While Netflix seemingly led the way for other streaming networks to create compelling original programming, Hulu actually beat them all to the punch. In 2011, a year before Netflixâs Lilyhammer and two years before the arrival of House of Cards, the burgeoning streamer premiered The Morning After, a pop-culture-focused news show that ran for 800 episodes over three years.
Hulu has continued to make TV history in the years since, most notably in 2017 when it became the first streamer to win an Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series with The Handmaidâs Tale (which recently dropped its long-awaited final season). In the years since, the streamer has continued to matchâand often exceedâthat high bar for quality entertainment with shows like The Bear and ShĆgun, which set an Emmy record in 2024 with 18 wins in a single season, and The Bear.
While more competition has popped up since Hulu started gaining critical credibility, the network has continued to stand out for its carefully curated selection of original series and network partnerships that make it the home of FX series and more. Below are some of our favorite shows streaming on Hulu right now.
Not finding what youâre looking for? Head to WIREDâs guide to the best TV shows on Amazon Prime, the best TV shows on Disney+, and the best shows on Netflix. Have other suggestions for this list? Let us know in the comments.
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Steve Martin, Martin Short, and Selena Gomez make for a delightful trio of true-crime-obsessed podcast fans who, in season 1 of this original Hulu series, decide to join forces and create their own podcast while attempting to solve the mysterious death of a fellow resident of their Manhattan apartment building. From the very beginning of their odd alliance, itâs been clear that all is not what it seems, and everyone is keeping secrets. The show has also managed to attract an increasingly stellar list of guest stars, some of them recurring characters, that includes Meryl Streep, Paul Rudd, Eugene Levy, Kumail Nanjiani, Tina Fey, Melissa McCarthy, Zach Galifianakis, Sting, Nathan Lane, and Jane Lynch. Season 5, which contains some fun nods to The Godfather, kicked off on September 9 and features Bobby Cannavale, RenĂ©e Zellweger, Christoph Waltz, Keegan-Michael Key, TĂ©a Leoni, Logan Lerman, Beanie Feldstein, Dianne Wiest, and Richard Kind.
This action-filled spy drama from South Korea is a thrillingâand timelyâtale of global corruption at the highest levels. Jang Jun-ik (Park Hae-joon) is a presidential candidate who dreams of bringing peace to his peopleâa notion that doesnât sit well with everyone. When he is assassinated just feet from his wife, Seo Mun-ju (Jun Ji-hyun), a former ambassador, she vows to get to the truth behind her husbandâs murder. What she discovers is a chilling conspiracy that threatens world peace and leads all the way to the White House. Good thing sheâs got mercenary Baek San-ho (Gang Dong-won) by her side.
In September 2007, Amanda Knox was just another American college student opting to study abroad for a year. Just weeks later, she was on the front page of newspapers around the world following the brutal murder of her roommate, Meredith Kercher, which Knox was eventually arrested for. Nearly 20 yearsâand one controversial murder convictionâlater, Knox is reclaiming her own narrative to tell her version of events in this new Hulu series, which is based on Knoxâs own memoir and executive produced by Knox and Monica Lewinsky. Though the seriesâ campiness doesnât always land, given the subject matter, star Grace Van Pattenâs impressive performance helps to ground the story.
With Fargo, Noah Hawley proved that he could transform an iconic movie into a compelling TV series. Now heâs done it again with Alien: Earth, a prequel series that takes place just two years before the events of Ridley Scottâs original Alien movie. The series revolves around the Prodigy Corporation, a tech company that has come up with a way to transfer the consciousness of terminally ill children into the bodies of synthetic beings. Wendy (Sydney Chandler) is one of these âhybrids,â whose memory of her past turns out to be a complication, especially when she volunteers herself and her fellow hybrids to investigate the mysterious crash of a Weyland-Yutani research spacecraft, which houses all sorts of horrorsâand creatures.
