75 best TV series on Netflix to watch right now (June 2023) - Los Angeles Times
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The 75 best TV shows on Netflix right now, according to our experts

A GIF of some of the best shows on Netflix, including "BoJack Horseman" and "Russian Doll"
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There’s no way to select just 75 TV shows from a catalog as large as Netflix’s without making someone mad. Even if you start off by eliminating nontheatrical (formerly “made-for-TV”) movies, one-off comedy specials and others that could reasonably exist under the TV show umbrella, you’re left with an almost impossible array of options. Who’s to say this anime is better than that sitcom, or that melodrama is better than this docuseries?

Still, a 75-item unranked list is no fun — and perhaps not terribly helpful if you too need help sorting through all the streamer has to offer. So we surveyed the eight-member Times TV team about individual picks for the best TV shows on Netflix and compiled the results into this master list. The choices, as you might expect, are sometimes idiosyncratic, possibly controversial and always deeply personal. For us, there’s no other way to talk about TV.

So, without further ado, here’s our anything-but-exhaustive guide to the 75 best TV shows on Netflix, which we’ll be updating regularly as tastes change and titles come and go from the platform. We’re sure it’ll leave everyone dissatisfied in one way or another. If it didn’t, it wouldn’t be a very good list. —Matt Brennan

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75. Tiger King

A man with a mullet and open shirt poses embracing a tiger.
Joe Exotic (Joseph Maldonado-Passage) in “Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem and Madness” on Netflix.
(Netflix)

2020 | TV-MA | 2 Seasons | LGBTQ TV Shows
Directed by Eric Goode and Rebecca Chaiklin

Tiger King” was ready to pounce in March 2020, when “shelter in place” became a household term. It mercifully showed us a world more dysfunctional and perhaps more creepy than our own. See, things could be worse.

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This car wreck of a show is a disturbing ride through the world of big cat breeder/wildlife collector Joe Exotic (a.k.a. Joseph Maldonado-Passage). He’s an attention-seeking sociopath whose fiefdom was an Oklahoma roadside zoo attraction, a gun-waving internet troll who openly stalked and threatened his enemies in graphic video screeds, a gay polygamist who is now serving 22 years for orchestrating an unsuccessful murder-for-hire plot ... and for killing the tigers he supposedly loved.

His human target was Carole Baskin, a social media star who runs a big cat rescue and sanctuary in Tampa, Fla. She’s loved by animal rights advocates and hated by swaggering, macho showmen like Joe. Baskin’s wealthy older husband Don Lewis disappeared 23 years ago. Her detractors think she murdered him.

“Tiger King’s” loose structure allows for mixed messaging and mislaid sympathies. Like Joe Exotic, it’s sensational, absurd and begs to be watched. (Read more) —Lorraine Ali

74. Wynonna Earp

A woman standing in a clearing points a gun
Melanie Scrofano in “Wynonna Earp” on Syfy.
(Michelle Faye / Syfy)
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2016 | TV-MA | 4 Seasons | LGBTQ TV Shows
Created by Emily Andras

Wynonna (Melanie Scrofano), the quippy great-great-granddaughter of the famed lawman Wyatt Earp, returns to her hometown of Purgatory and activates a family curse that tasks her with sending resurrected demons back to hell with her ancestor’s magical gun. Despite her insecurities and aversion to responsibility, she’s loyal to those she loves and knows it’s up to her to save the day. Her support network includes her younger sister Waverly, town sheriff Nicole Haught and gunslinger-turned-vampire Doc Holliday.

This supernatural western, loosely based on a comic book series by Beau Smith, is a show about family and love and embracing who you are meant to be, wrapped in a package that includes whiskey, donuts, steamy romance and creepy monsters. “Wynonna Earp’s” feminist perspective and LGBTQ-inclusive storytelling quickly drew a passionate following of fans known as “Earpers.” It’s a TV fandom known not only for its commitment to the show but also for its collective niceness. (Read more) —Tracy Brown

73. Bridgerton

A man and a woman wearing formal 19th century attire look up
Regé-Jean Page and Phoebe Dynevor in “Bridgerton.”
(Liam Daniel / Netflix)

2020 | TV-MA | 2 Seasons | TV Dramas
Created by Chris Van Dusen

This charming and addictive series, based on the romance novels of Julia Quinn, is set in the competitive marriage market of Regency London’s high society, where wizened matriarchs present their eligible offspring at an exhausting number of balls, luncheons and parties in a sumptuous pageant of exquisite gowns, sparkly tiaras and silken waistcoats.

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But underneath all that finery is the raw desire, lust and treachery you’d expect from a production helmed by creator-showrunner Chris Van Dusen, Shonda Rhimes’ protégé and former producer on both “Scandal” and “Grey’s Anatomy.”

The uptight decorum and prudish manners of the era are reimagined through a modern lens. Historians and Jane Austen purists may take offense, but this well-crafted, escapist drama — where orchestras play covers of Ariana Grande and Billie Eilish hits — is not meant for them.

A powerful gossip columnist known only as Lady Whistledown, voiced by Julie Andrews, narrates the series, though her identity remains a mystery until the season’s closing moments. Central to the game of human chess are the lovely Daphne Bridgerton (Phoebe Dynevor) and dashing Duke Simon Basset (Regé-Jean Page). Daphne is sheltered and naive to the ways of the world, but she is clever when it comes to navigating the perils of high society. (Read more) —Lorraine Ali

72. The Umbrella Academy

A boy holds a newspaper and five people at a table look at him
Aidan Gallagher, left, Elliot Page, Emmy Raver-Lampman, Robert Sheehan, Tom Hopper and David Castañeda in “The Umbrella Academy” on Netflix.
(Christos Kalohoridis / Netflix)

2019 | TV-14 | 3 Seasons | Sci-Fi TV
Created by Steve Blackman

The Umbrella Academy” is a superhero series adapted from the comic book created and written by My Chemical Romance’s frontman Gerard Way, and it stars Elliot Page, Tom Hopper and Mary J. Blige. The sibling rivalries and roller-coaster emotions of the characters play a central role in this not-so-average family drama.

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Their narrative starts with a global phenomenon: It’s the 1980s and 43 unrelated women who showed no signs of pregnancy suddenly give birth to infants on the same day. Wealthy inventor and philanthropist Sir Reginald Hargreeves (Colm Feore) adopts seven of these miracle babies, creates the Umbrella Academy and teaches them to hone their powers and become superheroes. Good thing they have a strategic edge. Vanya (Page), a.k.a. No. 7, is the only one without powers — or at least that’s what they all think.

“The Umbrella Academy” stands out among the countless other superhero series splashed across billboards and viewing queues. (Read more) —Lorraine Ali

71. The Haunting of Hill House

One man has his arm across another man's chest as if to hold him back
Michiel Huisman, left, and Timothy Hutton in “The Haunting of Hill House” on Netflix.
(Steve Diet / Netflix)

2018 | TV-MA | 1 Season | TV Mysteries
Created by Mike Flanagan

The Haunting of Hill House” is “based on” Shirley Jackson’s 1959 novel of the same name, which is to say it lifts a setting, a couple of characters, several names, selected incidents, odd details and occasional passages of prose from the book and makes something almost entirely different out of them.

Meet the Crains, late 20th century edition. Mom Olivia (Carla Gugino) and dad Hugh (Henry Thomas) have taken temporary possession of an imposing old Massachusetts mansion they intend to restore and flip to become rich. (That this is a ghost story, and a less ambiguous one than Jackson’s, means that just who is in possession of what, or what of whom, will be in question.)

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Meet the Crains of today. A quarter-century has passed. (The series hops back and forth in time.) Mom is no longer in the picture; dad (Timothy Hutton) isn’t around much. Steven (Michiel Huisman) has gotten rich writing books about ghostly phenomena, beginning with one about the summer his family spent in what came to be known as “America’s most famous haunted house,” though he has never seen a ghost himself. Shirley (Elizabeth Reaser), having discovered her calling young, is a mortician who has no time for phantoms. She is not happy about Steven’s book.

One senses that creator-director Mike Flanagan felt this material keenly and that he had some things of his own about parents and children and brothers and sisters and life and death he really needed to say, and said them all, literally to the last word. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

70. Borgen

A man stands behind a woman with his hand on her shoulder.
Sidse Babett Knudsen and Pilou Asbaek in “Borgen.”
(KCET)

2010 | TV-MA | 4 Seasons | Social Issue TV Dramas
Created by Adam Price

Thrusting an intelligent idealist into a leadership position is a time-honored method of chronicling the corruptive nature of power, particularly the political variety. In recent years, television writers have done a bit of narrative multitasking by making that person a woman — in the U.S. it was “Commander in Chief,” in the U.K., “The Amazing Mrs. Pritchard.” For Denmark, in case you were wondering, it’s “Borgen.”

One part “The West Wing,” one part “The Newsroom” and more dramatically ambitious than either, “Borgen” (and “Borgen — Power & Glory”) follows the career of Birgitte Nyborg Christensen (Sidse Babett Knudsen), a leader of the moderate party who unexpectedly becomes prime minister only to discover many things we already know: Government is run by an unsavory combination of narcissists and lackeys; fear and greed, shaken or stirred, is the beverage of choice; being a leader requires a certain level of ruthlessness; no one is to be trusted completely; and holding political office is tough on a marriage. It’s a smarty-pants show, but it’s provocative rather than explosive, and these days, that’s a rare and wonderful feat. (Read more) —Mary McNamara

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69. I Think You Should Leave

A man in a black suit sits in an armchair beside a table.
Tim Robinson in “I Think You Should Leave” on Netflix.
(Lara Solanki / Netflix)

2019 | TV-MA | 2 Seasons | TV Comedies
(Third season premieres May 30)
Created by Tim Robinson and Zach Kanin

Potty humor gets a surreal twist in Tim Robinson’s antic sketch comedy show. The former “Detroiters” star often plays the person who should leave — usually because he insists he’s in the right despite all signs to the contrary. The humor derives from the absurd lengths his characters are willing to go to to prove their point, whether he’s the guy in the hot dog costume who is determined to find the person who crashed a hot-dog shaped car into the window of a clothing store — a sketch that went on to become one of the late Trump era’s most resonant memes — or a guest who keeps interrupting a Victorian ghost tour with profane interjections. Each episode runs for about 15 minutes — just two Quibis! — and there are only 12 of them, so you can watch the entire series in about the time it would take to view “The Irishman.” You will probably laugh a lot more. —Meredith Blake

68. Call the Midwife

Four people arm-in-arm dressed in nurses uniforms.
Helen George, left, Miranda Hart, Jessica Raine and Bryony Hannah in “Call the Midwife.”
(PBS / BBC)

2012 | TV-MA | 11 Seasons | Social Issue TV Dramas
Created by Heidi Thomas

Set in London’s East End starting in the late 1950s and based on the memoir of Jennifer Worth, “Call the Midwife” chronicles the adventures of a group of midwives working at the Nonnatus House, a nursing convent named for the early cesarean-surviving patron saint of childbirth.

