor toward something much stranger and more rewarding. The TBS years gave the creative team freedom that produced some of the show's strongest work, even if the lower budget occasionally showed. Twenty-two seasons in, consistency is the main issue, with a growing gap between the episodes that land and the ones that feel like they're coasting.

Adventure Time

4.4

2010 · 10 Seasons · Cartoon Network · Animation, Fantasy, Comedy

Adventure Time started as a goofy cartoon about a boy and his magic dog and slowly revealed itself as one of the most ambitious animated narratives ever attempted. Its willingness to tackle loneliness, identity, trauma, and love within a candy-colored post-apocalyptic world earned it a place in animation history. The middle seasons drag with filler and the mythology can feel impenetrable to latecomers, but the highs are extraordinary. This is a show that grew up alongside its audience, and the emotional payoff of that journey is something few series in any medium have matched.

Somebody Somewhere

4.3

2022 · 3 Seasons · HBO · Comedy-Drama

Somebody Somewhere is one of the most emotionally honest shows HBO has ever produced, a three-season portrait of grief, friendship, and finding your people in the last place you expected. Bridget Everett anchors the whole thing with a performance that never reaches for sentiment it hasn't earned, and her chemistry with Jeff Hiller as Joel gives the show its beating heart. The deliberate pace and low-stakes storytelling won't work for everyone, and a few plotlines across the run feel undercooked. But for anyone who has ever felt stuck, out of place, or uncertain about where they belong, this show lands with quiet, lasting force.

Dave

3.8

2020 · 3 Seasons · FXX · Comedy

Dave is a show that works hardest when you least expect it to. Beneath the avalanche of crude jokes and genital-related humor lies a surprisingly sincere exploration of insecurity, friendship, and the cost of chasing creative ambition. Its second season is excellent television, and the supporting cast elevates what could have been a vanity project into something with real heart. The crude humor will push some viewers away before the show reveals its depth, and the third season doesn't quite sustain the highs of the second, but at its best, Dave earns its place in the conversation about modern comedies that manage to be both absurd and affecting.

Hacks

4.3

2021 · 5 Seasons · Max · Comedy-Drama

Hacks built its reputation on two things: Jean Smart's towering performance as Deborah Vance and a central relationship so combustible it could power five seasons of comedy and heartbreak in equal measure. The writing is consistently sharp, the ensemble cast punches well above its weight, and the show handles themes of ageism, ambition, and creative legacy with a confidence that most comedies never attempt. A recurring cycle of conflict between its leads tests patience in later seasons, and the portrayal of stand-up itself leans more toward Hollywood satire than anything resembling the real comedy world. But at its best, Hacks is one of the defining comedies of the 2020s, funny and cutting and unexpectedly moving in ways that earned every one of its Emmys.

Jury Duty

4.2

2023 · 2 Seasons · Amazon Freevee / Prime Video · Comedy / Reality

Jury Duty pulled off something that shouldn't have worked. A prank show built around deceiving one person for three weeks sounds like a recipe for cruelty, but the entire production bends toward celebrating its subject rather than humiliating him. James Marsden's self-parodying performance and the tight ensemble of improvisers create a world absurd enough to be hilarious and warm enough to be deeply moving. The middle episodes lose momentum when the comedy drifts away from the courtroom's natural tension, and the ethical questions around the premise never fully disappear. But the finale delivers an emotional payoff that catches most viewers completely off guard, and the show's faith in basic human decency gives it a staying power that most comedy series would kill for.

PEN15

4.3

2019 · 2 Seasons · Hulu · Comedy / Drama

Two women in their thirties play themselves at thirteen, surrounded by actual teenagers, and somehow it becomes one of the most honest depictions of middle school ever put on screen. The concept sounds like a gimmick, but PEN15 earns every minute of its two-season run through fearless writing and performances that capture the full spectrum of adolescent humiliation, joy, and confusion. Its cringe factor will be too much for some viewers, and the show's willingness to go dark in its second season won't land for everyone. For those who can meet it where it lives, this is a show that understands something true about growing up and the friendships that get you through it.

Ramy

4.0

2019 · 3 Seasons · Hulu · Comedy-Drama

A first-generation Egyptian-American navigates faith, identity, and his own worst impulses across three seasons that redefined what Muslim representation looks like on American television. The standalone family episodes are some of the best character work in modern comedy, and the supporting cast consistently outshines its deeply flawed lead. Ramy's repetitive cycle of spiritual ambition and personal failure tests patience by the third season, and some portrayals of Arab culture have drawn legitimate criticism from the community the show claims to represent. Those tensions are part of what makes it worth watching. This is a show that takes real swings, lands most of them, and opened a door that American TV badly needed opened.

I Love Lucy

4.5

1951 · 6 Seasons · CBS · Sitcom / Comedy

I Love Lucy ran for six seasons on CBS and produced 180 episodes that essentially invented the modern sitcom. Lucille Ball's fearless physical comedy, the chemistry between all four leads, and writing clever enough to make a simple domestic formula endlessly entertaining turned the show into a cultural landmark. Some of the marital dynamics and humor reflect 1950s attitudes that modern audiences will notice, and the episode structure rarely deviates from its established pattern. None of that diminishes a show that remains laugh-out-loud funny more than seventy years after it first aired. Few comedies have ever matched its combination of craft, charm, and lasting influence.

New Girl

3.8

2011 · 7 Seasons · FOX · Comedy / Romance

New Girl built one of television's most lovable friend groups around Zooey Deschanel's adorkable Jess and three male roommates who gradually became family. The ensemble chemistry between the four loftmates, particularly Jake Johnson's Nick Miller, generates consistently funny and surprisingly emotional comedy. The first three seasons are the show's peak, with the Nick-Jess romance providing a compelling will-they/won't-they. Later seasons struggle with recycled relationship dynamics and a shortened final season that feels rushed.

That '70s Show

3.5

1998 · 8 Seasons · FOX · Comedy

That '70s Show captured the awkwardness and excitement of teenage life through a 1970s lens that felt both nostalgic and timeless, anchored by a young ensemble cast that included future stars Ashton Kutcher, Mila Kunis, and Topher Grace. The basement hangout sessions, the circle format, and the parent dynamics create a sitcom that's as much about friendship as it is about its era. The final season, with Topher Grace's departure, is widely regarded as a significant quality drop, and the humor can be broader than the character work deserves.

The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air

3.8

1990 · 6 Seasons · NBC · Comedy

The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air made Will Smith a star through a fish-out-of-water comedy that was funnier, more culturally significant, and more emotionally complex than its premise suggested. The class and cultural dynamics between Will and the Banks family provide comedy with genuine social observation, and the dramatic episodes, particularly the famous father scene, achieve an emotional power that transcends the sitcom form. The later seasons lose creative energy as the show became more of a vehicle for Smith's stardom than a comedy about culture clash.

Will & Grace

3.5

1998 · 11 Seasons · NBC · Comedy

Will & Grace broke ground as network television's first prime-time sitcom with gay lead characters and earned its audience through sharp writing and a comedic ensemble anchored by the dynamic between Eric McCormack and Debra Messing. Sean Hayes' Jack and Megan Mullally's Karen stole every scene they were in, becoming two of the most quoted characters of the era. The revival seasons (2017-2020) diluted the show's legacy, and the humor occasionally relies on stereotypes it's simultaneously attempting to normalize.

Cheers

4.3

1982 · 11 Seasons · NBC · Comedy

Cheers is one of the foundational texts of the American sitcom, building an entire show around the regulars of a Boston bar with writing so sharp and performances so lived-in that the location feels like a place you've actually been. The Sam-Diane dynamic defined the will-they/won't-they template for a generation, Ted Danson's Sam Malone is one of the great sitcom protagonists, and the ensemble grew richer with every season. The show spans two distinct eras (the Diane years and the Rebecca years) of varying quality, and some episodes haven't aged as gracefully as the show's reputation suggests.

Everybody Loves Raymond

3.5

1996 · 9 Seasons · CBS · Comedy

Everybody Loves Raymond mined the specific anxieties of family proximity for nine seasons of reliably funny, sometimes painfully accurate domestic comedy. The Barone family dynamics, particularly the mother-in-law conflict and the sibling rivalry, are drawn from observations so specific that they feel universal. Doris Roberts and Peter Boyle as the overbearing parents are the show's secret weapons, elevating familiar family sitcom territory into something sharper. The format is deeply traditional and the humor relies on recycled family dynamics that can feel repetitive across 210 episodes.

Frasier

4.3

1993 · 11 Seasons · NBC · Comedy

Frasier is the rare spinoff that surpassed its parent show, turning a supporting character from Cheers into the lead of a sophisticated comedy of manners built on farce, wit, and the relationship between two brothers whose pretensions mask genuine vulnerability. Kelsey Grammer and David Hyde Pierce are one of television's great double acts, the farce episodes are among the finest in sitcom history, and the show maintained its quality across eleven seasons with a consistency that few comedies achieve. The sophistication occasionally tips into repetitive snobbery, and the romantic subplots are the show's weakest recurring element.

Malcolm in the Middle

4.2

2000 · 7 Seasons · FOX · Comedy

Malcolm in the Middle redefined what a family sitcom could look like by removing the laugh track, embracing visual comedy, and centering a dysfunctional working-class family whose chaos felt more real than any pristine TV household. Bryan Cranston's Hal is one of television's greatest comic performances, Frankie Muniz's fourth-wall-breaking narration gives the show a distinctive voice, and the Wilkerson boys' escalating destruction provides physical comedy that still hasn't been matched. The later seasons lose some of the anarchic energy as the novelty fades.

M*A*S*H

4.5

1972 · 11 Seasons · CBS · Comedy / Drama

M*A*S*H remains one of television's towering achievements, a comedy set in a Korean War surgical unit that used humor as a survival mechanism while building toward emotional moments that still devastate fifty years later. The show's evolution from broad military comedy to sophisticated dramedy tracked television's own maturation, and its finale remains the most-watched broadcast in American television history. Alan Alda's Hawkeye Pierce is one of the medium's great characters, and the show's anti-war message, delivered through laughter and tears in equal measure, has never been more relevant.

The Big Bang Theory

3.3

2007 · 12 Seasons · CBS · Comedy

The Big Bang Theory became the most-watched comedy on television by making nerd culture accessible to mainstream audiences, with Jim Parsons's Sheldon Cooper becoming one of the most recognizable sitcom characters of the 21st century. The show's early seasons balance genuine affection for its characters with sharp comedy, and the ensemble works well together. Later seasons drift toward conventional relationship sitcom territory that contradicts the show's original identity, and the humor's relationship to geek culture shifted from celebration to something closer to mockery over time.

The Undoing

3.3

2020 · 1 Season · HBO · Thriller / Drama

The Undoing assembles a remarkable cast (Nicole Kidman, Hugh Grant, Donald Sutherland) and a glossy Upper East Side setting for a murder mystery that starts with genuine intrigue and gradually reveals that it doesn't have enough substance beneath its polished surface. Hugh Grant is excellent playing against type as a charming man who might be a monster, and the first three episodes build compelling uncertainty. But the mystery resolves in the most predictable way possible, and the show's obsession with wealth aesthetics undercuts its attempt to be a serious thriller.

Interview with the Vampire

4.5

2022 · 3 Seasons · AMC · Horror / Drama

AMC's Interview with the Vampire reinvents Anne Rice's novel with a boldness that honors the source material while making it entirely its own, anchored by Jacob Anderson and Sam Reid's extraordinary performances as Louis and Lestat. The show explores race, identity, and the horror of eternal life through a gothic lens that's both lavish and emotionally devastating. The unreliable narrator framework adds layers of complexity that reward attentive viewing, though the timeline shifts can occasionally feel disorienting.

Little Fires Everywhere

3.8

2020 · 1 Season · Hulu · Drama

Little Fires Everywhere benefits enormously from the combustible pairing of Reese Witherspoon and Kerry Washington as two mothers whose opposing worldviews collide in a planned community where rules are everything. The show explores race, class, motherhood, and the limits of good intentions with enough nuance to provoke genuine reflection. It occasionally overplays its hand with melodramatic plot turns, and the custody battle subplot carries more thematic weight than it can always support dramatically.

Maid

4.2

2021 · 1 Season · Netflix · Drama

Maid is an unflinching portrait of poverty, emotional abuse, and the bureaucratic gauntlet that traps people who are trying to escape both. Margaret Qualley delivers a breakthrough performance as a young mother navigating homelessness, custody battles, and a system designed to catch you in loops rather than lift you out. The show's refusal to simplify or sentimentalize poverty makes it one of the most honest depictions of class in American television, even when the emotional weight becomes almost unbearable.

Modern Family

3.8

2009 · 11 Seasons · ABC · Comedy

Modern Family redefined the family sitcom for a new era by presenting a multigenerational, diverse family through the mockumentary lens that made each episode feel intimate and immediate. The first five seasons deliver some of the sharpest, warmest comedy of the 2010s, with an ensemble so perfectly cast that every family member gets their share of standout moments. The later seasons ran on momentum rather than invention, and eleven seasons was several too many, but the family it built remains one of television's most endearing.

Sharp Objects

4.3

2018 · 1 Season · HBO · Thriller / Drama

Sharp Objects is a slow, suffocating masterpiece of Southern Gothic television, with Amy Adams delivering a career-best performance as a journalist returning to her toxic hometown to investigate a murder while confronting her own damaged past. The show prioritizes atmosphere and character psychology over plot mechanics, building dread through accumulation rather than revelation. It demands patience and rewards it with one of the most disturbing final scenes in television history.