Fifteen years after saying goodbye, Mike Judge and Greg Danielsâ beloved animated series is taking viewers back to Arlen, Texas, home of propane salesman Hank Hill (Judge), his wife Peggy (Kathy Najimy), and their son Bobby (Pamela Adlon). Hank and Peggy have been away for a while, living in Saudi Arabia while Hank saves for their retirement. But their return home is bittersweet, for as much as Arlen has remained the same, the world around them has changed.
Though itâs not based on a true story, Dope Girls is inspired by a nonfiction book, Marek Cohenâs Dope Girls: The Birth of the British Drug Underground, and a very real part of British history. In the wake of World War I, Kate Galloway (Julianne Nicholson) is a widow and mom who needs to provide for her family. She ends up building one of Londonâs most popular underground nightclubs, and a drug empire that would make Walter White blush.
Esi Edugyanâs 2018 best-selling historical fiction novel gets the miniseries treatment via Hulu. Eleven-year-old George Washington âWashâ Black (Ernest Kingsley Jr.) flees from his native Barbados to Nova Scotia following a tragic incident at the plantation where he was enslaved. Once free, Wash meets Medwin Harris (Sterling K. Brown), who is impressed with Washâs intelligence and determination, and sees a lot of himself in the youngster. So he takes him under his wing in order to help him make the most of the second chance at life he has been given.
Carmen âCarmyâ Berzatto (Jeremy Allen White) is a superstar of the fine-dining world who has returned to his hometown of Chicago to save his familyâs failing sandwich shop after his brotherâs death by suicide. While Carmy initially struggles to acclimate himself to being home and to his inherited kitchenâs back-to-basics style, he eventually realizes that itâs not too late to change both himself and the restaurant. Anyone who has ever worked in a busy kitchen knows the stress that comes with it, and The Bear does an excellent job of making that tension palpable. While the plot sounds simple enough, much of Carmyâs previous life is a bit of a mystery, and itâs doled out in amuse-bouche-sized bits throughout the series with top-tier guest stars you may not have seen coming. (Fact: Jamie Lee Curtis has never been better, as evidenced by her very first Emmy win in 2024.) The Bearâs fourth season answers viewersâ pressing questions about Carmyâs partnership with Syd (Ayo Edebiri) and what the future holds for their restaurant. Prepare to feast.
Comedian/actress Kat Sadler created and stars in this deeply messy, darkly funny story of a totally dysfunctional familyâmom Deb (Sherlockâs Louise Brealey) and daughters Josie (Sadler) and Billie (Lizzie Davidson, Sadlerâs real-life sister)âattempting to pick up the pieces after their husband/father leaves them. Itâs cringe-comedy at its finest, and the kind that will appeal to fans of Fleabag. The seriesâ second season arrived in July.
Though many have dubbed Adults a Gen Z version of Friends, the similarities begin and end with the fact that itâs about a group of twentysomething pals trying to find themselves in New York City. When Samirâs (Malik Elassal) parents take off traveling, he invites a few of his palsâAnton (Owen Thiele), Billie (Lucy Freyer), and Issa (Amita Rao)âto come crash with him at his childhood home in Queens. While they all see it as a chance to supercharge their jump into adulthood, complete with hosting dinner parties, they soon realize theyâre each in over their heads in their own ways when it comes to taking on the responsibilities that come with being a part of the real world.
In 2020, actor pals Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney (now legally known simply as âRob Macâ) decided to take their friendship to the next levelâby purchasing Walesâ Wrexham AFC, one of the worldâs oldest football (aka soccer) clubs, which had long been struggling and was on the verge of possibly disappearing altogether. Enter the two Hollywood stars and their dreams of bringing the club back to its former glory. Like a real-life Ted Lasso, this docuseries follows the two as they begin to understand that what might have started as a lark is a literally game-changing turn for the players and people of Wrexham in reclaiming their storied sporting history. All four seasons of the series are streaming, with a fifth in the works.