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Although first and foremost the tale is about the plucky middle-class “gels” (hard g) learning about life, “Call the Midwife” is also a timely valentine to socialized medicine. The midwives, as well as the clinics, doctors and ambulance drivers who tend to the East End’s poor, are employees of Britain’s newly established National Health Service. Nary an episode goes by without the reminder, often via voiceover by the glorious Vanessa Redgrave, that this baby or that mother would have most certainly died without the services provided by the NHS.

The stories revolve around the young and comely Jenny Lee (Jessica Raine), who becomes a midwife out of a desire to do good but also to escape the perils of a thwarted romance. She joins two other young women, as well as a terrific quartet of nuns; Sister Julienne (Jenny Agutter) runs the place, and not since “The Sound of Music’s” Mother Superior have we seen such regal kindliness. (Read more) —Mary McNamara

67. My Next Guest Needs No Introduction

Former President Barack Obama and David Letterman sitting
Former President Barack Obama, left, and David Letterman on”My Next Guest Needs No Introduction” on Netflix.
(Joe Pugliese / Netflix)

2018 | TV-MA | 4 Seasons | Political TV Shows

A decidedly more casual version of America’s longest-reigning late-night host greeted an ecstatic studio audience with characteristic understatement: “I’m Dave Letterman. I had a show for a while, then I got fired.”

The Obama interview was the premiere episode of a monthly series that includes sitdowns with George Clooney, Jay-Z, Tina Fey and activist Malala Yousafzai in the first season; Kanye West, Ellen DeGeneres and Melinda Gates in the second; and Kim Kardashian West, Robert Downey Jr. and Dave Chappelle in the third.

Letterman gave a simple explanation of why he decided to host another show: “You never know when you might learn something, and that’s what this is about for me. These are people that I admire.” (Read more) —Lorraine Ali

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66. Chef’s Table

A chef leans over to fix a dish in a kitchen full of others doing the same.
Dan Barber in “Chef’s Table” on Netflix.
(Netflix)

2015 | TV-MA | 6 Seasons | Docuseries
Created by David Gelb

Created, produced and sometimes directed by David Gelb, director of the film “Jiro Dreams of Sushi,” this dreamy, creamy, often heartbreakingly beautiful documentary series, tracks chefs in their natural habitats. The restaurants tend to rank high on lists that themselves tend to rank high — Michelin and such. The food tends to be fantastically conceived and presented, sensual and intellectual, traditional and innovative and, in the way of modern fine food, tends to come in small portions, the better to concentrate the mind.

Food here is inextricable from human relationships, with a person or a people; with the land and the sea and the ingredients they give over; and with the particularity of place, whether city, village, town, countryside, mountainside, forest or jungle. The cinematography and scoring are almost too lovely at times — a little push and you might think yourself in an Apple ad — but you will likely be too emotional to care. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

65. Atypical

A man and a young boy stand face to face.
Michael Rapaport, left, and Keir Gilchrist in “Atypical” on Netflix.
(Jordin Althaus / Netflix)

2017 | TV-14 | 4 Seasons | Teen TV Shows
Created by Robia Rashid

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The tacit social cues. The subtle body language. The veiled conversation. It’s all Greek to the autistic teen who’d rather talk about the migration habits of Antarctica’s chinstrap penguin population, but funnily enough, that’s not the best chick bait.

Yet if Sam (played with humor and sensitivity by Keir Gilchrist) ever hopes to have a girlfriend, he must decode this odd courtship ritual between humans. Complicating things is that he’s like any other teen on the precipice of adulthood — confused, annoyed and dismayed.

Those who’ve raised, loved or cared for someone autistic will recognize their story in “Atypical,” a series that understands the minutiae and big picture of living on the spectrum, or living with someone who others may see as weird, odd or “not all there” (as one student says about Sam while she’s trying to defend him against bullies). But this is not a sob story, or autism explainer, or an after-school special about tolerance.

“Atypical” is a fast-moving family drama that often borders on comedy. The series is as compassionate as it is snarky, pairing a deep understanding of everyday life on the spectrum with a sense of humor rarely found in productions that deal with autism. “Atypical” risks offending some, but it does more good than harm by demystifying a sensitive and painful subject with unapologetic candor. (Read more) —Lorraine Ali

64. Neon Genesis Evangelion

An animated boy looks mad
Shinji Ikari in “Neon Genesis Evangelion.”
(Gainax)

1995 | TV-MA | 1 Season | Sci-Fi Anime
Created by Hideaki Anno

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Since its debut in 1995, Hideaki Anno’s “Shinseiki Evangelion” (“Neon Genesis Evangelion”) has remained one of the most popular, influential and controversial series in the history of Japanese animation.

“Evangelion” (pronounced with a hard “G”) is derived from the German evangelium, which refers to the Christian Gospels but is also slang for absolute truth. Anno’s watershed series was not the first anime series to combine giant robots with apocalyptic Christian symbols and elements of Jungian psychology, but it did so with exceptional panache. It’s an intriguing and sophisticated work, utterly unlike any American animated film.

The story unfolds in 2015, 15 years after the Second Impact, a cataclysmic explosion in Antarctica that devastated much of the Earth. Although reported as a meteor strike, the explosion was caused by a human encounter with Adam, the first of the powerful, sentient creatures known as Angels to appear on Earth. The Angels are now attacking the planet, and the defense of Earth rests with the secret U.N. agency NERV. The only effective weapon against the Angels are the Evas (short for “Evangelions”), NERV’s enormous cyborg robot suits piloted by psychic teenagers. (Read more) —Charles Solomon

63. The Keepers

A black-and-white photo of a nun among sheets of paper.
Catherine Cesnik in “The Keepers” on Netflix.
(Netflix)

2017 | TV-MA | 1 Season | TV Mysteries
Directed by Ryan White

The seven-part documentary series “The Keepers” looks at one of Baltimore’s most vexing cold cases through the eyes of the women who continue to push for justice for Sister Cathy: her former students at Archbishop Keough High School.

Sister Cathy Cesnik went missing on Nov. 7, 1969. Two months later, her body was found in a field not far from her apartment. Nearly five decades later, the murder of the young nun and high school teacher remains unsolved.

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Now in their 60s, Gemma Hoskins and Abbie Schaub have spent decades trying to get to the bottom of the murder of their beloved teacher, who was 26 at the time of her death. But as “The Keepers” shows, the unsolved case has wider implications than your average whodunit, and the series lays out a number of compelling theories. (Read more) —Lorraine Ali

62. Dear White People

Three young men and a young woman walk four abreast on a brick sidewalk.
Jeremy Tardy, left, Marque Richardson, Ashley Blaine Featherson and Jemar Michael in “Dear White People” on Netflix.
(Adam Rose / Netflix)

2017 | TV-MA | 4 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Justin Simien

In the appealing comedy “Dear White People,” Justin Simien expands his 2014 movie about Black life at a mostly white Ivy League college into a streaming series that has a sort of round-robin structure, each episode focusing on a different character, moving the story forward as it replays earlier action in a new context, adding backstories and side plots for depth and breadth.

At its axis, more or less, is Winchester University student Samantha White (Logan Browning). A “junior media-studies major and local provocateur,” Sam hosts a college-radio program called “Dear White People,” in which she takes calls and talks mainly about how white people get Black people wrong, even when acting out of what they perceive as genuine interest or brotherly/sisterly goodwill.

The series’ inextricable mix of the personal and the political makes for the best of both worlds in the end, because Simien is sweet with his characters, who are, finally, sweet with one another. Principles matter here, but people matter more. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

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61. Seven Seconds

A woman and a man, both wearing suits, sit on some steps.
Clare-Hope Ashitey and Michael Mosley in “Seven Seconds” on Netflix.
(Cara Howe / Netflix)

2018 | TV-MA | 1 Season | Social Issue TV Dramas
Created by Veena Sud

Peter Jablonski (Beau Knapp) is driving distractedly through a snowy Jersey City park in what, on a sunny day, would be the shadow of the Statue of Liberty, when he hits something — a Black teenager on a bicycle, it eventually transpires, named Brenton Butler.

Police arrive on the scene as he waits in his car, and it seems for a minute that Jablonski will turn himself in. But he turns out to be one of them, the rookie member of an elite narcotics squad.

Butler is discovered the next day, bringing together our raggedy heroes, Harper (Clare-Hope Ashitey) and Det. Joe “Fish” Rinaldi (Michael Mosley) — lonely outsiders catching what looks at first, especially through the filter of her exhaustion and his cynicism, like a nothing case. They have wonderful, aggravated chemistry.

She’s the black sheep of an upper-crust Black family, drinking too much, showing up late and unprepared to court. He has come to Jersey City from the NYPD after a divorce. She is moody, hungover; he’s a needling, jokey chatterbox who has filled his bachelor apartment with senior rescue dogs for love.

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Like the Veena Sud-developed “The Killing,” this is ultimately a story about families and surrogate families and improvised families — the comfort they offer and the damage they do. “Seven Seconds” does keep you in suspense with the expectation that bad things will happen, and they do. Nevertheless, the series is more hopeful than not. To find out just what that means you’ll have to watch. I recommend you do. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

60. You

A man watches a woman read a book in front of bookshelves
Elizabeth Lail and Penn Badgley in the first season of “You” on Netflix.
(Netflix)

2018 | TV-MA | 4 Seasons | TV Thrillers
Created by Greg Berlanti and Sera Gamble

Part psychological thriller and part social commentary, “You” follows unassuming New York bookstore manager Joe (Penn Badgley) as he stalks aspiring writer and grad student Beck (Elizabeth Lail). “We were meant for each other,” he tells himself as he peers through her curtain-less apartment windows days after meeting her over a brief transaction at the bookstore.

Creepy, addictive and full of dry humor about social media, millennials and dating in the age of Tinder, “You” twists the usual victim-perp plotline — she’s terrorized, he’s sickeningly aroused — by placing them both squarely in the #MeToo era.

Joe is a dangerous, delusional mess, but is he any worse than the lechy professor who demands sex for a paid position at the university; the cheating, vapid boyfriend; or the bestselling author who feigns interest in her work as he runs his hand up her skirt?

