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512 verdicts, A to Z · Page 11 of 11

TV Shows listing, page 11

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.

animated comedy satire Fox

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.

crime drama HBO 1990s

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.

horror drama AMC anthology

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.

Rod Serling CBS anthology classic TV

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.

thriller drama hbo miniseries

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.

animation comedy Adult Swim 2000s

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.

Aaron Sorkin NBC political White House

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.

HBO satire wealth anthology

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.

crime Baltimore drugs institutions

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.

fantasy drama Netflix 2010s

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.

sci-fi drama Fox 1990s

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.

comedy mockumentary Canadian cult classic

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.

drama New Orleans HBO 2010s

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.

vampire supernatural HBO 2000s

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.

crime drama HBO 2010s

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.

mystery drama David Lynch 1990s

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.

animation Amazon 2010s rotoscope

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.

comedy HBO 2010s politics

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.

anime historical action drama

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.

supernatural mystery comedy Netflix

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.

comedy drama Showtime 2000s

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.

sci-fi HBO AI western

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.

vampires mockumentary FX comedy

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.

USA Network Jeff Eastin crime con artist

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.

comedy sitcom nbc lgbtq

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.

animated superhero Marvel X-Men

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.

animated superhero Marvel X-Men

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.

survival dual timeline wilderness ensemble cast

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.

western family ranch Montana