When Margaret Atwood wrote The Handmaidâs Tale in 1985, little did she know that its television adaptation would revolutionize the still-nascent world of original streaming content. And she may not have anticipated just how many parallels her dystopian classic would share with the real world at the time it was adapted into an award-winning television series. Itâs set in an unnamed time in what is presumably the very near future, when the United States has been taken over by a fundamentalist group known as Gilead, under whose regime women are considered property and stripped of any personal rights. The most valuable women are those who are fertile, as infertility has become an epidemic, and they are kept as handmaids who are forced to take part in sexual rituals with high-ranking couples in order to bear their children. Recognizing the power she wields, Offred, aka June Osborne (Elisabeth Moss), is not content to remain enslaved and sets about changing the rules as she seeks to reunite with her lost husband and daughter, becoming romantically entangled with a Gilead Guardian (Max Minghella) in the process. The Handmaidâs Tale's sixth, and final, season is streaming in full now.
Five-time Oscar nominee Michelle Williams plays Molly Kochan, a young woman trapped in a loveless marriage who learns that she has terminal stage IV breast cancer. After revealing that she has never had an orgasm with another person, it becomes apparent to Molly and everyone caring for her that this should be at the top of her bucket list. Realizing she doesnât have much time left, Molly leaves her husband and, with the help of her best friend Nikki (Jenny Slate), sets out to achieve the sexual satisfaction that has eluded her all her lifeâwith unexpected consequences. New Girl creator ââLiz Meriwether teamed up with Kim Rosenstock (Only Murders in the Building) to create this hit new series, which is based on the life of the real Molly Kochan, creator of the Dying for Sex podcast, which launched in 2020.
If you thought the characters on Seinfeld were terrible people, wait until you meet the gang from Paddyâs Pub. For 20 years, Dennis (Glenn Howerton), Mac (Robert âRob Macâ McElhenney), Charlie (Charlie Day), Sweet Dee (Kaitlin Olson), and Frank (Danny DeVito) have unapologetically plotted against each other and total strangers in a series of completely self-centered schemes with absolutely no regard for the rules of civility. The show follows the âno hugging and no learningâ rule Larry David established for Seinfeld, but elevates it to a new level of sociopathy. âDennis and Dee Go on Welfare,â âSweet Dee Has a Heart Attack,â âHow Mac Got Fat,â âDennis Looks Like a Registered Sex Offender,â âThe Gang Turns Black,â and âThe Gang Goes to a Water Parkâ are just some of the offbeat adventures awaiting viewers. In 2021, Sunny became the longest-running live-action sitcom in the history of television, and it shows no signs of slowing downâor taking it easy on its characters. It also happens to be one of the easiest shows to binge: Pop an episode on and, without even realizing it, youâll be on to another season. Its 17th (!!) season wrapped in August with at least one more already confirmed.
Creator Jack Rooke won a well-deserved BAFTA Award in 2024 for this semi-autobiographical dramedy about a closeted 19-year-oldâalso named Jack (Dylan Llewellyn)âwho, after a year of mourning the death of his father at home with his overprotective mom, leaves for university. There, heâs paired up with Danny (Jon Pointing), a 25-year-old more interested in meeting women than studying, as his roommate. As Jack struggles to become comfortable with his sexuality, he also comes to understand the truth behind Dannyâs seemingly extroverted personality. Yes, itâs a coming-of-age story and one in which opposites attract (on a purely platonic level). But itâs also a laugh-out-loud funny series that shows there is life after death.
Pakistani American brothers Mir (Asif Ali) and Raj (Saagar Shaikh) Dar have spent their entire lives wanting for nothing, thanks to the hard work of their father, who owns a chain of convenience stores. But after a freak accident kills dear old dad, the brothers are expected to take on the family business which, unbeknownst to them, is actually a front for a drug smuggling empire. While their antics are undoubtedly hilarious, the series does attempt to paint a truthful portrait of the immigrant experienceâeven if itâs often through an absurdist lens. In late August, almost six months after the series premiered, Hulu finally confirmed that a second season is on its way, with former SNL star Fred Armisen joining the cast.