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Not really. The other predators and abusers don’t need to move through the shadows or hide because their brand of harassment is socially acceptable. It’s just the way things are — the price a young woman has to pay to get ahead. (Read more) —Lorraine Ali

59. Beef

Ali Wong and Steven Yeun hold each other up in “Beef” on Netflix.
Ali Wong and Steven Yeun in “Beef” on Netflix.
(Andrew Cooper / Netflix)

2023 | TV-MA | 1 Season | TV Thrillers
Created by Lee Sung Jin

“Beef” pits Ali Wong‘s Amy and Steven Yeun‘s Danny in a war in which it is impossible to take sides, as both are completely aggravating. They meet “not cute” in a shopping center parking lot. Danny is already on edge, having unsuccessfully attempted to return some items whose meaning will become significant later on — a smarter viewer than I might deduce their importance right away. Pulling out of a parking space, he nearly backs into Amy’s car; she honks and flips him off. He decides to follow her, to say his irate piece. It’s the rare series that begins with a car chase.

He doesn’t catch her. Where any reasonable person would end this misadventure there, and be thankful they came out of it alive and not arrested, Amy and Danny manage to escalate it into a war, tracking each other down, vandalizing one another’s lives. (He urinates on her bathroom floor; she tanks his business with bad Yelp reviews. She paints insults on his car; he tries to set hers on fire.) (Read more) — Robert Lloyd

58. Immigration Nation

A woman at a protest stands in front of people holding a sign that reads "Stop separating families."
Stefania Artega in “Immigration Nation” on Netflix.
(Netflix)
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2020 | TV-MA | 1 Season | Docuseries
Created by Shaul Schwarz and Christina Clusiau

Covering the spring of 2017 to the winter of 2019, “Immigration Nation” documents the implementation of President Donald Trump’s hard-line immigration framework, a central theme in his 2016 campaign, and its effect on the migrants who must grapple with it — casting the lens on the enforcers and the immigrants. (None of the participants were compensated for their participation.) The series hails from directors Shaul Schwarz and Christina Clusiau, the team behind 2017’s “Trophy,” which explored both sides of the debate over big-game hunting. (Read more) —Yvonne Villarreal

57. Gentefied

Three men sit at a table in a diner, looking up.
Joseph Julian Soria, left, Joaquín Cosío and Carlos Santos in “Gentefied” on Netflix.
(Kevin Estrada / Netflix)

2020 | TV-MA | 2 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Marvin Lemus and Linda Yvette Chávez

Based on a 2016 web series, “Gentefied” is a small-town (within a big town) comedy that announces its intentions in its very first scene, when what looks like a robbery about to happen turns out to be the return of a library book. In one nice stroke, it plays to television’s habitual criminalization of the poor and reminds us that life everywhere is, well, normal.

The action, set in the predominantly Mexican American neighborhood of Boyle Heights, centers on three cousins and their grandfather, called Pop (Joaquín Cosío), who runs a taqueria named for his late wife and stands for the honored and perhaps fatally intransigent older generation. (He is grumpy but poetic.) Erik (Joseph Julian Soria) works for Pop and has a baby coming with Lidia (Annie Gonzalez), his former girlfriend who in almost every respect is his superior. Ana (Karrie Martin) is an aspiring artist, with a young daughter and a female partner, Yessika (Julissa Calderon).

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Chris (Carlos Santos) is back in town after a decade, having earned a business degree that allows him to say things like “That’s just the free market” when it comes to discussing the changing economics of the neighborhood. But he’s working in the kitchen at a fancy Arts District restaurant and hoping to enroll at Le Cordon Bleu. Their shared concern is the survival of the taqueria, which is behind on the rent.

The show is certainly topical and political — Trump and his wall, the threat of ICE and toxic masculinity all get a shoutout, as do “greedy landlords waiting to replace us with ramen spots.” But ultimately “Gentefied’s” strengths are personal: a universally understood, mostly sunny story of people driving their loved ones a little crazy while they sort out their lives. You may relate. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

56. Sex Education

A man and a woman sit side by side on a couch.
Asa Butterfield and Gillian Anderson in “Sex Education” on Netflix.
(Sam Taylor / Netflix)

2019 | TV-MA | 3 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Laurie Nunn

America may dominate popular culture with the power of Hollywood and Silicon Valley, but Europe often still leads in terms of subject matter. Consider this U.K. import, which imagines an awkward high school kid who with a little help follows in the footsteps of his sex therapist mother (an excellent Gillian Anderson) by counseling his classmates through their intimate issues.

While it’s entertaining enough to imagine how far such a TV series might progress through an American network, “Sex Education” manages to be even more rewarding with a mix of outrageous comedy and gentle empathy. (Read more) —Chris Barton

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55. Unsolved Mysteries

Three crime scene investigators in white hazmat suits gather evidence.
“Unsolved Mysteries” on Netflix.
(Netflix)

2020 | TV-MA | 3 Seasons | Docuseries
Executive produced by Shawn Levy

If you were a child in the ’80s or ’90s — and maybe even if you were an adult — you probably lost a few nights’ sleep to “Unsolved Mysteries.” Hosted by the leathery-voiced Robert Stack and featuring one of the eeriest theme songs in TV history, the long-running reality show scared the bejesus out of a generation with stories about brutal murders and baffling disappearances, yeti sightings and alien abductions, medical mysteries and long-lost loves.

Now, like so many other nostalgia-steeped properties from the 1990s, it’s been revived for the streaming era on Netflix.

The spooky theme song is back in a new arrangement, and the franchise has likewise been retooled to suit contemporary tastes: There’s no host, no narration and no more literal reenactments. Each episode focuses on a single subject, allowing for a greater level of detail and nuance. Stylistically, the reboot — executive produced by Shawn Levy — shares as much DNA with “The Jinx” or “Making a Murderer” as the original “Unsolved Mysteries.” (Read more) —Meredith Blake

54. Hilda

Three animated children run alongside a pet.
“Hilda” on Netflix.
(Netflix)
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2018 | TV-Y7 | 2 Seasons | Kids’ TV
Created by Luke Pearson

I have a weakness for cute creatures, and “Hilda” is packed with them. A young girl who’s grown up in a house out in the wilderness with her mother, Hilda is much more comfortable sketching rock-like trolls, negotiating peace with tiny elves and hitching rides on the backs of flying round puppies than trying to make friends with children her age. But when her mother decides it’s time for them to move to the city early in the first season, Hilda has to learn to adapt. And it turns out there are plenty of magical creatures within the urban landscape too. The show’s embrace of the weird and whimsical is charming, but it’s the touch of wistfulness that seeps through as we watch Hilda grow that makes it memorable. (Read more) —Tracy Brown

53. Big Mouth

Animated still of two kids fist-bumping in a classroom..
“Big Mouth” on Netflix.
(Netflix)

2017 | TV-MA | 6 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Nick Kroll, Andrew Goldberg, Mark Levin and Jennifer Flackett

Countless books, TV shows and movies have re-created the cringe-inducing traumas of adolescence, but perhaps none have been as simultaneously filthy and emotionally insightful as “Big Mouth.”

The animated comedy puts a fictional spin on the decades-long friendship between co-creators Nick Kroll and Andrew Goldberg — a relationship that dates to the mid-’80s when they met as first-graders at their school in the suburbs of Westchester County. (Read more) —Meredith Blake

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52. Queer Eye

Three smiling men sit on a couch.
Tan France, left, Bobby Berk and Antoni Porowski in “Queer Eye” on Netflix.
(Netflix)

2018 | TV-14 | 6 Seasons | Lifestyle
(Seventh season premieres May 12)
Created by David Collins

The latest old show to be resurrected for a new generation is Bravo’s Emmy-winning “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy,” later, and presently, just “Queer Eye.” The series took off from the premise that (some) gay men might have something to teach (certain) straight people about self-presentation and self-understanding, and that the world would be better for watching this happen.

Here is how it works: A person, stuck in a rut or facing a challenge, is chosen for a makeover. In comes the Fab Five, each with his specialty: clothing, food, home decor, grooming and (the most variable of categories) culture. By the end of the show — the original took place in a day, or “a day,” but the new show transpires over the course of a week — they have transformed their target outside and in.

The subject then hosts an event — a party, a date — highlights of which the team watches on video back in their loft headquarters. There is laughter, there are (especially in the reboot) tears. Some of that laughter, and some of those tears were, I don’t mind saying, mine.

Karamo Brown, Jonathan Van Ness, Tan France, Antoni Porowski and Bobby Berk are the Fab Five in the 2018 revival. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

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51. The End of the F— World

A young man and a young woman sit in the front seat of a car.
Alex Lawther, left, and Jessica Barden in “The End of the F— World” on Netflix.
(Netflix)

2017 | TV-MA | 2 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Jonathan Entwistle

She’s a nihilist. He’s a potential serial killer. Both need to flee the constraints of their disapproving families and conventional town. Alienation and angst are embodied in this quirky and sardonic British series.

James (Alex Lawther) wants to graduate from small animals to larger prey when he meets Alyssa (Jessica Barden). She sees him as a malleable accomplice in a quest to find her estranged father. Together they learn they need each other to make it through a world that’s more messed up than them. Based on the comic book series by Charles Forsman, this coming-of-age, misfit tale is the true outsider’s answer to the soppy teen drama dilemma. (Read more) —Lorraine Ali

50. Black Mirror

Two women in a booth at a bar in the 1980s
Gugu Mbatha-Raw, left, and Mackenzie Davis in “Black Mirror.”
(Laurie Sparham / Netflix)

2011 | TV-MA | 5 Seasons | TV Thrillers
(Sixth season premieres in June)
Created by Charlie Brooker

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Named after the visual reflection of our devices when powered off, “Black Mirror” began in 2011 as an import from the U.K.’s Channel 4, and memorably kicked off with a bizarrely prescient episode about a prime minister’s close relationship with a pig (Google it). Since then it has resembled a sort of “Twilight Zone” for the digital age, imagining not-too-distant futures of Yelp-like ratings for people, a dystopian endgame for “American Idol” and how digital footprints could yield a haunting sort of immortality. Of course, for all its cautionary examples of technology run amok, the series earned its greatest notice for “San Junipero,” a timeless, digitally enhanced love story that constituted its most hopeful moment. (Read more) —Chris Barton

49. Kim’s Convenience

Two people stand at a counter in a store.
Paul Sun-Hyung Lee as Appa and Jean Yoon as Umma in “Kim’s Convenience.”
(CBC)

2016 | TV-MA | 5 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Ins Choi and Kevin White