Big Little Lies

4.0

2017 · 2 Seasons · HBO · Drama / Thriller

Big Little Lies' first season is a near-perfect blend of suburban satire, domestic thriller, and powerhouse acting that builds to a devastating finale. Reese Witherspoon, Nicole Kidman, and Shailene Woodley lead an ensemble that makes Monterey's privileged anxieties feel genuinely urgent. The second season, added after the first was designed as a complete story, dilutes the impact despite Meryl Streep's formidable addition, making this a show where the recommendation comes with a season-specific asterisk.

How I Met Your Mother

3.5

2005 · 9 Seasons · CBS · Comedy / Romance

How I Met Your Mother built one of the most beloved sitcom friend groups of the 2000s and pioneered a nonlinear storytelling structure that gave a standard sitcom genuine narrative ambition. The first five seasons are consistently funny, emotionally resonant, and structurally inventive, with Neil Patrick Harris's Barney Stinson becoming a cultural phenomenon. The controversial finale and the declining quality of the final seasons cast a shadow that the show's considerable strengths don't entirely escape.

The West Wing

4.5

1999 · 7 Seasons · NBC · Drama, Political

The West Wing is Aaron Sorkin's love letter to democratic governance, a show that proved political process could be as gripping as any thriller when anchored by brilliant writing and a cast that elevated every walk-and-talk into something electric. The first four seasons under Sorkin's pen represent some of the finest writing in television history, with dialogue that crackles and characters you'd follow anywhere. The quality drops noticeably after Sorkin's departure in season four, with the fifth season in particular struggling to maintain the standard, though the show recovers somewhat for its final stretch. Even with its uneven back half, The West Wing remains essential television for anyone who believes that smart, literate drama belongs on network television.

White Collar

4.1

2009 · 6 Seasons · USA Network · Crime, Comedy, Drama, Mystery

White Collar succeeds on the strength of its central partnership: Matt Bomer's suave con artist and Tim DeKay's straight-arrow FBI agent make an unlikely duo whose chemistry carries the show through six seasons of art heists, forgeries, and the ongoing question of whether a criminal can truly go straight. The cases are stylish and entertaining, Manhattan looks gorgeous, and the show maintains a lightness of touch that makes it endlessly rewatchable. The mythology around the music box and later conspiracies doesn't always land, but the core dynamic between Neal and Peter never falters.

The Peripheral

3.5

2022 · 1 Season · Amazon Prime Video · Science Fiction Thriller

The Peripheral is a stylish, ambitious adaptation of William Gibson's novel that delivers a compelling central performance from Chloe Grace Moretz and some inventive science fiction concepts. The show's dual-timeline structure creates an intriguing puzzle, but the dense mythology and rapid-fire worldbuilding leave many viewers struggling to keep up. Amazon's cancellation after one season means the story ends without resolution, making it a harder sell despite its significant strengths.

The Righteous Gemstones

4.0

2019 · 4 Seasons · HBO · Comedy-Drama, Crime

The Righteous Gemstones is Danny McBride's most ambitious project, a sprawling satire of megachurch culture wrapped in family crime drama and held together by an ensemble that commits fully to the absurdity. John Goodman anchors the chaos as patriarch Eli Gemstone, giving the show an emotional center that it needs more than it realizes, while McBride, Adam Devine, and Edi Patterson build comedy from their characters' toxic entitlement and desperate need for approval. Four seasons is a long run for a show this specific in its targets, and some seasons are sharper than others. But the best episodes combine outrageous comedy with genuine family pathos, and the show's willingness to go dark without losing its sense of fun makes it one of HBO's most entertaining comedies.

Californication

3.5

2007 · 7 Seasons · Showtime · Comedy / Drama

Californication runs on David Duchovny's magnetic turn as Hank Moody, a self-destructive novelist whose charm barely conceals the wreckage he leaves behind. The first four seasons deliver sharp writing, great music, and a surprisingly tender love story buried under layers of bad behavior. After that, the formula runs dry. Repetitive storylines, diminishing returns on shock value, and a final season that limps to the finish line keep the show from fulfilling its early potential. At its best, it's a funny and unexpectedly moving portrait of a man at war with himself. At its worst, it's a show that forgot why its own premise worked.

Entourage

3.3

2004 · 8 Seasons · HBO · Comedy / Drama

Entourage is a Hollywood fantasy machine powered by wish fulfillment, celebrity cameos, and Jeremy Piven's volcanic performance as super-agent Ari Gold. The first four seasons deliver a breezy, entertaining ride through a version of Los Angeles where everything works out for the main characters, and the fun is infectious when you stop resisting it. Later seasons run out of creative energy, and the show's treatment of women, always a weak point, hasn't aged well at all. It's a time capsule of mid-2000s bro culture that's simultaneously easy to binge and difficult to defend. If you can enjoy it for what it is without expecting it to be more, there's genuine entertainment here.

Nurse Jackie

3.8

2009 · 7 Seasons · Showtime · Comedy / Drama

Nurse Jackie is a bruising, often brilliant character study held together by Edie Falco's ferocious lead performance. The show takes an unflinching look at addiction through the lens of a deeply competent ER nurse who happens to be destroying herself and everyone around her, and it refuses to offer easy answers or redemption arcs. Supporting cast chemistry and sharp half-hour pacing keep it moving through seven seasons. The writing doesn't always match Falco's intensity, and some middle seasons spin their wheels, but the show's commitment to showing addiction as it actually works, cyclical and resistant to neat resolution, makes it one of the more honest medical dramas ever produced.

Orange Is the New Black

3.8

2013 · 7 Seasons · Netflix · Comedy / Drama

Orange Is the New Black brought an unprecedented level of diversity and humanity to television, building a sprawling ensemble inside a women's federal prison that felt more alive than most prestige dramas. The first few seasons crackle with sharp writing, dark humor, and genuine emotional weight. Later seasons lose some of that momentum as the cast expands and plotlines stretch thinner, but the show's willingness to center voices rarely heard on mainstream television remains its lasting achievement. It changed what streaming original content could look like and proved that stories about marginalized women could draw massive audiences.

Ray Donovan

3.6

2013 · 7 Seasons · Showtime · Crime / Drama

Ray Donovan delivers a compelling Hollywood fixer premise and a magnetic lead performance from Liev Schreiber, wrapped in a family drama that explores generational trauma with real weight. The first three seasons build a tense, layered world where celebrity cover-ups collide with deeply personal wounds. Later seasons lose focus, cycling through antagonists and plotlines that never quite recapture the early energy. The abrupt cancellation and subsequent movie finale left fans with closure that felt rushed rather than earned. What remains is a show with superb casting, genuine emotional depth in its family dynamics, and a frustrating inability to sustain its best qualities across the full run.

Snowfall

4.0

2017 · 6 Seasons · FX · Crime / Drama

Snowfall chronicles the crack epidemic's devastation through the story of Franklin Saint, a young man whose ambition transforms him from neighborhood kid to drug kingpin across six seasons of increasingly gripping television. Damson Idris delivers a career-defining performance, and the show's willingness to trace the human cost of the drug trade without flinching gives it a moral weight that elevates it above standard crime drama. A choppy first season gives way to something special once the show finds its footing, and by its final stretch it earns comparisons to the best in the genre. Not every plotline lands, and some characters get shortchanged by the scope of the story, but the core is powerful enough to carry the whole thing.

Snowpiercer

3.4

2020 · 4 Seasons · TNT / AMC · Sci-Fi / Drama

Snowpiercer expands the world of its source material into a sprawling class-war thriller aboard a perpetually moving train, and at its best it delivers compelling world-building, satisfying plot twists, and strong ensemble performances. The show never quite matches the visceral impact of Bong Joon-ho's film, but it carves out enough of its own identity to justify its existence across four seasons. Production design and visual ambition carry the show through patches where the writing loses its edge, and the central metaphor of a rigidly stratified society barreling through a frozen wasteland remains potent throughout. It's a solid genre show that occasionally rises above its limitations without ever fully transcending them.

Taboo

3.6

2017 · 1 Season · BBC One / FX · Drama / Thriller

Taboo is a dark, atmospheric period thriller that lives and dies by Tom Hardy's commanding performance as a man who terrifies empires. The Regency-era London setting is rendered with grimy beauty, and the show builds tension through mood and mystery rather than action. It demands patience and rewards it inconsistently, with some episodes delivering genuinely gripping drama and others losing momentum in murky plotting. The dialogue can be hard to follow, literally and figuratively, and the pacing tests even devoted viewers. But when Hardy is on screen, fully inhabiting a character who seems to operate by rules no one else understands, the show generates a pull that's hard to shake.

Weeds

3.5

2005 · 8 Seasons · Showtime · Comedy / Drama

Weeds built one of television's most entertaining premises around a suburban widow selling marijuana, and for its first three seasons it delivered sharp satire, complex characters, and a fearless willingness to push its heroine into increasingly dangerous territory. Mary-Louise Parker's performance as Nancy Botwin anchors the entire run. The problem is that the show kept going long past the point where the original concept could sustain it, shedding what made it special in favor of increasingly implausible escalation. The early seasons remain a high point of cable comedy. Everything after is a cautionary tale about what happens when a show outlives its premise.

The Mentalist

4.0

2008 · 7 Seasons · CBS · Crime, Drama, Mystery

The Mentalist thrives on Simon Baker's magnetic performance as Patrick Jane, a character whose charm and intelligence make even formulaic cases entertaining to watch. The Red John mystery provides a compelling spine for the first six seasons, though its resolution divided fans who had invested years in the puzzle. The show's strengths are its lead performance and the dynamics Jane creates with everyone around him, and those strengths carry it through seven seasons of consistently enjoyable television.

The Penguin

4.1

2024 · 1 Season · HBO · Crime, Drama

The Penguin is a crime drama that happens to take place in Gotham City, and that distinction is what makes it work. Colin Farrell disappears completely into Oswald Cobb, delivering a performance that's equal parts repulsive and magnetic, while Cristin Milioti matches him beat for beat as Sofia Falcone. Lauren LeFranc built a power struggle that owes more to classic gangster stories than to superhero television, and the eight-episode structure keeps the narrative tight and focused. The show's darkness can feel unrelenting, and its Gotham exists in a moral void that some viewers will find exhausting. But as a character study of a desperate, dangerous man clawing his way to the top, it's one of the best things to come out of the DC universe.

Suits

3.8

2011 · 9 Seasons · USA Network · Legal Drama / Comedy-Drama

A slick, fast-talking legal drama built on the chemistry between its two leads and a premise that somehow sustained nine seasons of 'will they get caught' tension. Suits found a massive second life on streaming, where a new generation discovered what the original audience already knew: when the banter is this sharp and the cast is this charismatic, you don't need the cases to be realistic. The show loses steam in its middle seasons when key cast members depart, but the core dynamic between Mike and Harvey remains one of the most entertaining partnerships in modern television.

Burn Notice

4.0

2007 · 7 Seasons · USA Network · Action, Comedy, Drama, Thriller

Burn Notice found a winning formula by dropping a resourceful spy into Miami and letting him solve problems with duct tape, yogurt, and voiceover narration explaining exactly how. Jeffrey Donovan's Michael Westen is charming and competent without being invincible, and the trio of Michael, Fiona, and Sam became one of television's most entertaining teams. The overarching burn notice mythology grows unwieldy in later seasons, but the show's blend of clever problem-solving, sunny location, and self-aware humor makes it one of the most rewatchable action shows of its era.

Criminal Minds

4.0

2005 · 15 Seasons · CBS · Crime, Drama, Thriller

Criminal Minds carved out a unique space in procedural television by focusing on the psychology of killers rather than the mechanics of solving crimes, and at its peak the show delivered deeply unnerving episodes built on strong ensemble performances and smart behavioral analysis. The quality fluctuated across 15 seasons, with cast changes and an increasing reliance on shock value weakening later years, but the core concept remained compelling throughout. The BAU team became one of television's most beloved ensembles, and the show's best episodes rank among the most effective thrillers network TV has produced.

CSI: Crime Scene Investigation

3.8

2000 · 15 Seasons · CBS · Crime, Drama, Procedural

CSI transformed television crime drama by making forensic science the star of the show, and its early seasons remain some of the most compelling procedural television ever produced. The Grissom era established a tone and visual style that spawned an entire genre of imitators, and while the show's quality declined as lead actors departed and the formula grew repetitive, the first seven or eight seasons deliver a standard of forensic storytelling that few shows have matched since.

Law & Order: SVU

4.0

1999 · 27 Seasons · NBC · Crime, Drama, Procedural

Law & Order: SVU has earned its place as the longest-running live-action primetime series in American television through Mariska Hargitay's powerhouse performance and a willingness to tackle subject matter most shows avoid entirely. The quality has fluctuated across 27 seasons, with the middle years representing a creative peak that later seasons have struggled to match. But even at its most formulaic, SVU connects with audiences because it treats its victims with a seriousness and empathy that remains rare on network television.

Monk

4.2

2002 · 8 Seasons · USA Network · Comedy, Crime, Drama, Mystery

Monk is built on one of the great television performances: Tony Shalhoub's portrayal of Adrian Monk, a brilliant detective crippled by obsessive-compulsive disorder and grief, is funny, heartbreaking, and utterly original. The mysteries are clever, the comedy is warm without being cruel, and the show's exploration of living with mental illness, while sometimes simplified for television, is handled with more care and empathy than it had any obligation to provide. Eight seasons and 125 episodes of consistently entertaining television, anchored by a character who earns every laugh and every tear.

NCIS

3.8

2003 · 23 Seasons · CBS · Crime, Drama, Procedural

NCIS built itself into one of the most-watched shows in television history not through innovation but through execution, delivering a reliable combination of case-of-the-week crimes, workplace family dynamics, and Mark Harmon's understated charisma as Leroy Jethro Gibbs. The show has never been cutting-edge television, and it was never trying to be. It found a formula that worked, refined it over two decades, and built an audience loyalty that survived multiple cast overhauls and the departure of its lead star.