If Netflixâs Emmy juggernaut Adolescence has you seeking out more of Stephen Grahamâs work, check out Steven Knightâs A Thousand Blowsâthe Peaky Blinders creatorâs newest British historical drama in which crime and violence collide. In this case itâs an all-female crime syndicate, the Forty Elephants, who are at the center of the action, with Mary Carr (Erin Doherty) as their leader. When Maryâs crew crosses notorious kingpin Sugar Goodson (Graham), she turns to Hezekiah Moscow (Malachi Kirby) and Alec Munroe (Francis Lovehall), two young men who have recently emigrated from Jamaica in order to make a better life for themselves, to help her escape Goodsonâs wrath.
This Is Us creator Dan Fogelman reteams with that award-winning seriesâ star, Sterling K. Brown, for an intricate political thriller which plays with time to slowly reveal the details of a secret service agent (Brown) tasked with protecting the president (James Marsden) who ultimately becomes a suspect in the POTUSâ death. Expect many twistsâincluding a massive one to kick off the series in episode 1. A second season is already in the works and will add Shailene Woodley, Thomas Doherty, Michael McGrady, and Timothy Omundson to the cast. It is expected to premiere in early 2026.
âWhy would somebody fake cancer?â Thatâs the question askedâand that ABC News attempts to answerâin this true crime docuseries based on the podcast of the same name. The four-part special recounts the life and lies of Amanda C. Riley, a wife, mother, churchgoer, and popular mommy blogger who was celebrated for sharing her fight against Hodgkinâs lymphoma with the world ⊠only to have it all blow up in her face.
Like a reverse engineered version of Law & Order, Accusedâadapted by Homeland cocreator Howard Gordon from the acclaimed British series of the same nameâfollows the justice system from the perspective of the accused. Each episode begins with the defendant in the courtroom and recounts (via flashbacks) the circumstances that led them there. Like Dick Wolfâs iconic crime series, each episode is full of familiar faces, from Whitney Cummings and Wendell Pierce to Molly Parker and Margo Martindale.
Fact and fiction combine in this historical drama based on Patrick Radden Keefeâs novel that follows the lives of a group of people growing up in Belfast during the Troubles and their dealings with the Provisional IRA. Much of the story focuses on the Disappearedâa group of 16 people who went missing during the Troubles and were believed to have been kidnapped and murdered. Jean McConville was one of these individuals, both the only woman among them and the only Irish Catholic convert. Nearly 50 years later, many questions remain about these individuals. While Say Nothing doesnât attempt to answer all of these questions, it does add fascinating context to the events.
Willis Wu (Jimmy O. Yang) is a waiter who attempts to escape his humdrum life by imagining that he is a background actor in a Law & Order-esque TV show called Black & White. After Wu witnesses a kidnapping, police detective Lana Lee (Chloe Bennet) enlists him to help investigate and take down the local gangs in Chinatownâwhere he discovers something about his own family in the process. Nothing is what it seems in this meta comedy-crime series, which Charles Yu adapted from his own National Book Awardâwinning novel. The Daily Showâs Ronny Chieng ups the comedy as Wuâs coworker/BFF Fatty Choi, and Taika Waititi (one of the showâs executive producers) directs the pilot.
If you are in need of a laugh-out-loud comedy (and donât mind if itâs of the sometimes R-rated kind), there are few better than What We Do in the Shadows. In 2014, Jemaine Clement and Taika Waititi cowrote, codirected, and costarred in a feature of the same nameâa funny mockumentary featuring a group of vampires who share a home. This series, which premiered in 2019, moved the vampire action from New Zealand to Staten Island and brought in a whole new group of vampiresâwho struggle to even get up off the couch, let alone take over all of New York City (as theyâve been instructed to). After several years, they finally seem ready to get around to the task. All six seasons of the series, which wrapped up its run in late 2024, are available for streaming.