Originally based on Ins Choi’s stage play, this CBC sitcom centered on the day-to-day happenings of a Toronto convenience store and the Korean Canadian family who ran it. Throughout its five seasons, Paul Sun-Hyung Lee and Jean Yoon played the immigrant parents, often getting laughs for their deadpan delivery; Andrea Bang and Simu Liu (the latter of whom went on to star in Marvel’s “Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings”) played their kids. The heartwarming show reached an international audience via Netflix, and gained acclaim for its normalized depictions of Korean culture and its understated take on the intergenerational relationships that can get strained within a family. It’s already so rare for a series to center on an Asian family, and it’s even more uncommon when its storylines are less about their identity markers and more about their universal humanity. Plus, it’s hilarious. —Ashley Lee

48. Avatar: The Last Airbender

An animated boy uses a fan to glide over two people in a snowy landscape.
“Avatar: The Last Airbender” is an animated series that takes place in an Asian-inspired, make-believe land. The main character, Aang, is voiced by Zach Tyler Eisen.
(Nickelodeon)

2005 | TV-Y7 | 3 Seasons | Fantasy TV Shows
Created by Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko

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The premise of “Avatar the Last Airbender” is straightforward: Aang, a 12-year-old with the ability to control air through an elemental martial art called airbending, must complete his training to master the other three elements — water, earth and fire — in order to stop the Fire Nation’s attempts to conquer other lands and bring balance back into the world. Helping Aang on his journey are siblings Katara and Sokka, who discovered him frozen in ice, and other friends he makes along the way. The groundbreaking animated series, set in a world inspired by Asian and Indigenous cultures, has been praised for its worldbuilding, ambitious storytelling, excellent animation and handling of complex topics including colonialism, imperialism, genocide, sexism, systemic inequalities and more. It’s a series often credited with showing American audiences the possibilities of deep, serialized storytelling in animation. But above all “Avatar” is fun and funny, even while packing emotional gut punches. —Tracy Brown

47. Bodyguard

Richard Madden, Keeley Hawes in "Bodyguard" on Netflix.
Richard Madden and Keeley Hawes in “Bodyguard.”
(Netflix)

2018 | TV-MA | 1 Season | TV Mysteries
Created by Jed Mercurio

The flamboyantly named Jed Mercurio, who created the well regarded police procedural “Line of Duty,” is the creator of “Bodyguard,” a conspiracy thriller.

Richard Madden (Robb Stark in “Game of Thrones,” which will mean the world to some) plays Sgt. David Budd, a tight-jawed security officer who, after averting the terrorist bombing of a London-bound train, with only a cool head and powers of persuasion, is assigned to guard Home Secretary Julia Montague (the ever-welcome Keeley Hawes). She’s a Conservative hawk, and he’s a veteran who’s had enough of war.

It’s not giving away anything to say that Madden and Montague become involved in a way they might not have expected but any viewer will, even one who had not seen that similarly titled Whitney Houston flick. Things get sexy, I mean, which makes them dangerous. And things also get dangerous, which makes them sexier.

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Interestingly, apart from Madden, all the best roles — the power roles — have been written for women, including Pippa Haywood as Budd’s superior officer and head of Metropolitan Police Counter Terrorism Command. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

46. Kipo and the Age of Wonderbeasts

A girl in rabbit ears walks beside a young man in an old car with a four-eyed pig thing on the hood.
“Kipo and the Age of Wonderbeasts”
(Netflix)

2019 | TV-Y7 | 3 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Radford Sechrist

The post-apocalyptic world of “Kipo and the Age of Wonderbeasts” features dangerous creatures roaming its vibrant wasteland, and it’s quite a sight. Thirteen-year-old Kipo has spent her entire life in an underground community and is excited by every new thing she sees on the surface world — even more relatable now that every trip outside can feel equal parts risky and liberating. But whether you are relentlessly optimistic like Kipo or extremely cautious like her new surface-dwelling friend Wolf, the show’s unique mutant creatures and soundtrack are what make its wonderland worth checking out.

Set 200 years after the rise of giant, intelligent mutants has driven most humans underground, the series follows Kipo after she’s suddenly thrust into the dangerous surface world. Kipo’s earnest positivity is magnetic, and the teen’s ability to see the humanity in everyone is a balm at a time when real-world politics have emboldened some to be more open in their hate toward those they consider “different.” Plus, all the dangerous mutants Kipo encounters, from lumberjack cats to K-pop singing narwhals, are adorable. And the soundtrack is fantastic. (Read more) —Tracy Brown

45. The Walking Dead

Cast members of "The Walking Dead" in a scene set in a prison.
Lori, Carol, Beth, Carl, Hershel and Maggie (Sarah Wayne Callies, left, Melissa McBride, Emily Kinney, Chandler Riggs, Scott Wilson and Lauren Cohan, rear)

(Gene Page / AMC)

2010 | TV-MA | 11 Seasons | TV Shows Based on Comics
Created by: Frank Darabont

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Yes, the gore is an acquired taste — it’s often stomach-churning. The brutality can be upsetting. And the series has had more than its share of ups and downs creatively, particularly in recent seasons. But at its best, AMC’s long-running “zombie” drama “The Walking Dead” is a well-written, slickly produced and superbly acted thrill ride that grapples with the themes of survival and human nature we will all soon be confronting. The show has never really gotten its due as a well-done genre series. If you haven’t already, now would be a good time to discover it. (Read more)—Greg Braxton

44. The Last Dance

Two men in red basketball uniforms walk along the sidelines.
Michael Jordan and forward Scottie Pippen are featured in “The Last Dance.”
(Robert Baker / Associated Press)

2020 | TV-MA | 1 Season | Sports & Fitness
Directed by Jason Hehir

He’s the most famous athlete of his generation, one of the most famous public figures ever. He appeared in six NBA Finals, won all six, and was the MVP each time. So why would Michael Jordan take part in a 10-episode docuseries when its director said up front that it would go to some very uncomfortable places?

The framework of “The Last Dance” is the fraught-yet-glorious 1997-1998 season that capped the second of the Bulls’ three-peats, so there’s plenty of breathtaking basketball action. There are backstories of indispensable teammates, their sometimes inexplicable actions and the insurmountably toxic conflicts between the team’s key architect, General Manager Jerry Krause, and others, including Coach Phil Jackson and secondary superstar Scottie Pippen.

The warts-and-all series goes there with Jordan’s less-shiny moments and other difficult chapters (such as his gambling habit and the shocking murder of his beloved father), and that’s good: What makes Jordan so fascinating is not simply his athletic talent but his indomitable will. It’s what made him who he is, what sets him apart from mere humans. (Read more) —Michael Ordoña

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43. Lady Dynamite

A woman in a floral top holds a bunch of balloons.
Maria Bamford in “Lady Dynamite” on Netflix.
(Doug Hyun / Netflix)

2016 | TV-MA | 2 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Pam Brady and Mitchell Hurwitz

Lady Dynamite” is cheerful, dark, surreal, profane, aspirational, meta-fictional and packed with people playing versions of themselves or other people entirely (or playing versions of themselves playing other people entirely); it plays with visual and verbal puns, with moods and acting styles and moves around in time and dimension.

“Lady Dynamite” is right: When things aren’t actually exploding, they feel liable to; there is always the potential for mayhem, for one reality to intrude on another. A living room might suddenly become a Japanese game show, a person might become, briefly, a sheep, or a family a family band.

Star Maria Bamford is wonderful throughout. With her querulous way of speaking and her way of walking on the balls of her feet, like a child keeping its balance, she can seem fragile and strange. But, like some comedians less affected by chemistry, she is not self-loathing; this is a show about putting the blown-up back together. It is rich with hope and, for all the weirdness, moving. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

42. The Legend of Korra

An animated woman with a high ponytail and a raised fist.
Korra in a scene from “The Legend of Korra.”
(Nickelodeon)
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2011 | TV-Y7 | 4 Seasons | Fantasy TV Shows
Created by Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko

Set in the world of “Avatar the Last Airbender,” “The Legend of Korra” tells the story of the next incarnation of the Avatar, a confident teenager named Korra. The series kicks off 70 years after the events of the original series. Korra has already mastered three of the four elements and heads to a large metropolitan city — to learn airbending from Aang’s son, Tenzin — where he joins a team of professional bending brothers, Bolin and Mako. The world has prospered since the end of the war instigated by the Fire Nation, shepherding in a new age of industry and technology. “Korra” expands on the lore around the Avatar — the one person in each generation able to bend all four elements, tasked with maintaining balance and harmony in the world — and retains its glorious animation style, while continuing to tackle serious and complex topics including capitalism, weapons technology, fascism, inequity and trauma. The series has also been praised for its (subtle) inclusion of a same-sex romantic storyline, which was groundbreaking at the time in children’s programming. —Tracy Brown

41. Chappelle’s Show

Dave Chappelle sitting on a stage.
Dave Chappelle on the set of his show on Feb. 5, 2003, in New York.
(Tina Fineberg / For The Times)

2003 | TV-MA | 2 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Dave Chappelle and Neal Brennan

Chappelle’s Show,” often profane and racially incendiary, is kind of like a raunchy salon with Chappelle as host, usually dressed in floppy hats and baggy street clothes, introducing comedic ideas that are then illustrated by filmed sketches that star Chappelle. Chappelle’s host persona somehow channels both the emcee qualities of Bob Hope and the languid gait of Snoop Dogg. He has a way of diminishing his edge with a smile and a “Who me?” nonchalance.

Almost everything on “Chappelle’s Show” is written by Chappelle and Neal Brennan, his writing partner going back to the 1998 pot-inspired feature “Half-Baked.” Sometimes too there are musical guests. It is evident in the sketches that Chappelle can do a lot of characters and voices — white, Black and otherwise — and that his comedy is all about inverting racial stereotypes to find the humor in still-uncomfortable issues. (Read more) —Paul Brownfield

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40. A Series of Unfortunate Events

A young bespectacled boy and an older man stand face to mean face.
Louis Hynes, left, and Neil Patrick Harris in “A Series of Unfortunate Events” on Netflix.
(Joe Lederer / Netflix)

2017 | TV-PG | 3 Seasons | TV Comedies
Developed by Mark Hudis and Barry Sonnenfeld

Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events,” a TV series based on the series of children’s books written by Daniel Handler under the pen name Lemony Snicket, stars Neil Patrick Harris as Count Olaf and Patrick Warburton as Snicket, who narrates retrospectively from within the story.

Slipping in and out of various disguises, Olaf, a self-styled “ac-tor” attempting to steal a fortune from young siblings, is at once grotesque and banal, a villain with the heart and habits of an annoyed and impatient teenager, a know-it-all short on information: “All of the artistic and financial aspects of my career are finally coming together like two pieces of a bread in the middle of a sandwich.”