Psych

4.3

2006 · 8 Seasons · USA Network · Comedy, Crime, Mystery

Psych is one of the most purely enjoyable shows of its era, a comedy mystery that never takes itself too seriously and benefits enormously from the comedic chemistry between James Roday Rodriguez and Dule Hill. The cases are entertaining puzzles, the pop culture references are relentless, and the show's commitment to fun over prestige makes it endlessly rewatchable. It occasionally loses focus during weaker stretches in the middle seasons, but the character relationships and comedic energy carry it through eight seasons of television that feels like hanging out with your funniest friends.

Scrubs

4.1

2001 · 9 Seasons · NBC / ABC · Comedy / Medical Drama

The rare comedy that could make you laugh and cry in the same episode, sometimes in the same scene. Bill Lawrence's medical comedy used J.D.'s overactive imagination as a storytelling device that kept the format fresh for years, and the friendships at its core, particularly the bond between J.D. and Turk, became some of the most beloved in television comedy. The first eight seasons tell a complete, satisfying story. The ninth season, a soft reboot that even its creator acknowledges was a misstep, is best treated as a separate entity. At its peak, nothing on television balanced humor and heartbreak with this much precision.

ER

4.2

1994 · 15 Seasons · NBC · Medical Drama

The show that defined the modern medical drama and launched a generation of imitators, none of which matched its combination of technical authenticity, emotional depth, and pure adrenaline. Michael Crichton's creation ran for fifteen seasons and 331 episodes, and while the later years couldn't sustain the intensity of the first six, the early run of ER is some of the most gripping network television ever produced. George Clooney became a movie star here. The Steadicam became a dramatic tool here. And the template for every medical show that followed was written in County General's trauma rooms.

Grey's Anatomy

3.5

2005 · 22 Seasons · ABC · Medical Drama / Romance

The longest-running primetime medical drama in American television history, and a show that has survived more cast departures, character deaths, and natural disasters than most soap operas dream of. Grey's Anatomy built its legacy on the strength of its early seasons, when Meredith Grey's intern class felt fresh and the emotional stakes hit hard, and has sustained itself through sheer force of formula and a fanbase that has grown up alongside the show. The first five seasons are peak Shonda Rhimes. Everything after varies wildly, but the show's ability to generate big emotional moments has never completely disappeared.

House

4.2

2004 · 8 Seasons · Fox · Medical Drama / Mystery

Hugh Laurie's Gregory House is one of the great television characters, a brilliant, abrasive, Vicodin-addicted diagnostician whose intelligence is matched only by his capacity for self-destruction. The show built eight seasons around this one performance, and Laurie delivered so consistently that the procedural formula never quite wore out. The medical mysteries follow a reliable pattern and the supporting cast rotates more than most fans would like, but when the writing focuses on House himself and his tortured friendship with Wilson, it produces some of the finest character drama of the 2000s.

Law & Order

4.0

1990 · 25 Seasons · NBC · Crime / Legal Drama

The show that perfected the procedural format and proved that television doesn't need serialized storytelling to be compelling. Dick Wolf's split-screen approach, half police investigation, half courtroom prosecution, became one of the most durable formulas in television history, generating 25 seasons, over 500 episodes, and a franchise that reshaped network television. The rotating cast keeps things fresh, the 'ripped from the headlines' approach gives the show an evergreen quality, and the famous two-note 'dun dun' sound became the most recognizable audio cue in television. Not every era is equal, but the formula has proven nearly indestructible.

Nip/Tuck

3.5

2003 · 6 Seasons · FX · Drama / Thriller

A provocative, boundary-pushing medical drama that thrived on shock value and moral ambiguity, delivering two remarkably compelling seasons before gradually losing its grip on the line between daring and absurd. The performances from Julian McMahon and Dylan Walsh anchor the show through its wildest swings, and when Nip/Tuck was firing on all cylinders, nothing else on television looked or felt like it. The later seasons push credibility past its breaking point, but the early run remains a fascinating snapshot of mid-2000s cable television learning just how far it could go.

Treme

4.0

2010 · 4 Seasons · HBO · Drama

David Simon's love letter to New Orleans is one of the most authentic portrayals of a real American city ever put on television. Across four seasons, Treme follows musicians, chefs, lawyers, and everyday residents fighting to rebuild their culture in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, and it does so with a patience and specificity that rewards viewers willing to meet it on its terms. The music is extraordinary, the cast is deep, and the show's refusal to simplify the messy politics of recovery makes it one of the most honest dramas of its era. It's not for everyone, and it never tried to be.

True Blood

3.5

2008 · 7 Seasons · HBO · Horror / Fantasy / Drama

A wild, blood-soaked ride through supernatural Louisiana that started as a sharp metaphor for civil rights wrapped in Southern Gothic horror and gradually became the most entertaining mess on premium cable. Alan Ball's adaptation of the Sookie Stackhouse novels delivered unforgettable characters, a fearless approach to sex and violence, and a world so overstuffed with supernatural creatures that the show eventually buckled under their combined weight. The first three seasons are legitimately great television. Everything after that is a test of how much you enjoy chaos.

Carnivale

3.8

2003 · 2 Seasons · HBO · Fantasy, Drama, Mystery

Carnivale is one of the most visually stunning and atmospherically rich shows HBO ever produced, a Depression-era supernatural drama that built its mythology with patience and precision across two mesmerizing seasons. Daniel Knauf's creation features some of the finest production design in television history, with Clancy Brown delivering a performance as the sinister Brother Justin that commands every scene he inhabits. The slow pacing and dense mythology tested viewer patience, and the cancellation after two of a planned six seasons means the story remains permanently unfinished. But what exists is unlike anything else on television, a haunting and beautiful piece of work that rewards viewers willing to meet it on its own terms.

Lupin

3.8

2021 · 3 Seasons · Netflix · Mystery, Thriller, Crime

Lupin is a stylish and infectious heist thriller elevated by Omar Sy's magnetic screen presence and a Parisian setting that drips with charm. The show's best moments combine clever disguises, elaborate cons, and genuine emotional stakes rooted in a father-son story that gives the flashy surface real weight. Plot logic doesn't always hold up under scrutiny, and the later parts lean heavier on action at the expense of the intricate scheming that made the early episodes so satisfying. But as escapist entertainment with a cultural identity all its own, Lupin delivers something that feels fresh in a crowded streaming market.

Oz

3.9

1997 · 6 Seasons · HBO · Drama, Crime

Oz is the show that opened the door for everything HBO became, a raw and uncompromising prison drama that proved premium cable could tell stories network television would never touch. Tom Fontana's series pioneered the kind of serialized, morally complex storytelling that would define the golden age of television, and its best seasons deliver some of the most gripping ensemble drama of the late 1990s. The later seasons lose focus and lean into increasingly outlandish plot developments, and the show's graphic content remains difficult to watch. But Oz's historical importance and the power of its strongest work earn it a place in any serious discussion about the shows that changed television forever.

Rectify

4.3

2013 · 4 Seasons · SundanceTV · Drama

Rectify is one of the quietest and most profoundly moving dramas in television history, a show about a man released from death row after nineteen years that refuses to turn his story into a procedural or a thriller. Ray McKinnon's series is interested in something harder and more honest than guilt or innocence: the question of whether a person can rebuild a life that was taken from them, and whether the people around them can handle the answer. Aden Young's performance as Daniel Holden is a masterpiece of restraint, and the show's deliberate pace rewards patience with emotional payoffs that land with devastating quiet force. Its final season received universal acclaim, and the series as a whole stands as one of the finest character studies television has ever produced.

The Newsroom

3.6

2012 · 3 Seasons · HBO · Drama, Political

The Newsroom is Aaron Sorkin at his most passionate and most polarizing, a show about how television news should be done that struggles with the gap between its ideals and its execution. Jeff Daniels delivers a commanding lead performance, and the second season's sustained storyline about a fabricated story represents some of Sorkin's tightest work. But the show's tendency to lecture, its uneven treatment of female characters, and the inherent smugness of telling real-world stories with the benefit of hindsight kept it from reaching the heights of Sorkin's earlier work. It's a fascinating, frustrating show that provokes strong reactions in every direction.

The Shield

4.4

2002 · 7 Seasons · FX · Crime, Drama, Thriller

The Shield is one of the most relentless and morally uncompromising crime dramas ever produced, a show that introduced audiences to Vic Mackey and then spent seven seasons methodically destroying every justification for his behavior. Shawn Ryan's series pushed the boundaries of what basic cable could broadcast, and Michael Chiklis delivered a performance that redefined the antihero archetype years before the concept became a television cliche. The show's pace never lets up, and the finale is one of the most devastating conclusions in television history. It never received the cultural recognition of some of its premium cable contemporaries, but the people who have seen it tend to put it in the conversation with the best dramas of the century.

The Twilight Zone

4.7

1959 · 5 Seasons · CBS · Science Fiction, Fantasy, Horror

The Twilight Zone remains the gold standard for anthology television, a show so far ahead of its time that its themes about conformity, prejudice, technology, and human nature feel more relevant now than when they aired over sixty years ago. Rod Serling used the framework of science fiction and fantasy to smuggle in social commentary that network censors would have killed in any other format, and the result is a body of work that has entered the cultural vocabulary permanently. Not every episode lands with the same force, and the fourth season's shift to an hour-long format disrupted the show's tight rhythm. But at its best, The Twilight Zone is television that operates on a level very few shows have ever reached, before or since.

Silo

4.0

2023 · 2 Seasons · Apple TV+ · Science Fiction Drama

Silo is a confident dystopian thriller that understands the value of patience, building its mystery across two seasons with the kind of measured tension that rewards attentive viewers. Rebecca Ferguson carries the show with a performance rooted in quiet determination, and the production design of the underground community is detailed enough to make it feel like a real place rather than a set. The slow pacing will lose some viewers, but those who stay will find a sci-fi series that trusts its audience to engage with ideas rather than explosions.

The Diplomat

3.8

2023 · 3 Seasons · Netflix · Drama, Thriller

The Diplomat delivers a smart, character-driven political thriller anchored by Keri Russell's commanding performance as an ambassador thrown into an impossible situation. Debora Cahn's writing is at its best when exploring the personal cost of political power, and the show crackles when its characters are arguing in rooms, negotiating alliances, and navigating marriages that have become indistinguishable from policy disputes. The plotting can stretch credibility, and some seasons struggle to maintain the tension of their cliffhanger-driven structure. But Russell and the ensemble keep you invested through every twist, and the show fills a gap in television that's been empty since the West Wing era.

The Knick

4.2

2014 · 2 Seasons · Cinemax · Medical Drama

The Knick is one of the most visually ambitious shows ever made for television, a period medical drama directed entirely by Steven Soderbergh that feels nothing like any period piece you've seen before. Clive Owen delivers a ferocious performance as a brilliant, self-destructive surgeon navigating the dawn of modern medicine in 1900s New York, and the show's willingness to confront the racism, corruption, and brutality of the era gives it a weight that transcends its genre. Its two seasons tell a complete story that rewards viewers who can handle its unflinching subject matter.

Abbott Elementary

4.3

2021 · 5 Seasons · ABC · Comedy, Mockumentary

Abbott Elementary revived the network sitcom by doing something radical: being consistently funny while caring about its characters and their world. Quinta Brunson created a mockumentary that uses the format's familiar toolkit with precision, building a teaching staff that feels lived-in and authentic without sacrificing comedy for sentiment. The show occasionally leans too hard on its feel-good instincts, and the mockumentary framework can feel like a safety net rather than a creative choice. But the ensemble is so strong and the writing so consistently sharp that Abbott Elementary has earned its place as the best broadcast comedy in years.

Daredevil

4.2

2015 · 3 Seasons · Netflix · Action, Crime, Drama

Daredevil set the standard for what a grounded superhero show could be, delivering three seasons of brutal action, moral complexity, and one of the great hero-villain dynamics in television history. Charlie Cox's Matt Murdock is a superhero defined by his contradictions, a blind lawyer who fights crime with his fists, a Catholic struggling with the violence he can't stop inflicting. Vincent D'Onofrio's Wilson Fisk is a villain so fully realized that he occasionally steals the show from its own protagonist. The thirteen-episode seasons can drag in their middle sections, and the second season's split focus creates structural problems. But the hallway fights are legendary, the performances are exceptional, and at its best, Daredevil proved that superhero television could be something great.

Interview with the Vampire (TV Series)

4.3

2022 · 2 Seasons · AMC · Horror, Drama, Romance

Interview with the Vampire is the Anne Rice adaptation that fans waited decades for, a lush and emotionally devastating reimagining that honors the source material while making bold creative choices. The performances from Jacob Anderson and Sam Reid anchor a love story that spans centuries, and the show's willingness to explore race, identity, and power through its vampire lens gives the material a weight that transcends the genre. The narrative structure can be demanding, with its layers of unreliable narration and timeline jumping, and some viewers find the pacing of certain episodes uneven. But this is gothic television at its most ambitious and beautiful, the rare literary adaptation that justifies its own existence.

Poker Face

4.1

2023 · 2 Seasons · Peacock · Mystery, Comedy-Drama

Poker Face proved that the mystery-of-the-week format still has plenty of life when paired with the right creative vision. Rian Johnson built an inverted mystery machine around Natasha Lyonne's irreplaceable screen presence, delivering standalone episodes that play like miniature crime films with their own distinct tones and guest casts. The procedural format means some episodes land harder than others, and the overarching story never quite matches the strength of individual cases. But when it clicks, and it clicks often, Poker Face is the most purely entertaining mystery show in years.