Gael GarcĂa Bernal and Diego Luna have been close friends since childhood, and it shows in the work theyâve done togetherâmost famously in Alfonso CuarĂłnâs Oscar-nominated Y Tu MamĂĄ TambiĂ©n (2001). More than two decades later, their onscreen chemistry is still potent, as evidenced by this Spanish-language boxing drama. Esteban (Bernal) is an aging boxer whose manager/BFF Andy (Luna) persuades him to step into the ring one last time before he officially retires. But as the match looms closer, the criminal underbelly of the sport rears its headâforcing Esteban to determine what parts of his life heâs willing to sacrifice. With just six episodes in all, La MĂĄquina moves fast. Donât flinch.
Former Saturday Night Live and Insecure writer Natasha Rothwellâwhom you might know from her Emmy-nominated turn as spa manager Belinda in seasons 1 and 3 of The White Lotusâcreated and stars in this eight-episode series. Mel (Rothwell) is an employee at New York Cityâs JFK Airport who is content with the uneventful life she has built for herself. But when she has a sudden brush with death, she decides to take her life into her own hands. While itâs not the first series to explore matters of life and death, it does so in a way that is both beautifully nuanced and laugh-out-loud funnyâall of it anchored by Rothwellâs performance. On February 4, Hulu announced that it had canceled the series after one seasonâa move that has Rothwell âbaffledâ and looking for a new network to produce season 2.
Television audiences are hardly lacking in high schoolâset comedies, or in really great high schoolâset comedies, and/or really great high schoolâset comedies that focus on the teacher perspective (see: Abbott Elementary). English Teacher fits into that elite niche. Brian Jordan Alvarezâwho was behind the award-winning 2016 web series The Gay and Wondrous Life of Caleb Galloâboth created and stars in the show, in which he portrays an English teacher in Austin, Texas, who is dedicated to making an impact on his students, even if he sometimes needs to depend on their teenage wisdom to figure out the right way to do that. While it doesnât shy away from the politics that exist in the teaching profession, the series also presents the âadultsâ as often just as lost as the kids they teach. The first three episodes of English Teacherâs second season arrive on September 25.
This animated sci-fi comedy, which premiered in 2020, is about a family of aliens from the planet Shlorp who crash-land on Earthâfor better or worse. The show is rooted in the idea that humans are, well, weird. Which seems appropriate given this current moment in time. Yet, in between the laughs and occasional threat to humanity, it maintains a positive outlook on the world and the people who inhabit it. Which is something we could probably all use right about now. The showâs sixth season, which arrives on October 13, will also be its last.
Following a decade-long hiatus, FuturamaâMatt Groening and David X. Cohenâs animated sci-fi comedyâmade a triumphant return in 2023, complete with gags about Twilight Zone and âMomazonâ drone deliveries. The showâs all-new 13th season arrived on September 15, with all 10 episodes dropping at once versus weekly, as has been the case in the past. And one more season has already been confirmed, making now the perfect time to dive back inâor watch it all for the first time.
In Radom, Poland, the Kurcs are a loving family who seem to have it allâuntil the horrors of the Holocaust invade the serenity of their everyday lives. As World War II arrives on their doorstep, the family is separatedâescaping to France, Brazil, West Africa, and Russia. Some are in hiding, others in concentration camps. But theyâre all focused on one goal: surviving the war and reuniting with each other.
Queenie Jenkins (Dionne Brown) is a Jamaican-British twentysomething whose world is thrown into an upheaval following an ugly breakup with her boyfriend. That messiness follows Queenie into the next chapter in her life, when she attempts to pick up the pieces of her failed relationship while frequently butting heads with her family and trying to reconcile her dual cultures. Candice Carty-Williams adapts her own bestselling novel to create a poignant dramedy thatâs ultimately about trauma and healing.