As in most stories for young people, children must ultimately fend for themselves. The Baudelaires possess complementary talents. Violet (Malina Weissman), 14, is an inventor; Klaus (Louis Hynes), 12, handles research; and infant Sunny (Presley Smith, baby talk by Tara Strong) is the muscle, on the strength of her four-tooth bite.

Although basically comic, and not without moments of beauty and relief, the series is a dream in which you escape one trap only to fall into another, elude your pursuer only to find him somehow before you, and where hope springs eternal only so it can be eternally snatched away. But you should watch it, anyway, and take your time. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

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39. Tuca & Bertie

Two animated anthropomorphic birds stand in front of a door.
Tuca, left, and Bertie in “Tuca & Bertie” on Netflix.
(Netflix)

2019 | TV-MA | 1 Season | TV Comedies
Created by Lisa Hanawalt

A few episodes into Lisa Hanawalt’s terrifically funny animated series “Tuca & Bertie,” there’s a moment when a puffin in a pink suit calls a crowded auditorium to attention. In the process, she tidily summarizes the show’s twisted and (yet undeniably human) perspective.

“Ladies and gentle-birds,” the emcee begins, “and plants, humans and sometimes inanimate objects that talk — what a weird world!”

Featuring stand-up stars Ali Wong and Tiffany Haddish as a pair of bird best friends at the cusp of their 30s, their home of Birdtown is a freewheeling dreamscape where the subway is a snake and freeways loop like roller coasters around cat-infested yarn hillsides and lakes of grape jelly.

Though rendered in candy-colored hues and framed by a sunny, dance-funk soundtrack, the series fearlessly but beautifully makes room for issues around childhood trauma, social anxiety and sexual harassment in a way not dissimilar from “BoJack Horseman’s” candid depictions of depression. (Read more) —Chris Barton

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38. Selling Sunset

A man wearing glasses while holding a phone stands next to his identical twin, wearing glasses and gesturing
Jason Oppenheim, left, and Brett Oppenheim in “Selling Sunset” on Netflix.
(Netflix)

2019 | TV-MA | 5 Seasons | Reality TV

Netflix has joined Bravo in probing the cheesy conventions of L.A.’s celebritized real estate world. Its offering, a guilty pleasure docu-soap “Selling Sunset,” featuring people pleaser Chrishell Hartley (a soap opera regular), who wades into the shark tank to meet four mostly trash-talking female agents at Sunset Strip’s Oppenheim Group.

The firm’s principals — identical twins Jason and Brett Oppenheim — largely keep to their laptops, while the women tour properties for clients but also spend much of their onscreen time gossiping: hunky men; client poaching; and if moissanite, a faux diamond, counts as an engagement ring (of course it doesn’t).

Oh, and the show includes some Westside real estate, hovering around the $5-million mark with a few standouts. (Read more)—R. Daniel Foster

37. The Midnight Gospel

A cartoon figure with headphones on suns himself outside a trailer
“The Midnight Gospel” on Netflix.
(Netflix)

2020 | TV-MA | 1 Season | TV Comedies
Created by Pendleton Ward and Duncan Trussell

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“Adventure Time” creator Pendleton Ward surrealistically, psychedelically animates around interviews from collaborator Duncan Trussell’s mystically minded “Duncan Trussell Family Hour” podcast, framing them, to consonant or contrasting effect, as virtual interplanetary travel. (Are you with me?) The overarching theme of “The Midnight Gospel” is spiritual balance in a universe where everything dies, and its realization accordingly combines the dark and the light, the chaotic and the meditative, the dreadful and the funny, the sort of familiar and the most definitely weird. And it is always something to look at. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

36. Black Lightning

A muscled man in a superhero costume
Cress Williams in “Black Lightning.”
(Bob Mahoney / The CW)

2018 | TV-14 | 4 Seasons | Action TV Shows
Created by Salim Akil and Mara Brock Akil

Cress Williams (“Hart of Dixie,” “Living Single”) plays the titular hero, Jefferson Pierce, a scrupulous high school principal and divorced father of two daughters living in the fictional city of Freeland.

Nine years before the start of the series — following a near-fatal showdown with his nemesis, Tobias Whale (Marvin Jones III) — Pierce retired his alter ego Black Lightning, a masked vigilante with the power to manipulate electricity.

But superheroes rarely stay retired. Pierce resurrects Black Lightning to combat racist cops and a violent gang led by Whale that’s terrorizing the community. The battle becomes personal when gang members target Pierce’s daughters, activist Anissa (Nafessa Williams) and high schooler Jennifer (China Anne McClain), who turn out to have special skills of their own. (Stay tuned for “Thunder” and “Lightning.”)

One of the key goals for executive producer Salim Akil, who grew up in Richmond, Calif., is to show that black heroes matter. (Read More) —Greg Braxton

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35. Grace and Frankie

Two women sit and laugh in a kitchen.
Jane Fonda, left, and Lily Tomlin in “Grace and Frankie” on Netflix.
(Melissa Moseley / Netflix)

2015 | TV-MA | 7 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Marta Kauffman, Howard J. Morris

Thirty-five years after Jane Fonda recruited Lily Tomlin as a co-star in “Nine to Five,” the two teamed again, this time for a TV series, “Grace and Frankie.”

Fonda plays Grace; Tomlin is Frankie. We meet them at a fancy restaurant, and it is clear from the get-go that all they have in common are their husbands, business partners Robert (Martin Sheen) and Sol (Sam Waterston), who arrive presently to announce that they are in love with one another and want to get married because, says Grace’s Robert, “You can do that now.” And we’re off.

I found myself caring more about the actresses than the characters they played — finding their show a little wan but wanting it to work, both out of a lifetime of respect and because there could stand to be more series in which the main characters are not designed to appeal to TV’s hallowed 18-34 demographic. The series does get better as it goes on and grows less concerned with telling you who these people are and more interested in watching them. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

34. Patriot Act With Hasan Minhaj

A man with a beard gestures with both hands while talking
“Patriot Act With Hasan Minhaj” on Netflix.
(Cara Howe / Netflix)
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2018 | TV-MA | 6 Seasons | TV Comedies

The last correspondent hired by Jon Stewart at “The Daily Show,” Hasan Minhaj joined late-night topical comedy with a weekly Netflix series. The first Indian American to host his own comedy show, Minhaj proved to be a fearless comic voice. And in a political climate of rising Islamophobia and ongoing concerns about immigration at the federal level, his distinctive perspective on politics and culture feels especially essential. (Read more) —Chris Barton

33. She-Ra and the Princesses of Power

In an animated scene, a young woman rides a winged unicorn.
“She-Ra and the Princesses of Power” on Netflix.
(Netflix)

2018 | TV-Y7 | 5 Seasons | Fantasy TV Shows
Created by Noelle Stevenson

In “She-Ra and the Princesses of Power,” many of the most powerful warriors in the war over the fate of the universe are magical princesses. They are strong and they are brave, and you believe they’re going to win in the end.

One of the things that has been abundantly clear since “She-Ra’s” 2018 debut is that the animated DreamWorks/Netflix series is set in a world that is completely, casually LGBTQ-inclusive.

On Etheria, princesses are just as likely to be married to each other as they are to have boyfriends. Not even the most ruthless villain around has trouble remembering anybody’s pronouns. It’s a planet where gender isn’t constricted, heteronormativity does not exist, and queer people just get to be. (Read more) —Tracy Brown

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32. Arrested Development

A man in a green patterned shirt and glasses stands beside a man in a button-down plaid shirt.
David Cross, left, and Jason Bateman in “Arrested Development.”
(Mike Yarish / Netflix)

2003 | TV-MA | 5 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Mitchell Hurwitz

Arrested Development” is loosely organized around Michael Bluth (Jason Bateman), the relatively normal son (with a relatively normal son of his own, George-Michael, played by Michael Cera), whose periodic attempts to distance himself from his family ever fail: “You always come back to save the family, Michael,” his brother Buster (Tony Hale) says. “We joke about it all the time.”

They are a television family, fated to remain more or less in one another’s company. But this dynamic is woven into the fabric of “Arrested Development” more tightly than usual; a line of narration sums up the Bluth dilemma nicely: “Resentful of his family, Michael came up with a plan to make them come back.”

It is a devilish contraption, a finely worked out farce that marshals the classic tools of mistaken identities, misheard statements, cross purposes, backfiring deceptions and a desire for sex into a modern serial sitcom. With the exception of Michael and George-Michael, whose attempts to be bad go awry as reliably as his attempts to do good, the Bluths are variously dishonest, deluded, incorrigible and incompetent — though they are not without feelings and a need to be loved. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

31. Versailles

A man in period dress sits at a table while others stand and applaud
George Blagden, as Louis XIV in “Versailles.”
(Anouchka de Williencourt)
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2015 | TV-MA | Third season of three | TV Dramas
Created by Simon Mirren, David Wolstencroft

My favorite drama is one you’ve probably never watched. I’ve spent a few years lost in the lush gardens, ornate wardrobes and myriad scandals of “Versailles,” a historical drama chronicling the rise of King Louis XIV as he constructs the opulent testament to his power just outside Paris.

Most of its characters are based on historical figures, though my favorite — the brooding, mysterious and feared chief of police Fabien Marchal — is a product of dramatic license.

The series was frequently shot on location, so when Louis (played by George Blagden) strolls through the Galerie des Glaces in his exquisite buckle-top heels, he preens in the same mirrors and stands on the same floorboards that the Sun King did more than three centuries ago. When characters such as his scheming lover Madame de Montespan (Anna Brewster) and her frenemy Madame de Maintenon (Catherine Walker) needed to take in some fresh air — i.e. conspire in secret — their chats may have taken place along the real Grand Canal. (Read more) —Lorraine Ali

30. Ozark

A woman holding flowers stands in front of a man and a woman holding a gift basket
Julia Garner, left, Laura Linney and Jason Bateman in “Ozark” on Netflix.
(Jackson Davis / Netflix)

2017 | TV-MA | 4 Seasons | TV Thrillers
Created by Bill Dubuque and Mark Williams

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Jason Bateman, America’s sweetheart, plays Marty Byrde, a Chicago financial advisor. He is cautious, boring and, for the moment, obsessively distracted by a snippet of what looks like amateur pornography. For a while, you might think you are embarking on a rather dreary, and drearily familiar, drama of domestic breakdown and dinner-table scenes in which family members — wife Wendy (Laura Linney, another of America’s sweethearts); 15-year-old daughter Charlotte (Sofia Hublitz); and 12-year-old son Jonah (Skylar Gaertner) — can barely sustain a conversation.