Reservation Dogs

4.4

2021 · 3 Seasons · FX on Hulu · Comedy-Drama

Reservation Dogs is one of the most original shows to come out of the 2020s, a coming-of-age comedy-drama that tells Indigenous stories with a voice entirely its own. Sterlin Harjo and Taika Waititi created something that feels both culturally specific and universally resonant, following four Oklahoma teenagers through grief, friendship, and the messy process of figuring out who you are. The show's gentle pacing won't work for everyone, and its third season occasionally stretches the episodic format thin. But the writing is warm without being sentimental, the humor is bone-dry and perfectly timed, and the final season delivers an emotional landing that most shows can only dream of.

What We Do in the Shadows

4.2

2019 · 6 Seasons · FX · Comedy, Horror, Mockumentary

What We Do in the Shadows took a cult film premise and stretched it across six seasons of increasingly absurd vampire comedy without ever losing its bite. The ensemble cast found new ways to mine laughs from centuries-old undead roommates navigating modern Staten Island, and the show's willingness to go bigger and weirder with each season kept it from settling into a comfortable rut. Some later seasons pushed the absurdity past the point where the emotional stakes could keep up, and the mockumentary format occasionally felt more like habit than intention. But at its best, this was one of the funniest shows on television, a comedy that made immortality feel hilariously mundane.

For All Mankind

4.1

2019 · 4 Seasons · Apple TV+ · Science Fiction Drama

For All Mankind is the most ambitious alternate history series on television, using a simple premise, what if the Soviets reached the Moon first, to explore decades of divergent American history through the lens of the space program. Each season's time jump keeps the show from growing stale, and the blend of personal drama with geopolitical stakes gives it an emotional range that most sci-fi series can't match. The show occasionally buckles under the weight of its many storylines, but its best episodes capture the wonder and danger of space exploration with real conviction.

Foundation

3.7

2021 · 2 Seasons · Apple TV+ · Science Fiction Drama

Foundation is a visually stunning adaptation that succeeds most when it departs from Isaac Asimov's source material and struggles most when it tries to follow it. Lee Pace's Emperor Cleon and the Genetic Dynasty storyline represent some of the most compelling original science fiction television has produced in years, while the Terminus plotlines that attempt to adapt the novels directly never achieve the same level of engagement. It's a deeply uneven show with moments of greatness scattered across two seasons, rewarding for patient viewers but frustrating for anyone looking for consistency.

Halt and Catch Fire

4.4

2014 · 4 Seasons · AMC · Drama

Halt and Catch Fire is one of television's great second-chance stories, a show that evolved from a shaky first season into one of the most emotionally resonant dramas of the 2010s. Its portrayal of the personal computing revolution serves as backdrop for deeply human stories about ambition, partnership, and the cost of always chasing the next thing. Mackenzie Davis and Kerry Bishe anchor the show's transformation with performances that rank among the decade's best, and its final season delivers an ending that most series can only dream of achieving.

Only Murders in the Building

4.0

2021 · 4 Seasons · Hulu · Comedy-Mystery

Only Murders in the Building is a charming, clever comedy-mystery that gets remarkable mileage out of the chemistry between Steve Martin, Martin Short, and Selena Gomez. Its true-crime-podcast premise is both a loving homage and a sharp satire, and the show's best seasons balance genuine whodunit tension with character comedy that lands consistently. Later seasons show some formula fatigue, cycling through new murders and celebrity guest stars with diminishing returns, but the central trio remains a delight and the show's warmth keeps it enjoyable even when the mysteries themselves lose some of their punch.

The Night Of

4.3

2016 · 1 Season · HBO · Crime Drama

The Night Of is one of HBO's finest limited series, a crime drama that uses a murder case to expose the machinery of the American justice system with devastating clarity. Riz Ahmed delivers a career-defining performance as a young man ground down by a system that presumes guilt, and John Turturro matches him as the unglamorous defense attorney carrying the weight of his client's life. The pacing demands patience, particularly in its middle stretch, but the cumulative payoff is a show that lingers in your mind long after the final episode.

The Terror

4.1

2018 · 2 Seasons · AMC · Horror Drama

The Terror's first season is a masterclass in historical horror, using the doomed Franklin Expedition as the foundation for a story about leadership, hubris, and the slow unraveling of civilization at the edge of the world. Jared Harris delivers one of the finest performances of the decade as Captain Crozier, and the show's atmosphere of creeping dread is unmatched in recent genre television. Season 2's shift to a completely different setting and cast divided the audience, but the first ten episodes stand on their own as a complete and devastating piece of work.

Killing Eve

3.5

2018 · 4 Seasons · BBC America · Thriller / Drama

Killing Eve burst onto the scene with a first season that redefined the spy thriller through two magnetic lead performances, razor-sharp writing from Phoebe Waller-Bridge, and a cat-and-mouse dynamic crackling with tension and dark humor. Each subsequent season brought a new showrunner and a noticeable step down in quality, culminating in a final season that left most of its audience feeling shortchanged. The first season is exceptional television by any standard. The complete series is a cautionary tale about what happens when a show's creative identity fractures.

Station Eleven

4.5

2021 · 1 Season · HBO Max · Drama / Sci-Fi

Station Eleven takes a pandemic apocalypse and turns it into a meditation on art, memory, and human connection that feels unlike anything else on television. The nonlinear storytelling is ambitious and occasionally disorienting, and the pacing asks for patience that not every viewer will want to give. What it achieves with that patience is remarkable. This is a show that earns its emotional payoffs through careful construction rather than cheap manipulation, and its final episodes deliver some of the most moving television in recent years.

The Handmaid's Tale

4.0

2017 · 6 Seasons · Hulu · Drama / Sci-Fi

The Handmaid's Tale launched with three of the most powerful seasons in recent television memory, anchored by Elisabeth Moss's ferocious lead performance and a dystopian world that felt disturbingly plausible. As the series stretched beyond its source material, the story began circling familiar ground, testing audience patience with repetitive suffering and plot threads that moved at a crawl. The highs are extraordinary and the early seasons alone justify watching. Whether the later seasons reward your investment depends entirely on how much patience you bring to a show that sometimes struggles to justify its own length.

Baby Reindeer

4.3

2024 · 1 Season · Netflix · Drama / Dark Comedy / Thriller

Baby Reindeer is one of the most uncomfortable and rewarding shows Netflix has ever produced. Richard Gadd created something that refuses to let its audience settle into easy sympathy or simple judgment, building a story about stalking, trauma, and identity that feels disturbingly honest. Jessica Gunning's Martha is unforgettable, funny and frightening in equal measure. The handling of certain themes around sexuality has drawn fair criticism, and the real-world fallout from the show's popularity raised questions worth asking. None of that diminishes what the show accomplishes in seven episodes. This is television that stays with you whether you want it to or not.

Boardwalk Empire

4.0

2010 · 5 Seasons · HBO · Crime / Drama / Period

Boardwalk Empire brought Prohibition-era Atlantic City to life with production values that still hold up more than a decade later, and Steve Buscemi's Nucky Thompson remains one of HBO's most fascinating antiheroes. The first three seasons deliver some of the best historical crime drama ever made for television, with a supporting cast that turns real gangsters into compelling characters. A weaker fourth season and a rushed final run prevent it from reaching the heights of HBO's very best. This is a show that aimed for the prestige of its network's finest and came close enough to be worth every hour, even when it stumbles.

Slow Horses

4.5

2022 · 5 Seasons · Apple TV+ · Spy Thriller / Drama

Slow Horses is built on the simple premise that intelligence work is mostly thankless drudgery performed by people who've already failed, and it turns that idea into one of the sharpest spy dramas on television. Gary Oldman's Jackson Lamb is a masterclass in controlled chaos, leading a cast that makes every season feel earned. Some later seasons wobble in their plotting, and the show's deliberate pace won't suit everyone. But across five seasons and counting, this is a series that keeps finding new ways to make institutional dysfunction thrilling. It's the rare show that gets better the more comfortable it becomes with its own characters.

From

4.0

2022 · 4 Seasons · MGM+ · Horror, Mystery, Sci-Fi

From is one of the most effective mystery-horror series of the streaming era, and it remains badly underappreciated. The creatures are terrifying in a way few TV horrors manage, the mythology deepens season after season, and Harold Perrineau anchors the whole thing with a performance that keeps you emotionally invested no matter how strange things get. If you can tolerate a slow, accumulative burn and trust that the show is building toward something, it rewards that patience more consistently than most shows in this space ever do.

Midnight Mass

4.0

2021 · 1 Season · Netflix · Horror, Drama

Midnight Mass is one of the most ambitious horror miniseries in recent memory, wrapping a slow-burn vampire story inside a serious, probing meditation on faith, death, and community. The performances are extraordinary, the atmosphere is suffocating in the best way, and the finale earns its emotional devastation. It demands patience and tolerance for extended philosophical monologues, and some viewers will bounce off it hard. But for those who connect with it, it lingers long after the credits roll.

Reacher

3.8

2022 · 3 Seasons · Prime Video · Action, Crime, Thriller

Reacher gets the character right in ways that previous adaptations never quite managed, and Alan Ritchson's performance is the clearest possible argument for the series' existence. Season 1 is close to exactly what fans of the books were hoping for, and season 3 represents a strong recovery after a disappointing second outing. The writing quality varies enough across seasons that the show isn't consistently great, but when it's working, it's one of the most purely entertaining action series on streaming.

House of Cards

3.5

2013 · 6 Seasons · Netflix · Drama

House of Cards at its peak was some of the sharpest political television ever made, a show that understood power as something enjoyed rather than merely wielded. The first two seasons remain essential viewing. The decline is real, the final season is a mess, and the whole edifice was complicated by circumstances outside the story. Watch it for what it was at its best, and stop when it stops being that.

Loki

4.0

2021 · 2 Seasons · Disney+ · Action & Adventure

Loki is the rare MCU property that earned its ending, building a genuine character arc across two seasons and closing it in a way that resonated with fans long after the credits rolled. The first season sets up a compelling premise and the second delivers on it with surprising emotional depth. If you've ever wanted the MCU to care as much about its characters as its spectacle, this is the show that comes closest.

The White Lotus

4.5

2021 · 3 Seasons · HBO · Black Comedy Drama

The White Lotus is one of the most distinctive series HBO has produced in years, a darkly funny anthology that uses gorgeous resort settings to dissect the ugliness underneath wealth, entitlement, and the stories people tell themselves. Seasons one and two are as close to perfect as prestige TV gets. Season three shows signs of formula fatigue but still delivers more than most shows manage in their prime. Watch it and watch it with people who want to argue about it afterward.

Yellowstone

3.5

2018 · 5 Seasons · Paramount Network · Drama

Yellowstone is a show you can feel as much as watch, full of stunning visuals, compelling family drama, and a patriarch you'll root for even when you know better. Its early seasons set a high bar that later ones couldn't quite clear, especially as the show's creator spread himself thin across too many projects. Go in for Kevin Costner and the Montana scenery, stay for Beth and Rip, and make peace with the fact that it ends messily.

Mare of Easttown

4.5

2021 · 1 Season · HBO · Crime Drama

Mare of Easttown is a masterclass in how to do a limited series right: a murder at the center, a community threaded around it, and a lead performance that makes everything feel urgent and real. Kate Winslet is extraordinary, the Delaware County setting feels lived-in and specific, and the finale carries genuine emotional weight. A few subplot missteps don't change the fact that this is exactly what prestige TV is capable of at its best.

The Queen's Gambit

4.5

2020 · 1 Season · Netflix · Drama

The Queen's Gambit is a rare limited series that earns every bit of its cultural impact. Anya Taylor-Joy's performance anchors a beautifully crafted period piece that works both as a chess drama and as a portrait of addiction, loneliness, and self-destruction. The criticism that Beth's path feels too frictionless is fair, but it rarely diminishes the experience of watching. If you haven't seen it yet, clear your schedule.

Yellowjackets

4.0

2021 · 3 Seasons · Showtime · Drama, Thriller, Mystery

Yellowjackets is a gripping survival thriller that hooks you with its dual-timeline mystery and refuses to let go. The performances from both the adult and teen casts are consistently excellent, and the show finds smart ways to explore how trauma reshapes identity over decades. Season 2 stumbles with pacing issues and some underwhelming present-day storylines, but the central mystery and the wilderness descent into savagery remain compelling enough to keep you watching. It's a show that rewards patience, even when that patience gets tested.

Fallout

4.2

2024 · 2 Seasons · Amazon Prime Video · Sci-Fi, Drama, Adventure

Fallout does what most video game adaptations fail to do: it captures the feel of its source material without being enslaved to it. Walton Goggins delivers a career-highlight performance as The Ghoul, and the production design creates a wasteland you can practically taste. The writing occasionally stumbles with pacing and some characters get less development than they deserve, but the show's blend of dark humor, genuine pathos, and retro-futuristic style makes it one of the strongest adaptations in any medium. Amazon clearly bet big on this one, and the bet paid off.

Justified

4.3

2010 · 6 Seasons · FX · Crime, Drama, Western

Justified is one of the best crime dramas of its era, built on razor-sharp dialogue, a perfect lead performance from Timothy Olyphant, and one of television's great rivalries between Raylan Givens and Boyd Crowder. It has a weaker stretch in Season 5, and its case-of-the-week format in early seasons won't appeal to everyone, but the highs are extraordinary. Six seasons of smart, funny, violent storytelling that knew exactly when to take its final bow. If you haven't seen it, you've been missing out.