In the late 2000sâback when Elon Musk was just that car-and-spaceship billionaireâTwitter was more than a social media network. It was a genuine gathering place for people to find their people, whether that was Film Twitter or Cat Twitter. For Black Twitter, it was a lot more. This three-part docuseries, based on WIRED senior writer Jason Parhamâs 2021 cover story, recounts the most important moments and movements that helped solidify the Black Twitter communityâs place as a cultural force in the world, from politics and beyond.
Riley Keough and Lily Gladstone (who earned an Emmy nomination for her work in the show) make a formidable duo as an author and a police officer, respectively, investigating the brutal murder of a 14-year-old girl in a small town in Canada. The limited series is based on Rebecca Godfreyâs award-winning 2005 book of the same name (with Keough portraying Godfrey), and is a haunting reminder of what human beings are capable of.
Game of Thrones fans still lamenting the loss of one of television's great epics have found their new favorite binge-watch in ShĆgun, which took home a record 18 Emmys (with 25 nods altogether) in 2024. This 10-episode series, based on James Clavellâs beloved novel (which was first adapted into a miniseries in 1980), is a brilliant and sweeping tale of political rivalry in feudal Japan where Lord Yoshii Toranaga (Hiroyuki Sanada), a powerful warrior, has a target put on his back by his political rivals in the Council of Regents. Fortunately for Toranaga, heâs got Toda Mariko (Anna Sawai), a talented translator and fiercely loyal samurai, by his side. ShĆgun was originally positioned as a one-and-done limited series, but FX and Hulu have already confirmed that two more seasons are in the works, with the next expected to arrive in 2027.
Quinta Brunson created and stars in this hit series, which follows the daily livesâin and out of the classroomâof a group of teachers at what is widely considered one of the worst public schools in America. Despite a lack of funding for even basic educational necessities, and school district leaders who only care about the barest minimum standards, these educators are united by their drive to surpass expectations and encourage their students to do the same.
Noah Hawleyâs anthology series isnât the first attempt to adapt the Coen brothersâ Oscar-winning crime-comedy to the small screen (Edie Falco starred in a previous version, which was a more straightforward adaptation of the movie), but his approach was clearly the smarter move. Fans of the Coens in general will find lots to love about the many nods to the filmmakersâ entire filmography, with each season covering a different crime and time period. Though the seasons do share connections, each one is a total one-off, and the show might boast the most talented group of actors ever assembled: Billy Bob Thornton, Martin Freeman, Bob Odenkirk, Oliver Platt, Ted Danson, Patrick Wilson, Nick Offerman, Kirsten Dunst, Jesse Plemons, Ewan McGregor, Michael Stuhlbarg, Carrie Coon, Scoot McNairy, Chris Rock, Jason Schwartzman, Timothy Olyphant, and Ben Whishaw are just a few of the names whoâve found a home in Fargo. The fantastic fifth seasonâfeaturing Juno Temple, Jon Hamm, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Joe Keery, and Lamorne Morris (who won an Emmy for his role)âcontinued this tradition of exceptional acting, with all episodes streaming now.
Darby Hart (Emma Corrin) is a talented hacker and armchair detective who is one of eight guests invited to spend a few days at the stunning yet remote home of a mysterious billionaire (Clive Owen). When one of the guests ends up dead, Darby must work quickly to prove that it was murderâand who did itâbefore the bodies start piling up. Fans of twisty true crime will appreciate this limited series, which comes from the minds of Brit Marling (who costars) and Zal Batmanglijâcocreators of the equally mind-bending The OA.
Sinclair Daniel shines as Nella Rogers, an up-and-coming book editorâand the only Black employee at the publishing house where she works. While Nella is initially thrilled when another young woman of color, Hazel-May McCall (Ashleigh Murray), is hired as an assistant, she canât help but notice that a series of bizarre events seems to follow. As Nella tries to suss out exactly what is going on, she uncovers some pretty damn disturbing skeletons in her employerâs closet. While horror-comedies are an increasingly popular movie genre, we donât see them on the small screen quite as oftenâwhich, if this clever series is any indication, is a real shame. Also unfortunate: One season is all weâll get of The Other Black Girl.