And, in part, you are embarking on that drama. But slowly the story you thought you were watching turns into something different. One thing we learn is that Marty’s laundering money for a Mexican drug cartel and that his partner has been secretly taking a little of that lettuce home for himself. This prompts the arrival of upper-middle-management crime figure Del (Esai Morales) and the drama proper.

One thing leads to a horrible another, and in a moment of improvisation, Marty persuades Del not to kill him but instead send him down to the Lake of the Ozarks, painting this “redneck Riviera” as a potential criminal paradise, far from the much-seeing eye of the feds.

But the show comes fully alive in its secondary characters, particularly an extended family of petty criminals who fall athwart of more serious sorts; as their teenage de facto matriarch, Julia Garner is especially good, and her story line is arguably the most engrossing that “Ozark” has to offer. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

29. Love Is Blind

A smiling man and woman sit beside each other.
Cameron and Lauren in “Love Is Blind” on Netflix.
(Netflix)

2020 | TV-MA | 4 Seasons | Wedding & Romance Reality TV

Ever been on a date and thought: I’d have more fun talking to a wall?

Netflix’s matchmaking reality show “Love Is Blind” brings that scenario to life, with 15 single men and 15 single women splitting off into pairs and getting to know each other, one on one, sight unseen: Think Catholic confessional meets Tinder.

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Roughly 10 days later, after much gabbing, those who share a strong connection get engaged and meet for the first time before jetting off for a honeymoon-esque stay in Mexico. If the connection is still thriving — this being reality TV, it won’t be drama-free — the couples then venture back into the real world, where they live together for four weeks, meeting family, friends and pets. If, after all of that, the spark remains, the couples exchange vows and join the ranks of other made-for-television love stories. (Read more) —Yvonne Villarreal

28. Call My Agent

A man in a blue coat and tie
Thibault de Montalembert in “Call My Agent” on Netflix.
(Netflix)

2015 | TV-MA | 4 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Fanny Herrero

Set in a Paris talent agency, “Call My Agent” — “Dix Pour Cent” (“Ten Percent”) in its native France — is salted with real French screen stars, including Isabelle Adjani, Juliette Binoche, Fabrice Luchini, Charlotte Gainsbourg and Jean Reno, and American Sigourney Weaver playing ironic versions of themselves, and shot in real Paris locations. And though it is obviously not completely original — it’s a workplace comedy in more than one television tradition — it’s also different in the way that one language is different from another even when a sentence says the same thing.

At the end of the first episode, the agency’s founder dies, and much of what happens in the four seasons that follow is involved with keeping the ship afloat. Walking abreast in the opening credits are the surviving four partners: Mathias (Thibault de Montalembert), a powerful agent; Andréa (Camille Cottin), a passionate agent; Gabriel (Grégory Montel), an emotional agent; and Arlette (Liliane Rovère), who has seen it all. Introduced as assistants are Hervé (Nicolas Maury), a novel mix of ambition and self-doubt; Noémie (Laure Calamy), territorial, devoted to Mathias; and Camille (Fanny Sidney), the new girl in town. Along with receptionist and aspiring actress Sophia (Stéfi Celma), they will wind up somewhere different in the end. Assaad Bouab plays Hicham, an internet millionaire who buys into the agency in the second season.

Like “The West Wing” (and every other Aaron Sorkin series), “Call My Agent” is a story of people who love their work, even though it drives them crazy and ruins their lives. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

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27. Master of None

A smiling man and a woman holding a cellphone stand in front of a desk.
Aziz Ansari, left, and Noël Wells in “Master of None” on Netflix.
(K.C. Bailey / Netflix)

2015 | TV-MA | 3 Seasons | LGBTQ TV Shows
Created by Aziz Ansari and Alan Yang

Created by Aziz Ansari and “Parks and Recreation” writer Alan Yang, “Master of None” is somewhat based on — or shares certain interests with — Ansari’s humorous book of serious sociology, “Modern Romance,” about finding love in an age of apps. It’s smart, sweet and funny in ways both familiar and fresh.

Ansari plays Dev, a New York-based actor at the dawn of his 30s. And he’s doing some delicate work between the one-liners, especially in his scenes with Noël Wells, whose Rachel, introduced in the series’ opening scenes — involving a broken condom, side-by-side Googling and a late-night Uber trip to the pharmacy — will provide the season’s main romantic interest. The two have great, believable chemistry that makes their dissonances all the more alarming.

While it’s not exactly issue-oriented, the show does have real-world things on its mind: the relationship between first-generation Americans and their immigrant parents; the stereotyping of nonwhite actors; the extra burden of male obnoxiousness that women daily bear; the joy and tyranny of children.

That the episodes are longer than average — an advantage of not being made for the traditional time-bound TV grid — also gives them a subtly felt added weight. There are sitcom and rom-com tropes, to be sure, but more often than not the series plays with your expectations in order to subvert them. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

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26. City of Ghosts

Four children look at a map in an animated still.
“City of Ghosts” on Netflix.
(Netflix)

2021 | TV-Y7 | 1 Season | Kids’ TV
Created by Elizabeth Ito

Los Angeles is often misunderstood by those who don’t bother to see it beyond shallow pop-culture clichés and outsider hot takes. A solid rebuttal is “City of Ghosts,” an all-ages animated series that follows a group of kids who look for ghosts around the city to document their stories.

As quirky and cute as it is soothing and informative, the show is a celebration of L.A.’s often overlooked history, diverse communities and neighborhoods. The series also shows that topics like discrimination, gentrification and cultural appropriation can be approached in ways that even younger viewers can understand. (Read more) —Tracy Brown

25. Community

Two men standing and holding mop handles
Danny Pudi, left, as Abed and Donald Glover as Troy in “Community.”
(Justin Lubin / NBC)

2009 | TV-14 | 6 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Dan Harmon

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The beloved comedy about a study group at a community college that is not about a study group at a community college so much as it is a comedy about a comedy about a study group at a community college that is only incidentally a study group — and so on. At some point in its first year “Community” jettisoned any pretense of sticking to its premise and embraced its true nature, as an avant-garde meta comedy that plays with form and content with almost childlike glee.

That’s a tough thing to pull off week after week, season after season — after you’ve proved you can do anything, some of the thrill is bound to be lost — and there were times that the show seemed unfocused and obvious. In trying to find a way between invention and feeling, it could grow conventionally, rather than unconventionally, sentimental, or too eager to point out the smart thing it was doing. But there have been fine, surprising episodes — the puppet musical, one in real-time — and its ensemble is one of TV’s greatest. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

24. The Queen’s Gambit

A young man and a young woman shake hands over a chess board.
Jacob Fortune-Lloyd and Anya Taylor-Joy in “The Queen’s Gambit” on Netflix.
(Phil Bray / Netflix)

2020 | TV-MA | 1 Season | Social Issue TV Dramas
Created by Scott Frank and Allan Scott

Based on Walter Tevis’ 1983 novel about a female chess prodigy, “The Queen’s Gambit” is a sports story, a coming-of-age story and a becoming-human story, and also a kind of mortal version of that popular modern genre, the inner life of a superhero.

The first thing to say about it is that it is very good — thoughtful, exciting, entertaining. It is also, in screen terms, something like a cross between “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” — a lovingly decorated period piece, stretching from the late 1950s through most of the ‘60s, concerning a young woman triumphing in what was then considered a man’s game — and “A Beautiful Mind,” as an attempt to concretely represent the workings of an unusual intelligence living way out in the abstract.

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But perhaps most important, it’s about chess as chess; there is something almost audacious in making a series in which the main dramatic action involves two people at a table, moving little carved pieces of wood around, punching a clock and taking notes. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

23. Derry Girls

Four young women wearing jackets and backpacks
Saoirse-Monica Jackson, left, Jamie-Lee O’Donnell, Louisa Harland and Nicola Coughlan in “Derry Girls” on Netflix.
(Netflix)

2018 | TV-MA | 3 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Lisa McGee

Inspired by New Yorker journalist Patrick Radden Keefe’s can’t-put-it-down, made-me-cry-on-the-beach history of the Troubles, “Say Nothing,” I dove headlong into “Derry Girls” — a pungently funny comedy with the generations-long conflict in Northern Ireland as a backdrop. Drawing on writer Lisa McGee’s upbringing in the border city in the 1990s, the series never shies away from the damage wrought by the fighting. But “Derry Girls” blissfully refuses to depict life during wartime as an unrelenting struggle, and in doing so deflates more than a few hardened Catholic and Protestant stereotypes. Perhaps most of all, it’s a perfect vessel for that distinctly Irish sense of humor — cunning, morbid, irreverent to the point of being blasphemous. You’ll wear a holy smirk the whole time. (Read more) —Matt Brennan

22. Jane the Virgin

A surprised woman in a floral dress stands amid young women in school uniforms
Gina Rodriguez in “Jane the Virgin.”
(Danny Feld / The CW)

2014 | TV-14 | 5 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Jennie Snyder Urman

Jane the Virgin” tells the story of a young Miami woman who becomes pregnant despite never having had sex. (It’s not a miracle but a medical mishap.) Like “Ugly Betty,” it is based on a Latin American telenovela (the Venezuelan “Juana la Virgen”), and like that show, it has kept its transplanted Latin roots with a quietly remarkable title-role performance from Gina Rodriguez.

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Jane is almost engaged to police detective Michael (Brett Dier) but remains mindful of what her grandmother (Ivonne Coll) told her at 10, in Spanish — that once gone, virginity is gone for good. The flower her grandmother crushed for metaphorical illustration is framed above 23-year-old Jane’s bed.

The series is unusually successful in its mix of tones: farcical, serious, melodramatic and metafictional. It both mimics and comments on the telenovela form; indeed, it becomes part of the storyline, with an omniscient narrator (Anthony Mendez in a Ricardo Montalban “rich, Corinthian leather” mode) who gives the narrative a kind of legendary spin. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

21. Mindhunter

A man holds up a piece of cardboard with arrows drawn on it
Holt McCallany in “Mindhunter.”
(Netflix)

2017 | TV-MA | 2 Seasons | TV Mysteries
Created by Joe Penhall; executive produced by David Fincher and Charlize Theron

To meet Jonathan Groff and Holt McCallany, stars of the Netflix series “Mindhunter,” you’d never suspect they spent long months consumed with the darkest reaches of the human psyche. It’s easy to see why they were cast as the leads in “Mindhunter.” The psychological drama, executive produced by David Fincher and Charlize Theron, follows a pair of trailblazing FBI agents as they interrogate notorious real-life murderers in an effort to understand — and maybe prevent — the senseless urge to kill.