The Witcher

3.5

2019 · 4 Seasons · Netflix · Fantasy / Drama / Action

The Witcher arrived on Netflix with massive potential and delivered on enough of it to build a loyal following, even as it frustrated fans of the source material at nearly every turn. Henry Cavill's commitment to Geralt elevated the first three seasons into something worth watching despite uneven writing and confusing timelines. The show's action sequences and monster designs remain impressive, and the core relationships between Geralt, Yennefer, and Ciri carry real emotional weight when the scripts let them breathe. But creative liberties with the books, inconsistent pacing, and the looming question of how the series handles its lead actor transition make this a show that's easier to admire in pieces than as a whole.

Bridgerton

3.8

2020 · 4 Seasons · Netflix · Romance / Drama / Period

Bridgerton carved out its own space in the period drama genre by refusing to play by the usual rules, mixing Regency-era setting with modern sensibility, diverse casting, and a willingness to prioritize romance over historical accuracy. The lavish production design and rotating love stories keep things fresh across seasons, and the show has built one of Netflix's most passionate fanbases in the process. Uneven season quality, shallow treatment of its own social commentary, and a formula that can feel repetitive are real limitations. But as pure romantic escapism with gorgeous costumes and a pop-orchestral soundtrack, it delivers exactly what its audience wants.

Narcos

4.2

2015 · 3 Seasons · Netflix · Crime / Drama / Thriller

Narcos turns the rise and fall of Colombia's drug cartels into riveting television that rarely lets up across 30 episodes. Wagner Moura's portrayal of Pablo Escobar is magnetic, Pedro Pascal brings grounding energy as the DEA perspective, and the show's commitment to filming on location in Colombia gives everything an authenticity that studio-bound productions can't touch. The American-centric framing occasionally flattens a complex political reality into simpler hero-villain dynamics, and the narration leans harder than it needs to. Still, this is a crime drama that earns its reputation through strong performances, taut writing, and a willingness to let the real history speak for itself.

Money Heist

3.9

2017 · 5 Parts · Netflix · Crime / Thriller

Money Heist starts as one of the smartest, most addictive heist stories ever put on television. The Professor's plan, the city-named robbers, the red jumpsuits, and the constant chess match with police create an atmosphere of controlled chaos that's impossible to stop watching. The first two parts are close to perfect television. The trouble is that the show kept going past its natural ending point, and the later parts increasingly rely on melodrama, coincidence, and escalation that strains credibility. Watch it for the brilliant setup and stay for the characters you'll grow attached to along the way. Just know that the ride gets bumpier the longer it goes.

Squid Game

4.0

2021 · 3 Seasons · Netflix · Thriller / Drama

Squid Game's first season is one of the most gripping things Netflix has ever produced, a survival thriller with real characters, devastating emotional stakes, and social commentary that hits without feeling preachy. The premise of desperate people playing children's games for money is brilliantly simple, and the execution lives up to it. Later seasons struggle to recapture that lightning, leaning on familiar structures and introducing storylines that don't always pay off. The show as a complete package is uneven, but that first season alone earns it a place in the conversation about the best things streaming television has produced. Start it for the games. Stay for the people playing them.

Wednesday

3.8

2022 · 2 Seasons · Netflix · Supernatural Mystery / Comedy

Wednesday takes a beloved character and drops her into a teen mystery format that works better than it probably should. Jenna Ortega's deadpan performance carries the show through weaker plotting and some casting choices that don't quite land. The gothic visuals are gorgeous, the humor hits more often than it misses, and Ortega's chemistry with Emma Myers gives the show a genuine emotional core. The mysteries themselves are the weakest link, often predictable and occasionally convoluted, and the Addams Family elements beyond Wednesday herself feel undercooked. It's a fun, stylish show that knows what it does best and mostly sticks to it.

Atlanta

4.5

2016 · 4 Seasons · FX · Comedy-Drama

Atlanta is one of the most distinctive shows to air in the last decade, a series that carved out its own lane and never once looked back. Four seasons gave it room to grow, experiment, and occasionally frustrate, but the overall body of work is remarkable. The performances are universally strong, the writing swings for the fences more often than almost any other show on television, and its willingness to sit in discomfort makes it stick with you long after each episode ends. Some of its creative choices won't land for every viewer, but that's part of what makes it matter.

Barry

4.5

2018 · 4 Seasons · HBO · Dark Comedy

Barry ran for four seasons on HBO and left behind one of the most confident, inventive half-hour shows in recent memory. Bill Hader built something that started as a dark comedy about a hitman in an acting class and evolved into a full-blown examination of violence, identity, and the stories people tell themselves. The supporting cast, particularly Anthony Carrigan as NoHo Hank and Henry Winkler as Gene Cousineau, elevated every episode they touched. Later seasons pushed harder into darkness, and the finale swung for the fences in ways that divided some viewers. But the ambition never faltered, and the show's willingness to follow its characters into genuinely uncomfortable territory is what separates it from most comedies on television.

Euphoria

3.5

2019 · 2 Seasons · HBO · Drama

Euphoria is a show at war with itself, capable of breathtaking television one moment and baffling creative choices the next. Zendaya's performance alone justifies watching, and Season 1 builds a compelling foundation that hooks you fast. But the cracks that appear in Season 2 are real, and they raise legitimate questions about where the show goes from here. It's a series worth watching with the understanding that it might frustrate you as often as it moves you.

30 Rock

4.2

2006 · 7 Seasons · NBC · Comedy

30 Rock crammed more jokes per minute into its 22-minute episodes than almost any comedy in television history, and the hit rate across 138 episodes is staggering. Tina Fey and Alec Baldwin have one of the great platonic screen partnerships, the supporting cast commits to absurdity with total conviction, and the writing rewards rewatching in ways that few comedies can match. Low mainstream viewership and some later-season fatigue keep it from the conversation about universally beloved shows, but among the people who found it, 30 Rock is the comedy they quote more than any other. This is a show that trusted its audience to keep up, and the audience that did was rewarded handsomely.

Andor

4.5

2022 · 2 Seasons · Disney+ · Sci-Fi / Drama / Thriller

Andor is a show that trusts its audience enough to slow down, ask difficult questions, and let complicated people make terrible choices for understandable reasons. Across 24 episodes, it builds a story about rebellion that feels urgent and grounded in ways the franchise rarely attempts. The pacing will test you early on, and the final stretch of Season 2 stumbles slightly in its rush to connect with what comes next. Those are real flaws in a show that otherwise operates at a level most television never reaches. If you can sit with its patience, what you get back is one of the most rewarding dramas in recent memory.

Arcane

4.5

2021 · 2 Seasons · Netflix · Animation / Action / Adventure / Fantasy

Arcane took a video game property that had no business producing great television and turned it into one of the most ambitious animated series in recent memory. Its first season is a near-flawless piece of character-driven storytelling, elevated by animation that redefined what the medium could look like. The second season reaches higher but stumbles with pacing that leaves too many threads feeling rushed. That's a real flaw in an otherwise remarkable achievement. Taken as a whole, this is a show that proved animated drama deserves the same respect as its live-action counterparts, and it earned every bit of the attention it received.

Arrested Development

4.0

2003 · 5 Seasons · Fox / Netflix · Comedy / Satire

Arrested Development built one of the most intricate comedic worlds television has ever seen, packed with layered jokes, running gags, and foreshadowing that rewards obsessive rewatching. Its first three seasons on Fox represent a high-water mark for the sitcom format, with an ensemble cast firing on all cylinders and writing dense enough to reveal new details on the fifth viewing. The Netflix revival stumbled badly, fracturing the family dynamic that made everything work and never fully recovering across two uneven seasons. That decline is real, and it takes some of the shine off the show's legacy. Still, those original 53 episodes remain some of the funniest, most inventive comedy ever produced for television.

Attack on Titan

4.5

2013 · 4 Seasons · MBS / NHK General TV · Action / Dark Fantasy

Attack on Titan starts as a survival horror story about humanity's last stand behind massive walls and ends as something far more ambitious, a sweeping political epic about freedom, hatred, and the cycles that perpetuate both. Across four seasons and nearly a decade of storytelling, it delivers some of the most jaw-dropping plot twists, emotionally devastating moments, and thematically rich material that the medium has ever produced. The ending divided its fanbase, and the pacing stumbles in both early and late stretches. Those are real flaws in an otherwise extraordinary piece of work. This is the kind of show that changes what you think anime can do, and its best moments will stay with you long after the final credits roll.

Avatar: The Last Airbender

4.8

2005 · 3 Seasons · Nickelodeon · Animated Fantasy / Adventure

Avatar: The Last Airbender is one of those rare shows that fully earns its reputation as an all-time great. Across 61 episodes, Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko built a world that feels lived-in and layered, populated it with characters who grow in ways that would be impressive in any medium, and told a war story with the emotional complexity of prestige drama while never forgetting that it was also supposed to be fun. Zuko's arc from villain to hero stands as one of the finest character transformations in television history, animated or otherwise. A handful of filler episodes in the first season and some childish humor are the only real blemishes on a show that gets better with every rewatch and continues to find new audiences nearly two decades after it first aired.

Band of Brothers

4.8

2001 · 1 Season · HBO · War / Drama

Band of Brothers follows Easy Company from training through the end of World War II, and across ten episodes it builds into one of the most powerful war stories ever put on screen. The ensemble cast brings dozens of real soldiers to life with performances that carry weight far beyond what most miniseries manage, and the production never cuts corners on authenticity or emotional honesty. A few characters blur together early on, and some historical liberties have drawn fair criticism over the years. Those are small marks against a show that earns its massive reputation through sheer commitment to telling this story right. More than two decades later, it remains the standard by which all war television is measured.

Battlestar Galactica

4.3

2004 · 4 Seasons · Syfy · Sci-Fi / Drama

Battlestar Galactica reimagined a campy 1970s space adventure as one of the most politically and emotionally ambitious dramas of its era. Across four seasons and 76 episodes, it used the framework of humanity's near-extinction to explore questions about democracy, faith, war, and what separates us from the machines we create. Edward James Olmos and Mary McDonnell anchor a deep ensemble with performances that would be remarkable in any genre. A divisive finale that leans harder into mysticism than many fans wanted keeps this from the absolute top tier, and some mid-series storylines wander before finding their way back. What the show achieves at its best, though, is television that treats science fiction as a vehicle for examining the hardest questions about human nature.

Better Call Saul

4.7

2015 · 6 Seasons · AMC · Crime / Drama

Better Call Saul took a comedic side character from one of television's greatest dramas and built an entire series around the question of how he got that way. Across six seasons and 63 episodes, the answer turns out to be more heartbreaking and more layered than anyone expected. Bob Odenkirk and Rhea Seehorn deliver career-defining performances, the writing never condescends to its audience, and the visual craft matches anything on the big screen. Slow pacing in the early seasons will test some viewers, and the show asks for a level of patience that not everyone will want to give. Those who do stick with it are rewarded with one of the most complete and emotionally devastating character studies in the history of the medium.

Black Mirror

4.2

2011 · 7 Seasons · Channel 4, Netflix · Sci-Fi / Drama

Black Mirror takes the technology we already use and asks what happens when we push it just a little further. Its best episodes rank among the finest standalone stories in television history, delivering gut-punch twists that stay with you for days. The anthology format means quality swings wildly from brilliant to forgettable, and later seasons haven't matched the consistency of the early ones. Charlie Brooker's signature blend of dark humor and genuine dread works best when it stays grounded in recognizable human behavior rather than chasing spectacle. Uneven as it can be, the highs are high enough that the series remains essential viewing for anyone interested in where our relationship with technology might be heading.

BoJack Horseman

4.5

2014 · 6 Seasons · Netflix · Animated Tragicomedy

BoJack Horseman is one of the most emotionally ambitious animated series ever produced, a show that used talking animals and Hollywood satire as cover for a deeply serious exploration of depression, addiction, and the limits of self-awareness. Its six seasons built something that very few comedies attempt and even fewer pull off: a long-form character study where the laughs and the devastation feel equally earned. The first season requires patience, and the subject matter can be hard to sit with. But the show's refusal to offer easy answers or redemptive arcs for its deeply flawed characters is exactly what makes it resonate so powerfully with the people who stick with it.

Breaking Bad

4.8

2008 · 5 Seasons · AMC · Crime / Drama

A high school chemistry teacher turns drug manufacturer, and across five seasons that transformation becomes one of the most gripping character studies television has ever produced. Bryan Cranston delivers a performance that redefined what lead acting on TV could look like, backed by writing so precise that almost nothing feels wasted. The early episodes test your patience, and the show occasionally stumbles with contrivances or uneven subplots. None of that matters much when you step back and look at the full picture. This is a show that stuck the landing, earned its reputation, and still holds up more than a decade after its final episode aired.

Brooklyn Nine-Nine

4.0

2013 · 8 Seasons · Fox / NBC · Comedy / Crime

Brooklyn Nine-Nine built one of the most likable ensemble casts in modern sitcom history and used a police precinct setting to deliver fast, warm, and reliably funny comedy for most of its run. Its first five seasons on Fox represent the show at its best, balancing absurd humor with surprisingly effective character work and progressive representation that never felt forced. The move to NBC brought uneven later seasons, and a final year that tried to wrestle with real-world policing issues produced deeply divided reactions from its audience. That rocky ending doesn't erase what came before. At its peak, Brooklyn Nine-Nine was comfort food television executed with skill, heart, and an ensemble that made you want to hang out at the Nine-Nine.