Twenty-six years after a low-budget British comedy blew up at the box office, scored an Oscar, and introduced âthe Full Montyâ into the popular lexicon, the Regular Joes turned strippers from Sheffield are back to face largely the same issues they were lamenting in the original feature film (which is also streaming on Hulu). Much of the main cast reassembled for this follow-up to Peter Cattaneoâs hit 1997 movie, including two-time Oscar nominee Tom Wilkinson, who passed away in late December. Stripping is involved, as are other inevitables in life, including breakups, reconciliations, and death. For fans of the original movieâor the Broadway musical and stage play that followedâitâs a fun check-in with the characters who bared it all.
Years before there was Jim and Pam and Dwight and Michael, there were Tim and Dawn and Gareth and David. For lovers of cringe, itâs hard to do better than Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchantâs workplace comedy. David Brent (Gervais) is the original boss from hell, whose office antics will have you covering your eyes and laughing out loud at the same time. Like many British series, there are just two seasonsâeach consisting of a mere six episodesâplus a two-part Christmas special. Donât be surprised if you sit down to watch a single episode and binge it all in one go.
In the 1980s, NBC was the channel to watch on Thursday nightsâin large part thanks to Cheers. The bar where everybody knows your name is where the action happens in this award-winning sitcom about a former Red Sox player (Ted Danson) and the lovable employees and patrons who treat his bar like a second home. If you can look past (or, even better, embrace) the questionable â80s fashion and sometimes-sexist storylines that wouldnât necessarily fly on TV today, youâll find what is arguably one of the smartest sitcoms ever written. More than 40 years after its original premiere, the jokes still stand up and the characters are some of televisionâs most memorable (and beloved) for a reason.
Back in 2021, Hulu went where Netflixâs Painkiller went in 2023: to the late â90s and early 2000s, aka the beginning of Americaâs opioid crisis. Danny Strong created this retelling of the lengths to which Richard Sackler (played here by the always excellent Michael Stuhlbarg) and Purdue Pharma would go to sell doctors on the powers of OxyContinâall with the promise of no addiction. Michael Keaton won an Emmy for his portrayal of a widowed doctor in Appalachia who buys into the lies, and eventually becomes a victim of them.
Taika Waititi and Sterlin Harjo cocreated this Peabody Awardâwinning series, which made history as the first mainstream TV show created by, starring, and crewed by an almost entirely Indigenous American team. It tells the story of four bored teens who are desperate to escape their lives on a reservation in Oklahoma. They decide that California is where they want to be and commit to a life of mostly petty crimes in order to save up enough money to leave. The full three seasons are available to watch now, including the brilliant series sendoff.
Elle Fanning and Nicholas Hoult shine in this witty, fast-paced, comedic retelling (but not really) of Catherine the Greatâs rise to power. Created by Tony McNamara, who earned Oscar nominations for his writing work on both The Favourite and Poor Things, The Great offers the same combination of lush costumes and scenery mixed with a biting commentary on the world, and a womanâs place in it. A story that rings as true today as it did in the 18th century, when Catherine the Great became empress of Russia and brought about the Age of Enlightenment, this show chips away at notions of class, propriety, and monarchical rule in a way few others do. If itâs historical accuracy youâre after, look elsewhere; the seriesâ creators describe it as decidedly âanti-historicalâ (which is part of the fun). All three seasons are available to stream.
The reason to watch this eight-part limited series can be summed up in two words: Kathryn Hahn. A comedic juggernaut, Hahn can switch from funny to dramatic in the same scene, if not the same sentence. This talent is on display in Tiny Beautiful Things, where she plays Claire, a writer who takes up an advice column and pours all the traumas of her life into responding to her readers. Based on Wild author Cheryl Strayedâs collection of âDear Sugarâ columns, the vignettes here may be a bit out of sorts, but Hahn pulls them together.