Groff stars as Holden Ford, a clean-cut but open-minded young agent intent on shaking up the hidebound agency, while McCallany plays Bill Tench, a cynical veteran who asks what might be the series’ central question: “How do we get ahead of crazy if we don’t know how crazy thinks?”

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In 2017, when criminal profiling had long since become standard practice — and spawned an entire pop culture subgenre in the process — the need to understand the origins of violent behavior seems obvious. But “Mindhunter” is set in the 1970s, an era when the starchy culture of the FBI still reflected the narrow worldview of longtime director J. Edgar Hoover, says McCallany.

“The FBI was one of the most conservative law enforcement agencies in the world, so empathizing with killers to try to understand the traumas they experienced in their childhoods and how that gives us insight into their behavior was not something Hoover was interested in.”

Yet the nature of crime itself seemed to be changing radically at the time. The social turmoil of the ’60s and ’70s also brought with it what appeared to be a terrifying new breed of criminal — brutal murderers like David Berkowitz (a.k.a. “Son of Sam”), Ted Bundy and Richard Speck who killed repeatedly and without apparent motive other than bloodlust. Establishing “means, motive and opportunity,” as law enforcement officers had been trained to do, was no longer enough. (Read more) —Meredith Blake

20. One Day at a Time

A smiling woman shows something on a cellphone to a woman who looks upset.
Justina Machado, left, and Isabella Gomez in “One Day at a Time” on Netflix.
(Ali Goldstein / Netflix)

2017 | TV-PG | 3 Seasons | TV Comedies
Developed by Gloria Calderón Kellett and Mike Royce

One Day at a Time” preserves the domestically framed, socially engaged flavor of the Norman Lear original while mixing in new verve. And it has turned out very well: smart, fun, bighearted and less noisy and hectoring than Lear works of old could sometimes be.

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In the new show, developed and run by Gloria Calderón Kellett (“How I Met Your Mother”) and Mike Royce (“Everybody Loves Raymond”) and filmed before a live audience, the setting has moved from Indianapolis to Echo Park; the family is now Cuban, which determines the details but is less the point than it would have been if this were 1975. (Gloria Estefan has set the show’s original theme song to a Cuban beat; it’s a natural fit.)

Justina Machado plays Penelope Alvarez, a former Army nurse and Afghan war vet, still the mother of two: daughter Elena (Isabella Gomez) and a son, Alex (Marcel Ruiz). Schneider, still called Schneider, has been transformed into an aging rich kid (Todd Grinnell) who owns the building where the Alvarez family lives. And the series gains an extra generation with Rita Moreno as Penelope’s spark-plug mother, Lydia; Moreno, a vital 85 at the time of filming, is playing 70 here, which does not seem a stretch. I imagine her contract stipulates that only so many minutes can elapse in any episode before she is allowed to dance. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

19. Crazy Ex-Girlfriend

A woman in a blue dress marches with a marching band.
Rachel Bloom in “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend.”
(Eddy Chen / The CW)

2015 | TV-MA | 4 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Rachel Bloom and Aline Brosh McKenna

Rachel Bloom was best known for a handful of hilarious viral videos, one of which is titled “Historically Accurate Disney Princess Song.” In it, she performs a knock-off Belle, trilling her way through a medieval town in hopes of finding the prince who will impregnate her so she can die in childbirth.

That was how screenwriter Aline Brosh McKenna (“The Devil Wears Prada”) came to know Bloom, and together they came up with “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend.”

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Though live-action, the series is fueled by the same sardonic effervescence, and it often requires Bloom to burst into sweetly stinging song. It’s an intoxicating if precarious concoction, capable of exploding or imploding at any moment, which only adds to the fun.

Rebecca Bunch (Bloom) is a lawyer at a high-powered New York firm where nervous ambition and bad lighting have sucked the bloom from her cheek and the joy from her life. In a bit of magic realism borrowed perhaps from sister show “Jane the Virgin,” signs begin appearing: “When was the last time you were happy?” Finally one includes an arrow that points to the sidewalk below and the haloed form of her teenage crush, Josh (Vincent Rodriguez III). He’s delighted to see her (yay!), but he’s just about to move back home (boo!). Home being West Covina. And so, of course, Rebecca follows him. (Read more) —Mary McNamara

18. When They See Us

Three young men and an older one wearing suits sit at a table.
Caleel Harris, from left, Blair Underwood, Ethan Herisse and Marquis Rodriguez in “When They See Us” on Netflix.
(Atsushi Nishijima / Netflix)

2019 | TV-MA | 1 Season | Social Issue TV Dramas
Created by Ava DuVernay

When They See Us” is a docudrama in four parts — one might even say “movements,” for each has its own musical speed and spin — about the Central Park Five.

If this bit of history has faded from your memory, or never made it that far — and one suspects creator Ava DuVernay has made this film specifically to remedy either possibility — it involved the arrest and wrongful conviction of five Black and Latino Harlem juveniles, for the 1989 rape and beating of a white female jogger, Trisha Meili, in New York’s Central Park. Five boys — Raymond Santana, Kevin Richardson, Antron McCray, Yusef Salaam and Korey Wise — were charged with the assault. Their mutually contradictory confessions, made under duress, were quickly recanted, but all were convicted on the strength of those confessions, in spite of a lack of physical evidence. The convictions were vacated in 2002 when the actual rapist came forward; DNA evidence and his detailed knowledge of the event supported the confession. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

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17. Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt

Two women crawling in a tunnel
Sara Chase, left, and Ellie Kemper in “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt” on Netflix.
(Eric Liebowitz / Netflix)

2015 | TV-14 | 4 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Tina Fey and Robert Carlock

Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt,” wonderful odd duck that it is, might well have foundered and floundered in the roiling waters of broadcast TV — it is just the sort of left-of-center comedy that NBC once specialized in and has now purged from its schedule. The series stars Ellie Kemper (“The Office”) as a woman freed after 15 years from an underground bunker, where she was held as an unwilling member of a post-apocalyptic cult. After a “Today Show” appearance with her fellow Indiana Mole Women, Kimmy decides to remain in New York City, to live life. She’s like “That Girl,” out of a bunker.

In short order, she acquires a dotty landlady (Carol Kane) with a radical past, a roommate with show business dreams (Tituss Burgess, star of Broadway), and a rich uptown boss (Jane Krakowski), who hires her and fires and hires her again to watch her entitled, unhappy son (Tanner Flood) and stepdaughter (Dylan Gelula). The leads are all marvelous, with a complementary elemental division of attitudes: Kemper, air; Burgess, fire; Kane, earth; and Krakowski, water, as I reckon it. They rise to the occasion and make it an event. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

16. Russian Doll

A woman wearing a black zip-up jacket adjusts her curly hair in a mirror
Natasha Lyonne in “Russian Doll” on Netflix.
(Netflix)

2019 | TV-MA | 2 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Leslye Headland, Natasha Lyonne and Amy Poehler

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Russian Doll” is a beautiful puzzle piece, a circular, multiplane, existential mystery-comedy set in the villages of Lower Manhattan. Peopled with memorable characters, it’s a show that having watched once you may want to watch again to admire its machinery and find the clues you might have missed, but also because it feels just as good the second time around.

Natasha Lyonne, who co-created the series with Amy Poehler and Leslye Headland (“Sleeping With Other People”), plays Nadia, a video game software engineer who keeps dying violently, often to slapstick effect, on the night of or day after her 36th birthday. Each time she returns to the bathroom of the loft where her artist friend Maxine (Greta Lee) is throwing her a party she’d rather not be at for a birthday she’d rather not be having; Harry Nilsson’s sonically cheery, lyrically weary “Gotta Get Up” greets her on the soundtrack at every return.

Is “Russian Doll” a Russian doll — those increasingly smaller wooden figures that nest one inside another — past the fact that Nadia is Russian and, relatively speaking, doll-size? In a sense, perhaps, in that the world begins to contract. (Keep an eye on the flora and fauna.) Solving the mystery does become a kind of race against time, if only to add endgame pressure to a story that otherwise could cycle forever, until the end of television, as viewers grew old and Nadia remained 36. But maybe it’s just an intriguing title. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

15. Never Have I Ever

A teen looks suspiciously at the new girl in class
Maitreyi Ramakrishnan, left, Megan Suri and Darren Barnet in “Never Have I Ever.”
(Isabella B. Vosmikova / Netflix)

2020 | TV-14 | 3 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Mindy Kaling and Lang Fisher

This half-hour comedy about an Indian American teen coming of age in the San Fernando Valley is the series I wish existed when I was in school, in the San Fernando Valley, embarrassed about my dad’s “weird” immigrant culture and hopelessly out of step with high school norms.

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Co-created by Mindy Kaling and Lang Fisher and starring the multitalented Poorna Jagannathan (“The Night of,” “Ramy,” “Big Little Lies”) as strict Indian mother Nalini and impressive newcomer Maitreyi Ramakrishnan as rebellious high school sophomore Devi, the new series is a masterwork of first-generation angst and alienation. When we meet the pair, they’re grappling with the loss of husband and father Mohan (Sendhil Ramamurthy), who died eight months earlier. Grief, anger and denial abound as they struggle to navigate their relationship and lives without him, using tools from their respective upbringings to make it through. So many themes hit home in this delightfully warm and funny series, particularly if your parents are from somewhere else and you grew up here. (Read more) —Lorraine Ali

14. Stranger Things

Four children look frightened
Caleb McLaughlin, from left, Finn Wolfhard, Millie Bobby Brown and Gaten Matarazzo in “Stranger Things” on Netflix.
(Netflix)

2016 | TV-14 | 4 Seasons | Teen TV Shows
Created by the Duffer brothers

In a small Indiana town, 12-year-old Will (Noah Schnapp) goes missing. Will’s mother, Joyce (1980s icon Winona Ryder), begins immediately and hysterically demanding that the scruffy, boozy and clearly damaged Chief Hopper (David Harbour) find her son. But Hopper has many other things on his mind, including a shocking local death and reports of a mysterious runaway. So it falls to Will’s friends Mike (Finn Wolfhard), Lucas (Caleb McLaughlin) and Dustin (Gaten Matarazzo) to begin tracking him down.

A trio of geek brio, they are knowledgeable acolytes of both technology and epic fantasy. So when they encounter the above-mentioned runaway, a saucer-eyed and initially mute girl played with astonishing power by Millie Bobby Brown, it seems only natural that they would hide her, “E.T.”-like, in Mike’s basement.