Buffy the Vampire Slayer

4.0

1997 · 7 Seasons · The WB, UPN · Fantasy / Drama

Buffy the Vampire Slayer took a campy premise and turned it into one of the most influential shows of its era, blending supernatural action with coming-of-age drama in ways that still resonate. Sarah Michelle Gellar anchors the whole thing with a performance that balances humor, vulnerability, and toughness across seven seasons. The show is uneven, with a rough first season and a divisive sixth, and some of its creative choices haven't aged as gracefully as others. At its best, though, this is a show that earns every bit of the devotion its fanbase still carries, delivering individual episodes and character arcs that stand among television's finest.

Chernobyl

4.7

2019 · 1 Season · HBO · Drama / History / Thriller

Five episodes is all it takes. Craig Mazin's dramatization of the 1986 nuclear disaster is carried by three lead performances that are among the best in recent television history, wrapped in a score and visual presentation that make every minute feel suffocating in the best possible way. Some scientific liberties and a handful of simplified character portrayals keep it from perfection, but the minor stumbles barely register against the weight of what this miniseries achieves. Chernobyl tells a story about the cost of institutional dishonesty with a clarity and emotional force that stays with you long after the credits roll, and years later, it remains one of the finest limited series ever produced.

Community

4.1

2009 · 6 Seasons · NBC · Comedy

Community is the rare sitcom that treated its format as a playground rather than a constraint, turning a community college setting into a launchpad for genre parodies, emotional character work, and some of the most inventive comedy episodes ever aired on network television. Dan Harmon's vision produced a first three seasons that rank among the best in comedy history, anchored by an ensemble cast with chemistry that no amount of behind-the-scenes chaos could fully diminish. Cast departures and one notably rough season keep it from sustained greatness across all six seasons, but the highs are so high that the lows feel like a reasonable price of admission. Six seasons happened. The movie is reportedly on its way.

Cowboy Bebop

4.5

1998 · 1 Season · TV Tokyo · Sci-Fi / Action / Neo-Noir

Cowboy Bebop is one of those rare shows where every creative element operates in sync. Its music, animation, direction, and writing form a unified whole that still feels fresh nearly three decades after it aired. The episodic structure will frustrate viewers who need a constant narrative thread pulling them forward, and that's a fair criticism of a show that asks you to trust its rhythm. But for those willing to meet it on its own terms, the payoff across 26 sessions is a story about loneliness, regret, and the impossibility of outrunning your past that lands with devastating precision. Few anime series have matched its creative ambition, and fewer still have aged this well.

Curb Your Enthusiasm

4.5

2000 · 12 Seasons · HBO · Comedy

Curb Your Enthusiasm spent 24 years proving that a show built almost entirely on improvisation and social discomfort could be one of the funniest things on television. Larry David's fictional version of himself became an iconic comedic creation, a man whose refusal to follow unspoken social rules exposed just how fragile those rules really are. The improvisational format kept the show feeling spontaneous in ways that scripted comedies rarely achieve, and the best episodes are intricately plotted machines where every thread collides in the final minutes. Some later seasons recycled familiar patterns to diminishing returns, and the show's polarizing nature means it was never going to work for everyone. But twelve seasons on HBO, ending on its own terms with a finale that honored everything that came before, is a run that very few comedies can match.

Dark

4.5

2017 · 3 Seasons · Netflix · Sci-Fi / Mystery / Thriller

Dark is the kind of show that rewards viewers who are willing to lean into complexity rather than resist it. Across three tightly plotted seasons and 26 episodes, creators Baran bo Odar and Jantje Friese built one of the most ambitious and coherent time travel narratives ever put on screen. The writing is meticulous, the performances sell impossible situations with total conviction, and the finale delivers a payoff that most puzzle-box shows only dream of achieving. The subtitle barrier and sheer density of the storytelling will turn some viewers away, and those are legitimate hurdles. For everyone else, this is one of Netflix's finest achievements and a high-water mark for science fiction television.

Deadwood

4.5

2004 · 3 Seasons · HBO · Western / Drama

Deadwood takes the mythology of the American frontier and replaces it with mud, profanity, and some of the most extraordinary dialogue ever written for television. Ian McShane's Al Swearengen is an all-time great character brought to life by an all-time great performance, and the ensemble around him matches that standard with startling consistency. The show's density and cancellation after three seasons are legitimate drawbacks that cost it the ending it deserved on its original run. What exists across those 36 episodes is still a remarkable achievement, a show that found poetry in the ugliest corners of American history and never once flinched.

Death Note

4.3

2006 · 1 Season · Nippon Television · Psychological Thriller / Crime / Supernatural

Death Note's first 25 episodes deliver one of the most gripping intellectual duels in anime history, carried by a brilliant premise and two unforgettable characters locked in a battle of wits. The final stretch can't maintain that standard, introducing replacements who never fill the void left by what came before. That unevenness keeps it from perfection, but it doesn't erase what the show accomplished at its peak. For anyone curious about anime or hungry for a psychological thriller that treats its audience as smart, this remains one of the best entry points the medium has ever produced.

Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba

4.0

2019 · 4 Seasons · Tokyo MX / Fuji TV · Action / Fantasy / Adventure

Demon Slayer is a spectacle-first anime that delivers some of the most visually stunning fight sequences the medium has ever produced. Its story about a kind boy trying to save his sister won't surprise anyone with its twists, and a couple of the supporting characters test your patience with repetitive comedy. What it lacks in narrative complexity, it makes up for with sheer craft, emotional sincerity, and a willingness to make you care about its villains as much as its heroes. For action anime fans and newcomers to the genre alike, it's an easy recommendation with a few caveats attached.

Dexter

3.5

2006 · 8 Seasons · Showtime · Crime / Thriller

Dexter's first four seasons deliver some of the most compelling antihero television of its era, anchored by Michael C. Hall's magnetic performance as a serial killer you can't stop watching. The fourth season in particular reaches a high point that the show simply never recovers from. What follows is a long, frustrating decline that culminates in a finale widely regarded as one of the worst in television history. The early seasons are good enough to be worth your time, but going in with realistic expectations about where the show ends up will save you the kind of disappointment that still haunts its fanbase.

Doctor Who

4.0

2005 · 15 Seasons · BBC One · Science Fiction / Adventure

Doctor Who's 2005 revival took a beloved but low-budget science fiction institution and turned it into a modern television powerhouse, proving that a show about a time-traveling alien could make you laugh, cry, and hide behind the sofa all in the same episode. At its best, under showrunners Russell T Davies and Steven Moffat, it produced some of the finest sci-fi television of its generation, with David Tennant and Matt Smith delivering performances that defined the role for a new audience. The show's quality varies wildly depending on who's running it, and certain eras tested even the most devoted fans with inconsistent writing and questionable creative choices. But that inconsistency is baked into the show's DNA, and the regeneration concept means there's always another version of Doctor Who around the corner.

Downton Abbey

4.1

2010 · 6 Seasons · ITV · Historical Drama

Downton Abbey became a global phenomenon by doing something deceptively simple: telling a sprawling family saga with impeccable production values and a cast that elevated every scene. Julian Fellowes built a world of upstairs grandeur and downstairs ambition that drew over 13 million viewers at its peak and earned 69 Emmy nominations across its run. Maggie Smith's Dowager Countess alone is worth the price of admission, delivering some of the sharpest comic timing in television history. Later seasons lean harder into soap opera territory, recycling character conflicts and relying on melodramatic twists that test the show's more sophisticated qualities. But even at its soapiest, Downton never loses the warmth and visual splendor that made audiences fall in love with it in the first place.

Dragon Ball Z

3.8

1989 · 9 Seasons · Fuji TV · Action / Adventure / Martial Arts

Dragon Ball Z is the anime that taught an entire generation what anime could be, and that historical importance isn't nothing. Its best arcs, particularly the Saiyan and Frieza sagas, deliver escalating conflict and iconic moments that hold up decades later. The pacing problems are severe, the storytelling is formulaic by modern standards, and the character development outside Goku and Vegeta is limited. But the show established a template that the entire genre still builds on, and the raw excitement of its biggest fights remains potent. Whether it's a classic you appreciate or a nostalgia trip you outgrow depends on what you're looking for, but its influence on everything that followed is beyond debate.

Fargo (TV Series)

4.3

2014 · 5 Seasons · FX · Crime / Dark Comedy

Five seasons of self-contained crime stories, all filtered through the Coen brothers' sensibility of dark humor, sudden violence, and Midwestern politeness hiding something rotten underneath. The highs here are extraordinary, with two or three seasons that rank among the best anthology television ever produced, powered by a rotating cast of actors doing career-defining work. The lows are less about being bad and more about being ambitious in ways that don't always connect, with one season in particular struggling under the weight of too many characters and not enough focus. Taken as a whole, this is a show that figured out how to honor its source material while building something entirely its own, and that's a trick almost no adaptation manages to pull off.

Fleabag

4.5

2016 · 2 Seasons · BBC Three / Amazon Prime Video · Comedy-Drama

Twelve episodes. That's all Phoebe Waller-Bridge needed to build one of the most celebrated comedies of the past decade. Fleabag is sharp, filthy, surprisingly devastating, and smart enough to know exactly when to end. Its humor won't land for everyone, and its world is narrow in ways that matter. But the writing is so precise and the performances so committed that the whole thing feels like a magic trick, a show that makes you laugh until it quietly breaks your heart. It walked away at the peak, which is the hardest thing any show can do and the reason people are still talking about it.

Friends

4.0

1994 · 10 Seasons · NBC · Sitcom / Comedy

Friends became a global phenomenon for a reason. Six actors with remarkable chemistry carried 236 episodes of sharp comedic writing, quotable dialogue, and warm found-family storytelling that still functions as peak comfort television decades later. Some of the humor has aged poorly, the later seasons lose steam, and the central romance looks rougher under a modern lens. None of that erases the fact that this show shaped an entire generation of sitcoms and remains one of the most rewatched series in television history.

Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood

4.7

2009 · 1 Season · MBS/TBS · Action / Adventure / Dark Fantasy

Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood earns its place among the best anime ever produced through sheer ambition and follow-through. Sixty-four episodes build a world that feels lived-in, populate it with characters worth caring about, and tell a story that respects both its audience and its own rules. The rocky opening stretch and occasional comedy misfires are real flaws, but they're small cracks in something enormous and carefully constructed. This is the rare long-running series where the ending lands as hard as the beginning promises it will.

Futurama

4.3

1999 · 11 Seasons · Fox / Comedy Central / Hulu · Animated Sci-Fi Comedy

Futurama carved out a unique space in animated comedy by combining sharp science fiction concepts with the kind of emotional storytelling that can leave you emotionally wrecked by a 22-minute cartoon. Its original run on Fox remains one of the best stretches of animated television ever produced, packed with clever writing, memorable characters, and a handful of episodes that rank among the most emotionally devastating in the medium. The multiple cancellations and revivals have created an uneven viewing experience across its full run, but even the weaker stretches contain enough spark to remind you why the show keeps getting brought back. Few comedies have ever balanced brains and heart this well.

Game of Thrones

4.0

2011 · 8 Seasons · HBO · Fantasy / Drama

Game of Thrones delivered some of the finest television ever produced and then fumbled its own ending so badly that people are still arguing about it years later. Seasons one through four represent a high-water mark for the medium, full of sharp writing, unforgettable performances, and storytelling that respected its audience enough to be ruthless. The collapse in its final stretch is real, and it stings. But dismissing the entire series because of it means ignoring dozens of hours that changed what television could be. This is a show worth watching for what it got right, as long as you go in knowing the destination won't match the journey.

Homeland

3.8

2011 · 8 Seasons · Showtime · Espionage Thriller / Political Drama

Homeland delivered one of television's great opening seasons, a taut espionage thriller built on Claire Danes's extraordinary performance as a bipolar CIA officer hunting a turned prisoner of war. The first two seasons crackle with paranoia and moral ambiguity, and Mandy Patinkin's Saul Berenson remains one of TV's best mentor figures from start to finish. After that peak, the show struggled to reinvent itself across six more seasons, producing stretches of brilliance mixed with increasingly far-fetched plotting that tested even devoted viewers. It found its footing again for a strong final season, but the journey getting there was uneven enough that many fans dropped off along the way.

House of the Dragon

3.8

2022 · 2 Seasons · HBO · Fantasy / Drama

House of the Dragon delivers some of the most impressive production values on television and features a cast that elevates every scene they're in. Paddy Considine's King Viserys alone is worth the price of admission, and the show's best moments rival anything its predecessor produced. Season 2's pacing problems and anticlimactic structure hold it back from greatness, though, leaving a show that's often excellent but frustratingly inconsistent. With two more seasons planned, there's still time for the story to find its footing. Right now, it's a gorgeous, well-acted drama that hasn't quite figured out how to pace itself.

Hunter x Hunter (2011)

4.5

2011 · 1 Season · Nippon TV · Action / Adventure / Fantasy

Hunter x Hunter is one of the smartest and most emotionally ambitious action anime ever produced, and the 2011 adaptation by Madhouse does its source material justice at nearly every turn. The Nen power system remains the gold standard for how to make fictional combat feel strategic rather than arbitrary. Its willingness to shift genres across arcs, from adventure to heist thriller to war epic, keeps the show from ever settling into a predictable rhythm. The Chimera Ant arc's pacing will test anyone's patience, and the heavy narration in later episodes is a legitimate frustration. But the payoffs, both emotional and thematic, that the show delivers when it's operating at its peak put it in conversation with the best the medium has produced.

Invincible

4.3

2021 · 4 Seasons · Amazon Prime Video · Superhero / Drama / Action

Invincible takes the familiar origin story of a teenager discovering superpowers and turns it into something brutal, complicated, and surprisingly moving. The voice cast, led by Steven Yeun, J.K. Simmons, and Sandra Oh, elevates every scene they touch, and the writing consistently finds ways to make superhero violence feel like it costs something. Animation quality dips too often for a show this popular, and pacing stumbles crop up across multiple seasons. Those flaws haven't stopped it from becoming one of the strongest superhero series in any medium, animated or otherwise. Four seasons in, with more on the way, Invincible keeps earning its place near the top.