Dave Burd is a comedian and rapper who goes by the stage name Lil Dicky. In Dave, Burd plays a rapper who goes by the stage name Lil Dicky and is attempting to raise his profile and make a much bigger name for himself. If only his many neuroses didnât keep getting in the way. While Dave could have easily turned into some mediocre experiment in meta storytelling, Burdâwho cocreated the series, stars in it, and has written several episodesâgrapples with some surprisingly touchy topics, including mental illness. And he does it all with a level of sensitivity and honesty that you might not expect from a guy named Lil Dicky. Despite the showâs popularity and critical acclaim, the three seasons currently streaming may be all we get of Dave. In early 2024, Burd announced that heâd be pressing âpauseâ on the series in order to explore other creative ventures. (But never say never.)
Donald Glover proved himself to be a quadruple threat of an actor, writer, musician, and comedian with this highly acclaimed FX series about Earnest âEarnâ Marks (Glover), an aspiring music manager who is trying to help his cousin Alfred Miles, aka Paper Boi (Brian Tyree Henry), kick off his musical career. Theyâre surrounded by a supportive crew of friends, including Alfredâs BFF, Darius (LaKeith Stanfield), and Van (Zazie Beetz), Earnâs close friend and the mother of his child. This makes it all sound like a fairly straightforward buddy comedy, but Atlanta is so much more. Even better: Itâs weird. Glover is not afraid to experiment with storytelling, which is part of what makes the show so compelling.
Zach Galifianakis stars alongside Zach Galifianakis as twin brothers Chip and Dale Baskets in this unexpectedly moving family comedy about an aspiring clown (Chip) who fails to graduate from a fancy clowning school in Paris and is forced to return home to Bakersfield, California, where he lives with his mother (the late Louie Anderson) and is constantly belittled by his higher-achieving brother (Dale). Between the dual role for Galifianakis and Anderson as the mom, it may sound like a cheap bit of stunt casting that canât sustain more than an episode, let alone multiple character arcs. But if youâre a fan of absurdist comedy, Baskets truly ranks among the best of them. And Anderson, who won his first and only Emmy for his role as Costco-loving Christine, is absolutely transcendent. While it received a fair amount of critical acclaim, Baskets could rightly be considered one of the most underseen and underappreciated series in recent memory.
Amanda Seyfried won a much deserved Outstanding Lead Actress Emmy for her portrayal of the notorious Stanford dropout turned health care technology maven Elizabeth Holmes, who tricked some of the worldâs savviest business minds into investing in her company, Theranos. While Holmesâ goal was altruistic enoughâmaking health care more accessible to the masses via a device that could detect any number of diseases with little more than a single finger prick of bloodâthe technology wasnât able to catch up. Rather than admit defeat, she kept pushing, making business deals and promises she could never fulfill.
What began as a web series is now a Hulu original that wrapped up its eleventh season in December. The show is a portrait of small-town Canada (the fictional Letterkenny of the title) and focuses on siblings Wayne (cocreator Jared Keeso) and Katy (Michelle Mylett), who run a produce stand with help from friends Daryl (Nathan Dales) and Squirrely Dan (K. Trevor Wilson). As is often the case in small-town series, many of the residents fall into specific categoriesâin Letterkenny, you could be a gym rat, a hick, a skid (their word for a drug addict), or a ânativeâ (a member of the nearby First Nation reservation). But in contrast to many small-town series, these groupsâand the individuals who comprise themâarenât reduced to meaningless stereotypes.
Mining the awkwardness of oneâs middle school years is hardly a new comedy concept. But being in your early thirties and playing yourself as a junior high school student and then surrounding yourself with age-appropriate actors who are actually going through that hellish rite of passage brings a whole new layer of cringe and humor. This is exactly what cocreators/stars Maya Erskine and Anna Konkle did for Pen15.