It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia

4.3

2005 · 17 Seasons · FX / FXX · Comedy / Satire

It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia redefined what a sitcom could get away with and kept doing it for longer than any other live-action comedy in American television history. Its core cast of irredeemable narcissists turned taboo subject matter into a playground, and the best seasons deliver some of the sharpest, most fearless comedy ever aired. Later years introduced stretches where the formula felt strained and the edge dulled, but even in weaker runs, the show's willingness to go places no other comedy would touch keeps it relevant. Seventeen seasons in, The Gang still has more hits than misses, and that track record speaks for itself.

Jujutsu Kaisen

4.2

2020 · 3 Seasons · MBS / TBS · Action / Dark Fantasy / Supernatural

Jujutsu Kaisen delivers some of the best animated action sequences in modern anime, powered by a creative magic system and a willingness to let its characters suffer real consequences. MAPPA's production work is frequently stunning, and the show's refusal to pad itself with filler keeps the pace tight across its run. Its villain roster beyond the top tier can feel underdeveloped, and certain character arcs get cut short before they fully land. Still, this is a series that earns its place in the modern shounen conversation through sheer craft, ambition, and an appetite for darkness that most of its peers won't touch.

Lost

4.0

2004 · 6 Seasons · ABC · Sci-Fi / Drama

Lost changed television. That's not up for debate. Its combination of cinematic production values, puzzle-box storytelling, and one of the deepest ensemble casts in network TV history turned it into a cultural phenomenon that reshaped how audiences engaged with serialized drama. The first four seasons build mystery and character with remarkable skill, creating an addictive viewing experience that few shows have matched. A final season and ending that divided its audience so sharply that the debate continues years later keeps it from the pantheon of all-time greats. Even so, the journey through those 121 episodes, the characters you meet, the questions the island raises, and the emotional connections the show earns represent something that television rarely attempts and may never quite replicate.

Mad Men

4.5

2007 · 7 Seasons · AMC · Drama

Mad Men built a seven-season character study inside a period piece so meticulously crafted that every costume, every set decoration, and every background detail earns its place on screen. Jon Hamm's Don Draper is a magnetic, frustrating, endlessly watchable creation, and the ensemble around him charts an entire decade of American transformation through individual lives rather than historical bullet points. The deliberate pacing is a genuine barrier for some viewers, and the later seasons retread familiar ground with diminishing returns. Those are fair criticisms of a show that still stands as one of the most ambitious and accomplished dramas in the history of the medium.

Mindhunter

4.3

2017 · 2 Seasons · Netflix · Crime / Thriller

Mindhunter is one of the most intelligent crime shows ever produced, a series that finds its tension in conversation rather than action and trusts its audience to stay engaged with the psychology behind the violence. David Fincher's meticulous direction, Jonathan Groff and Holt McCallany's compelling lead performances, and the chilling interview sequences create something that feels entirely distinct from any other show in the genre. Two seasons and 19 episodes is not enough, and the cancellation stings more with each passing year. What exists is exceptional, and anyone with patience for a slow-burn approach to storytelling about the darkest corners of human behavior will find this unforgettable.

Mr. Robot

4.3

2015 · 4 Seasons · USA Network · Drama / Thriller

Mr. Robot is one of the most visually inventive and psychologically ambitious shows of its era, a series that used hacking culture as a lens to examine loneliness, identity, and trauma with uncommon depth. Rami Malek delivers a career-making performance as Elliot Alderson, Sam Esmail's direction pushes the boundaries of what television can look like, and the series finale lands with an emotional force that redefines everything that came before it. Season two's pacing issues and the show's relentlessly oppressive atmosphere will lose some viewers along the way. Those who stay find a show that rewards commitment with one of the most satisfying conclusions in recent television history.

My Hero Academia

3.8

2016 · 8 Seasons · ytv / NTV · Action / Superhero / Adventure

My Hero Academia built one of the most appealing superhero worlds in anime and populated it with characters worth rooting for. Its first three seasons deliver a near-perfect run of escalating stakes, creative power matchups, and emotional payoffs that justify the massive fanbase the show attracted. The middle stretch sags under repetitive tournament arcs, underdeveloped side characters, and a pacing structure that struggles to balance its enormous cast. It recovers for a final season that lands its biggest emotional beats, even if the rushed conclusion leaves questions about what could have been with more room to breathe. At its best, this show captures the thrill of watching ordinary people try to become extraordinary, and that core appeal carries it further than its flaws should allow.

Naruto

4.0

2002 · 2 Series (Naruto + Shippuden) · TV Tokyo · Action / Adventure / Fantasy

Naruto tells a sprawling story about an outcast kid who refuses to give up, and at its best, that story produces some of the most emotionally powerful moments in anime history. The early arcs and the peak stretches of Shippuden combine strong character writing, inventive combat, and themes about empathy and pain that hit harder than anything the genre's surface-level reputation would suggest. Hundreds of filler episodes, inconsistent female character development, and a final act that stumbles under its own ambition are real costs of admission. But the moments that work, and there are many, have a way of sticking with you for years. Few anime have meant as much to as many people, and that lasting resonance is earned.

Neon Genesis Evangelion

4.0

1995 · 1 Season · TV Tokyo · Mecha / Psychological Drama / Sci-Fi

Neon Genesis Evangelion is messy, polarizing, occasionally impenetrable, and still essential viewing three decades after it aired. Its first twenty episodes deliver some of the most ambitious storytelling in anime history, blending giant robot spectacle with a psychological depth that redefined what the genre could accomplish. The ending will frustrate anyone looking for narrative closure, and that frustration is valid. But the show's willingness to prioritize emotional honesty over satisfying resolution is also what makes it impossible to forget. Evangelion doesn't care whether you enjoy it. It cares whether it reaches you, and for millions of viewers across three decades, it has.

One Piece

4.0

1999 · 21 Seasons · Fuji TV · Adventure / Fantasy / Action

One Piece is an anime built on ambition, and across more than 1,100 episodes it delivers on that ambition more often than it doesn't. The world Eiichiro Oda created is among the richest in fiction, and the bonds between the Straw Hat crew carry a kind of emotional weight that few animated series have matched. Pacing problems and inconsistent production quality hold back the anime adaptation from matching the heights of its source material, and the sheer episode count will scare off anyone who isn't ready for a serious commitment. For those willing to take the voyage, though, there's a reason One Piece has captivated audiences for over two decades and shows no signs of slowing down.

Ozark

3.8

2017 · 4 Seasons · Netflix · Crime / Drama

Ozark builds one of television's most suffocating atmospheres across four seasons of escalating criminal entanglement, powered by exceptional performances from Jason Bateman, Laura Linney, and Julia Garner. The tension rarely lets up, the moral compromises pile up in ways that feel inevitable, and the show's best stretches rank alongside the finest crime dramas of its era. A divisive finale and some structural repetition keep it from the top tier, and the series occasionally struggles with where to draw the line between bleak and punishing. For viewers who want their crime dramas dark and uncompromising, Ozark delivers exactly that.

Parks and Recreation

4.3

2009 · 7 Seasons · NBC · Comedy

Parks and Recreation survived a rough first season to become one of the warmest, funniest workplace comedies in television history. Its secret weapon was sincerity. In an era when most comedies chased cynicism, this show built its laughs around characters who cared deeply about their jobs, their friends, and their fictional small town. The ensemble cast is stacked with memorable performances, and the middle seasons represent a peak that few sitcoms reach. A slow start and an uneven final stretch keep it from perfection, but what works here works so well that it barely matters. This is comfort television that also happens to be consistently, reliably hilarious.

Peaky Blinders

4.0

2013 · 6 Seasons · BBC · Crime / Drama

Peaky Blinders delivers an intoxicating blend of period crime drama and modern swagger, anchored by Cillian Murphy's magnetic performance as Tommy Shelby. The first three seasons build a world that's impossible to look away from, full of sharp writing, striking visuals, and a soundtrack that shouldn't work in a 1920s setting but absolutely does. Later seasons lose focus and lean too heavily on style over substance, with the final stretch testing the patience of even devoted fans. It remains a show worth watching for its highs, which are considerable, even if it doesn't sustain that level across its full run.

Rick and Morty

3.8

2013 · 8 Seasons · Adult Swim · Animated Sci-Fi Comedy

Rick and Morty at its best is inventive, emotionally complex science fiction comedy that uses infinite universes as a playground for ideas no other show would attempt. Its first three seasons delivered a rare combination of absurdist humor and genuine philosophical weight, wrapped in animation that pushed the boundaries of what the medium could do on television. The show's later seasons lost some of that magic, and the behind-the-scenes upheaval following co-creator Justin Roiland's departure created a visible fault line in the fan community. What remains is still smarter and more ambitious than most animated comedies, but the gap between its peaks and its recent output is impossible to ignore.

Rome

4.2

2005 · 2 Seasons · HBO · Historical Drama

Rome delivered one of the most lavish and convincing depictions of the ancient world ever produced for television, anchored by a pair of central performances that gave sweeping history a human heartbeat. Its first season is close to flawless historical drama, and the friendship between Pullo and Vorenus ranks among the best character dynamics on screen. The rushed second season and premature cancellation are real wounds that prevent the show from reaching the heights it clearly had in its sights. What survives across 22 episodes is still something special, a show that proved historical television could be both spectacle and substance.

Schitt's Creek

4.3

2015 · 6 Seasons · CBC / Pop TV · Comedy

Schitt's Creek asks for patience and rewards it with one of the most satisfying character journeys in modern comedy. The Rose family starts as a group of shallow, entitled people you'd cross the street to avoid, and by the finale they've become characters you're devastated to leave behind. That transformation is the show's greatest trick, and it works because the writing earns every emotional beat through humor rather than sentimentality. The first season is a hurdle that loses some viewers, and the comedy never reaches the joke density of faster-paced sitcoms. But what it does instead, building a world where acceptance is the default and growth happens through connection, is rarer and more valuable than another show competing for laughs per minute.

Seinfeld

4.5

1989 · 9 Seasons · NBC · Sitcom / Comedy

Seinfeld ran for nine seasons on NBC and produced 180 episodes that redefined what a sitcom could be. Four selfish, petty, hilarious New Yorkers turned the smallest moments of daily life into comedy gold, backed by writing sharp enough to create an entirely new comedic vocabulary. A few episodes have aged poorly, the last two seasons lost a step without one of the show's co-creators, and the finale remains one of television's most polarizing hours. All of that amounts to minor turbulence across one of the most consistently funny runs in TV history. The show about nothing gave television everything.

Severance

4.5

2022 · 2 Seasons · Apple TV+ · Sci-Fi / Thriller

Severance takes a brilliantly simple concept, a surgical split between your work self and your personal self, and builds an entire world around it that feels both alien and uncomfortably familiar. Adam Scott anchors two seasons of mounting dread with a performance that balances quiet confusion with real emotional force, and the supporting cast matches him at every turn. The pacing stumbles in the second season's middle stretch, and the show's fondness for stacking mysteries faster than it resolves them will test some viewers. Those are real flaws in a show that otherwise operates at a level very few series reach. When it clicks, and it clicks often, this is some of the most absorbing and original television of its era.

Sherlock

3.7

2010 · 4 Seasons · BBC One · Crime / Mystery Drama

Sherlock's first two seasons are some of the best mystery television ever produced, driven by Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman's magnetic chemistry and a visual style that made deduction feel electric. The modern London setting, feature-length episode format, and sharp writing created something that felt refreshingly original when it premiered in 2010. But the show's trajectory is a cautionary tale about what happens when style overtakes substance. Seasons three and four shifted focus from clever mysteries to melodramatic personal stakes, culminating in a final season that many fans consider a betrayal of what made the show work. It's a brilliant half of a series attached to a disappointing half, and that split makes it hard to recommend without heavy caveats.

Shōgun

4.7

2024 · 1 Season · FX · Drama / History

FX's adaptation of James Clavell's novel is a towering achievement in historical television. Hiroyuki Sanada and Anna Sawai deliver career-defining performances, the production commits fully to its feudal Japanese setting, and the writing trusts its audience to keep up with layered political scheming. Pacing drags in spots and the dense plotting won't be for everyone, but the ambition on display here is extraordinary. This is the rare prestige drama that earns every bit of the acclaim thrown its way, and it set a new standard for what historical television can look like.

Six Feet Under

4.5

2001 · 5 Seasons · HBO · Drama

A family that runs a funeral home becomes the vehicle for one of television's most honest explorations of mortality, grief, and the messy business of being alive. The performances are uniformly excellent, the writing swings between dark comedy and genuine devastation without ever losing its balance, and the series finale remains the gold standard for how to end a show. Seasons three and four stumble in places, and the pacing will test anyone looking for conventional drama. None of that diminishes the cumulative power of what Alan Ball and his cast built across 63 episodes. Few shows have ever understood their own subject this completely.

South Park

4.3

1997 · 28 Seasons · Comedy Central · Animated Sitcom / Satire

South Park remains one of the boldest comedies on television, willing to say things no other show would consider and often finding something true in the process. Its fast production turnaround lets it engage with the world in near real-time, and when the satire connects, nothing else on TV comes close to its combination of absurdity and insight. The crude animation and relentless vulgarity will always limit its audience, and the show's increased political focus has divided even its most devoted fans. But across nearly three decades, Trey Parker and Matt Stone have built something that no other animated series has attempted on this scale, a comedy that refuses to leave anything off-limits.

Steins;Gate

4.5

2011 · 1 Season · Tokyo MX · Sci-Fi / Thriller / Drama

Steins;Gate is one of the most meticulously constructed time travel stories in any medium, with an internal logic that holds up to the kind of scrutiny that usually breaks these narratives apart. Its slow opening act is the most polarizing element, and it will cost the show a significant number of viewers who never reach the moment where everything locks into place. That's a shame, because the second half delivers a story about consequence, sacrifice, and the weight of impossible choices that few anime have matched. The characters earn every emotional beat through groundwork laid in those early episodes, and the payoff is devastating precisely because of the patience required to get there.

Stranger Things

4.0

2016 · 5 Seasons · Netflix · Sci-Fi / Horror / Drama

Stranger Things built something special in its first season, a story that blended 80s nostalgia with real horror and heart in a way that felt effortless. The young cast was a revelation, the synth score became iconic, and for eight episodes the show fired on every cylinder. Later seasons expanded the scope but lost some of that focus, with bloated runtimes and too many subplots pulling attention away from what made the show click. A divisive final season keeps it from reaching the heights its opening act promised. Still, at its best, this is one of the defining shows of its era, and those early seasons remain as good as anything the streaming age has produced.

Succession

4.5

2018 · 4 Seasons · HBO · Satirical Drama / Black Comedy

Succession spent four seasons dissecting a family of media billionaires tearing each other apart over a company none of them truly deserved, and it did so with a level of craft that put it among the best television of its era. The writing is razor-sharp, the performances are extraordinary across the board, and the show's ability to make you laugh and wince in the same scene is something very few series have pulled off this consistently. Season 3 loses some momentum, and the early episodes ask you to spend time with people you may actively dislike before the show's grip fully tightens. Those are real flaws in an otherwise exceptional piece of work, one that stuck the landing and left a permanent mark on prestige television.

Ted Lasso

4.0

2020 · 3 Seasons · Apple TV+ · Comedy / Drama

Ted Lasso arrived at a time when television audiences were drowning in cynicism, and its relentless optimism felt like oxygen. The first two seasons deliver some of the warmest, funniest, and most emotionally intelligent comedy in recent memory, anchored by Jason Sudeikis and a deep ensemble that makes every character feel worth caring about. Season three's bloated episodes and scattered focus dull the momentum considerably, turning what could have been a perfect run into a good one with a disappointing final stretch. The show still lands more than it misses across 34 episodes, and at its best, it's the kind of television that actually makes you want to be a better person.

The Americans

4.4

2013 · 6 Seasons · FX · Drama / Thriller

The Americans took a premise that could have been a pulpy spy thriller and turned it into one of the most psychologically complex dramas of its era, built on two lead performances that rank among the finest television has produced. The marriage between Philip and Elizabeth Jennings is the show's true subject, and it gives the espionage framework an emotional weight that pure genre work rarely achieves. Season five's pacing issues are a legitimate stumble, and the show's intensity can make it feel more like an obligation than entertainment in its darker stretches. Those are small costs for a series that stuck its landing so perfectly that its final scene may leave you thinking about it for days.

The Bear

4.2

2022 · 4 Seasons · FX (on Hulu) · Comedy-Drama

The Bear built its reputation on two seasons of extraordinary television, driven by performances and filmmaking that set a new standard for how stories about work, grief, and family could be told on screen. Jeremy Allen White anchors a cast that brings real emotional weight to every frame, and the show's portrayal of kitchen culture feels lived-in and honest. Season 3's stumble into pacing issues and narrative drift is a real blemish, not an imagined one, though Season 4 clawed back meaningful ground. Taken as a whole, this is a show that reaches genuine greatness more often than it falls short, and its best stretches rank among the finest hours of modern television.

The Boys

4.0

2019 · 5 Seasons · Amazon Prime Video · Superhero / Satire / Thriller

The Boys arrived as the superhero satire that mainstream entertainment needed and built three seasons of sharp, bloody, consistently surprising television out of a premise that could have been a one-note joke. Its best moments combine political commentary, character depth, and gleeful transgression in ways that no other superhero property has attempted. The fourth season revealed the cracks in the formula, with pacing issues and repetitive shock tactics suggesting that the show's creative engine is running on fumes in places. Whether the final season can stick the landing remains an open question. At its best, this is one of the most inventive shows of the streaming era. At its weakest, it's a show that forgot the difference between provocation and purpose.

The Crown

4.0

2016 · 6 Seasons · Netflix · Historical Drama

The Crown built something remarkable across its first four seasons, combining extraordinary performances with production values that set a new standard for prestige television. Seasons five and six stumble, losing focus and repeating tricks that once felt fresh, but they don't erase what came before. Taken as a whole, this is a series that brought real depth and complexity to one of the world's most public families, even if it couldn't quite sustain that quality all the way to the finish line. The best stretches rank among the finest drama Netflix has ever produced.

The Expanse

4.5

2015 · 6 Seasons · Syfy, Amazon Prime Video · Sci-Fi / Drama

The Expanse is the gold standard for hard science fiction on television, a show that respects physics, respects its audience, and builds one of the most detailed and politically rich futures ever put on screen. Its first season demands patience as it lays the groundwork for a sprawling story across six seasons and 62 episodes, but once the pieces click into place, few shows in any genre deliver this consistently. The three-way political tension between Earth, Mars, and the Belt provides a framework for exploring colonialism, class conflict, and the costs of survival that feels urgently relevant. A truncated final season leaves some threads from the source novels unresolved, which stings. Even so, this is essential viewing for anyone who wants their science fiction to feel like it could actually happen.

The Good Place

4.3

2016 · 4 Seasons · NBC · Comedy / Fantasy

The Good Place pulled off something that shouldn't be possible. It made moral philosophy laugh-out-loud funny, built a sitcom around questions about what it means to be a good person, and stuck the landing with a finale that left most of its audience in tears. Kristen Bell and Ted Danson lead a cast that turns absurd premises into real emotion, and Michael Schur's writing never talks down to its audience. A slightly weaker third season and occasional dips in comedic consistency keep it from the very top tier, but this is still one of the most creative and emotionally satisfying comedies of its era.

The Last of Us

4.3

2023 · 2 Seasons · HBO · Drama / Post-Apocalyptic

HBO's The Last of Us turned a beloved video game into prestige television that stands on its own, powered by Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey's commanding performances and writing that treats its characters like real people navigating an impossible world. Season 1 is a near-flawless run of television that found ways to expand on its source material rather than simply replicate it. Season 2 stumbles with pacing and an incomplete arc across just seven episodes, leaving viewers in a holding pattern until the confirmed third season arrives. The highs here are extraordinary, and the show's willingness to slow down and live inside quiet, devastating moments sets it apart from everything else in the post-apocalyptic space.

The Leftovers

4.3

2014 · 3 Seasons · HBO · Drama / Mystery

The Leftovers is one of the most emotionally powerful television shows ever made, a series that uses an impossible event as a lens for exploring grief, faith, and the desperate human need to make meaning from loss. The first season is heavy and challenging in ways that turn some viewers away. Seasons two and three represent a dramatic creative leap, delivering television so confident and emotionally devastating that it transforms the entire series into something extraordinary. This is a show that asks for patience and rewards it with an experience that stays with you long after the final episode ends.

The Mandalorian

3.8

2019 · 3 Seasons · Disney+ · Action-Adventure / Sci-Fi

Two out of three seasons of The Mandalorian rank among the best Star Wars content produced in decades, built on a simple father-child bond that resonated far beyond the usual fanbase. The third season's pivot away from that bond and into broader Mandalorian politics cost the show much of its momentum and goodwill. Ludwig Goransson's score, the pioneering virtual production technology, and Pedro Pascal's ability to convey warmth through a helmet all remain impressive achievements. What holds this show back from greatness is the gap between what it was and what it became. When the focus stayed on a lone bounty hunter and his unlikely ward crossing a dangerous galaxy together, it was something special.

The Office (US)

4.5

2005 · 9 Seasons · NBC · Comedy / Mockumentary

Nine seasons, 201 episodes, and an absurd amount of quotable moments later, The Office remains one of the most rewatched comedies ever made, and that reputation is mostly deserved. Its middle stretch is among the best sitcom television ever produced, carried by Steve Carell's layered performance and an ensemble cast that made a fictional paper company feel like a place you'd actually want to visit on your lunch break. The final two seasons drag it down, and the early episodes take a few tries to find the right tone. Taken as a whole, though, this is a show that redefined what a television comedy could look like and still works as the ultimate comfort rewatch more than a decade after it wrapped.

The Simpsons

4.0

1989 · 37 Seasons · Fox · Animated Sitcom / Satire

The Simpsons produced what many consider the greatest run of comedic television ever made, with its first eight or nine seasons operating at a level of wit, heart, and cultural sharpness that changed the medium forever. Everything that came after has been a long, slow coast downhill, and that's both the show's tragedy and an unfair standard few programs could ever meet. Modern episodes aren't unwatchable, but they're a faint echo of what this show once was. The golden age alone earns its place among the all-time greats, and that body of work continues to influence every animated comedy that followed.

The Sopranos

4.8

1999 · 6 Seasons · HBO · Crime / Drama

A New Jersey mob boss walks into a therapist's office, and over six seasons that setup becomes the most influential television drama of its generation. James Gandolfini's Tony Soprano is a creation so fully realized that every actor who has played an antihero since owes something to this performance. The pacing tests you, the dream sequences divide opinion, and the finale will start an argument in any room. Those are real flaws, but they exist inside a show that rewrote the rules for what television could be. More than 25 years after its premiere, nothing about it feels small.

The Wire

4.8

2002 · 5 Seasons · HBO · Crime Drama

Across five seasons and 60 episodes, The Wire built something that still stands apart from everything else on television. Its writing treats viewers like adults, its characters feel like real people caught in systems bigger than themselves, and its portrait of a single American city remains unmatched in scope and honesty. The slow pacing and season five's stumbles are real drawbacks, not invented ones. They just don't come close to outweighing what this show accomplishes when it's firing on all cylinders. If you have the patience for it, very few shows will reward you this completely.

The X-Files

3.8

1993 · 11 Seasons · Fox · Sci-Fi / Drama

The X-Files redefined what television could do with science fiction and paranormal storytelling, delivering some of the finest standalone episodes the medium has ever seen. The chemistry between its two leads carries the show through its best years and cushions the fall during its worst. A mythology that starts as compelling gradually becomes its biggest liability, and the revival seasons add little to the legacy. The original five seasons remain essential viewing for anyone who cares about genre television, even if the full eleven-season run tests your loyalty in ways the early years never would have suggested.

True Detective

4.0

2014 · 4 Seasons · HBO · Crime / Drama / Mystery

True Detective is a series defined by extremes. Its first season delivered one of the most celebrated runs in television history, powered by two career-best performances and direction that rewrote what a crime drama could look like. The seasons that followed have been uneven, ranging from a genuine misfire to a quiet return to form to a bold reinvention that split its audience down the middle. That inconsistency is real, and it keeps the show from the highest tier of all-time-great television. But the peaks here are extraordinary, the ambition never wavers, and at its best, this anthology proves that the crime genre still has stories worth telling slowly and with purpose.

Twin Peaks

4.0

1990 · 3 Seasons · ABC, Showtime · Mystery / Drama

Twin Peaks is one of the most original and influential television shows ever made, a place where murder mystery meets surrealist art in ways that still feel startling decades later. Its first season is a near-perfect run of television. The second season's middle stretch is the weakest the show gets, and it gets weak enough to lose a lot of viewers. The Return brought it back with a creative ambition that rivals anything in the medium's history, even if it deliberately alienated as many people as it thrilled. This is a show that rewards commitment and tolerates confusion, and nothing else on television has ever sounded, looked, or felt quite like it.

Veep

4.3

2012 · 7 Seasons · HBO · Comedy

Veep is the most vicious comedy of its generation, a show where every character is terrible and the writing makes you love watching them fail. Julia Louis-Dreyfus delivers a performance for the ages as Selina Meyer, winning six consecutive Emmys for a reason that becomes clear within the first five minutes of any episode. The insult comedy alone would be enough to sustain a lesser show, but Veep layers it on top of razor-sharp political satire and an ensemble cast firing on all cylinders. A slight dip in quality after creator Armando Iannucci's departure and a sixth season that coasts more than it should are the only marks against a show that otherwise operates at a level most comedies can't even conceptualize.

Vinland Saga

4.5

2019 · 2 Seasons · NHK General TV · Action / Drama / Historical

Vinland Saga is one of the most ambitious anime of its era, telling a story that begins with blood and rage and evolves into something about the courage required to put down the sword. Its first season delivers Viking-era action and political intrigue at an elite level, while the second takes a creative risk that alienated viewers expecting more of the same. That risk paid off for those who stayed, producing one of the most compelling character arcs in modern anime. The show asks difficult questions about violence, forgiveness, and what it actually means to be strong, and it has the patience and intelligence to let those questions breathe rather than rushing toward easy answers.

Westworld

3.5

2016 · 4 Seasons · HBO · Sci-Fi / Drama

Westworld's first season is one of the most ambitious and intellectually thrilling debut seasons in recent television history, a layered puzzle box that rewards close attention with genuine philosophical depth. Everything after that first season is a steeper and steeper decline, with the show growing more convoluted and less emotionally grounded with each passing year until HBO cancelled it after four seasons. The performances from its stacked cast remain impressive throughout, and the production design never stops being gorgeous. But a show that began by asking profound questions about consciousness and free will ended up losing sight of its own characters in a maze of plot complexity. Westworld is worth watching for that first season alone, but go in knowing that the journey from there gets increasingly difficult to justify.