Eleven, named for the number tattooed on her wrist, is obviously terrified. On the run from “bad men,” headed by a stone-faced Matthew Modine in a sinister blue suit and ignorant of basic human relationships, El (as the boys call her) is more alien than “E.T.” ever was, but she reluctantly aids the search for Will. “Stranger Things” is genuinely creepy and sincerely sweet, two great tastes that may taste great together but are difficult to blend successfully. (Read more) —Mary McNamara

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13. Monty Python’s Flying Circus

Six men in bizarre costumes on a beach
An undated photo of the cast of “Monty Python’s Flying Circus”: John Cleese, left, Terry Gilliam, Terry Jones, Graham Chapman, Michael Palin and Eric Idle.
(PBS/Associated Press)

1969 | TV-14 | 4 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Graham Chapman, Eric Idle, Terry Jones, Michael Palin, John Cleese and Terry Gilliam

Long before “Saturday Night Live” became TV’s sketch-comedy standard-bearer, the Brits pioneered the form with “Monty Python’s Flying Circus,” which premiered on the BBC in 1969. In just four seasons and 45 episodes — that’s about two years’ worth of “Law & Order,” for those playing at home — the Pythons’ surreal, anarchic and quintessentially anti-authoritarian style lampooned seemingly every last bastion of British elitism and rigidity, and spawned a series of followup films (“Monty Python and the Holy Grail,” “Life of Brian” and “The Meaning of Life”) that are still regarded as classics. But perhaps its most lasting influence was to suggest that TV, already episodic, and humor, especially pithy, were an ideal marriage. “And now for something completely different!” isn’t just the credo of the “Flying Circus,” it’s a fair working definition of the art form at its best. —Matt Brennan

12. Unbelievable

A woman cries while wearing a gray sweatshirt.
Kaitlyn Dever in “Unbelievable” on Netflix.
(Beth Dubber / Netflix)

2019 | TV-MA | 1 Season | Crime TV Shows
Created by Susannah Grant, Ayelet Waldman and Michael Chabon

Unbelievable” follows the lines of “An Unbelievable Story of Rape,” a 2015 article by T. Christian Miller and Ken Armstrong co-published by the Marshall Project and ProPublica.

Like the article, the series switches between two places and times. We begin in the Seattle suburb of Lynwood, Wash., in 2008, where teenager Marie Adler (Kaitlyn Dever) is raped, reports it and — under pressure from detectives who are influenced by the doubts of Marie’s former foster mother — recants. (The series does not fail to note that she has been violated twice.)

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Meanwhile — which is to say, three years later, in Colorado — Det. Karen Duvall (Merritt Wever) learns from her husband, Max (Austin Hébert), that the rape case she’s working on bears similarities to one being investigated in the nearby division where he works. This brings her into contact and, eventually, partnership with the more experienced, better funded, not-as-jaded-as-she-seems Det. Grace Rasmussen (Toni Collette). You will realize quickly that these cases have something to do with Marie’s.

It’s worth mentioning that “Unbelievable” does not make the criminal a character. Too often, we are invited to tiptoe through their traumatic backstories, to look over their shoulders as they plot their next attack, or engage their pursuers in games of cat and mouse. “Unbelievable” sticks close to its protagonists instead. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

11. Cobra Kai

William Zabka as Johnny Lawrence, left, and Ralph Macchio as Daniel LaRusso "Cobra Kai."
(Curtis Bonds/Netflix)

2018 | TV-14 | 5 Seasons | Drama
Created by Josh Heald, Jon Hurwitz and Hayden Schlossberg

The ’80s are alive and kicking in the San Fernando Valley courtesy of “Cobra Kai’s” Johnny Lawrence (William Zabka), a hard-drinking, heavy metal holdover from an era when Twisted Sister ruled the charts and “No Fat Chicks” bumper stickers were commonplace.

The self-aware, kitschy soap takes place 36 years after the original “Karate Kid” movie, on which the series is based. Though Johnny and Daniel LaRusso (Ralph Macchio) are now in their 50s, their long-simmering rivalry has spilled over to the students of their competing dojos. Now, the Valley is home to an all-out struggle between karate gangs. These food-court warriors include LaRusso’s earnest daughter, Samantha (Mary Mouser); Johnny’s delinquent son, Robby (Tanner Buchanan); and Johnny’s neighbor, high schooler Miguel Diaz (Xolo Mariduena). And Johnny’s former teacher, Kreese (Martin Kove), who stole his dojo, is more than happy to fan the flames.

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The main characters’ fortunes have reversed since they battled it out at the All-Valley Karate Tournament way back when. Rich kid Johnny is a broke, divorced handyman who lives alone in a crappy Reseda apartment. Poor kid Daniel is a successful businessman who lives in the upscale West Valley with his seemingly perfect family. (Read more) — Lorraine Ali

10. Breaking Bad

Bryan Cranston, left, holding a bag of money, standing with Aaron Paul in a junkyard in "Breaking Bad."
Bryan Cranston, left, and Aaron Paul in “Breaking Bad.”
(Cathy Kanavy/AMC)

2008 | TV-MA | 5 Seasons | TV Thrillers
Created by Vince Gilligan

It would be easy to be put off by “Breaking Bad,” about a high school chemistry teacher hit by the one-two punch of a midlife crisis and a diagnosis of terminal cancer, who sets himself up in the manufacture of crystal meth. But it’s very good, sad and disturbing.

Walter White (Bryan Cranston) is as pale a figure as his name, an Albuquerque milquetoast professor whose real love of his subject is shared by none of his students. He has a wife, Skyler (Anna Gunn), a teenage son with cerebral palsy (RJ Mitte, who has cerebral palsy), and a brother-in-law (Dean Norris) who also happens to be a federal drug agent. Looking for a way to leave some money for his family, Walt blackmails an ex-student, Jesse (Aaron Paul), into taking him on as a partner in the manufacturer of methamphetamine.

The series oversells Walt’s meekness at first. His life’s not so bad — he has a good-looking, short story-writing wife more than a decade his junior, and his son seems to actually like him — but once things go off the rails, it’s all completely gripping. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

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9. Dead to Me

Two women standing by a black car on a cold day
Linda Cardellini, left, and Christina Applegate in “Dead to Me” on Netflix.
(Saeed Adyani / Netflix)

2019 | TV-MA | 3 Seasons | TV Dramas
Created by Liz Feldman

Dead to Me” brings together two excellent actresses who became known on television playing teenagers: Christina Applegate, whose 21st century career might be seen as recovery from a decade on “Married With Children,” and Linda Cardellini, the sweetheart of “Freaks and Geeks.”

Applegate plays Jen, a Laguna Beach real estate agent whose husband was killed by a hit-and-run driver. In an attempt to move forward, she visits a grief support group, Friends of Heaven, where she is approached by Judy (Cardellini), who would like to give her a hug. (Jen would like not to be hugged.) In the time-honored, time-worn tradition of fictional opposites, they will complete each other. They bond, drinking wine, eating cookies and discussing which “Facts of Life” character they resemble. Jen enlists Judy in her search for the driver of the car that killed her husband.

The pilot ends with a twist, as other episodes will. But this is less a story of bad dudes and the damage they do than one of female friendship forged in fire. Almost everything of value in the series happens in the space defined by Applegate and Cardellini, and all a concerned viewer wants is for them to stay friends and be OK. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

8. The Crown

A man in a military uniform walks a bride down the aisle.
Claire Foy and Jared Harris in “The Crown” on Netflix.
(Alex Bailey / Netflix)
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2016 | TV-MA | 5 Seasons | TV Dramas
(Sixth and final season coming soon)
Created by Peter Morgan

In 2016, Netflix premiered what it billed as the most expensive television series ever: “The Crown,” an epic true-life drama of the British aristocracy.

In the first of six planned 10-episode seasons, “The Crown” follows Elizabeth II (Claire Foy) from the eve of her 1947 wedding to Philip Mountbatten (Matt Smith), when she is yet a princess, to the eve of the Suez Crisis, by which time she has become very much a queen; in subsequent seasons, the monarch is played by Olivia Colman and Imelda Staunton, alongside a changing cast of Philips, Charleses and Dianas. The series was created by Peter Morgan, who has made hay from the royals before: His 2006 film “The Queen” concerned the royal family’s reaction to the death of Princess Diana; his 2013 play “The Audience” imagined meetings between Elizabeth and a number of her many successive prime ministers.

Like those works, “The Crown” is about people condemned by an accident of birth to embody abstract ideals. Morgan looks a little askance at the forms and the institutions and with more than a little sympathy at the titled mortals who follow them. As a production, it is very much a romance — sumptuous with palaces and castles and couture — yet oddly modest in a postwar-appropriate way. The plotting can be obvious at times, but it is always very watchable and never less than smart. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

7. GLOW

Two women wrestlers in the ring with a referee
Alison Brie, left, and Ellen Wong, right, in “GLOW.”
(Erica Parise / Netflix)

2017 | TV-MA | 3 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Liz Flahive, Carly Mensch

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In the lovely, lively comedy “GLOW,” named for an actual ‘80s wrestling show, Alison Brie plays Ruth, a never-hired actress in 1985 Hollywood who stumbles into the world of professional wrestling when she answers a call for “unconventional women” and finds herself in a gym among actresses of all shapes, colors and dispositions, most of them outsiders in one way or another. Facing them is Sam (Marc Maron), a director of low-budget horror fare who has been hired to make the world’s first women’s wrestling TV show.

It’s a tale of conflict and cooperation, about teamwork disguised as rivalry, and rivalry subsumed in teamwork, of plucky outsiders fighting for respect and self-respect. And the story of women living in close proximity has something in common with “Orange Is the New Black”; the wrestlers move into the same motel while they train, and though they are free to leave, one might say they are prisoners of their need to stay. (Read more) —Robert Lloyd

6. Better Call Saul

Two men in an elevator
Jonathan Banks and Bob Odenkirk in “Better Call Saul.”
(Ben Leuner / AMC)

2015 | TV-MA | 6 Seasons | Crime TV Shows
Created by Vince Gilligan, Peter Gould

Far more lighthearted and less immediately violent than its progenitor “Breaking Bad,” “Better Call Saul” centers on the man who would become Saul Goodman — Jimmy McGill, an all-American loser. Not the brilliant but marginalized borderline personality so popular in today’s television, but the real deal, a creature held together by flop-sweat, desperate cunning and doggedly delusional ambition.

A two-bit Albuquerque attorney whose “office” is a utility closet, Jimmy ekes out a living as a public defender, representing the kind of clients who are depraved enough to sexually abuse a corpse and stupid enough to videotape the proceedings. He drives a banged-up yellow Suzuki that belches enough black smoke to blur the ironic name of its model (“Esteem”) and never manages to get enough validation stickers to park it.

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You’ll either like star Bob Odenkirk’s nervy, nervous and surprisingly soulful performance or you won’t. But it’s pretty hard not to like. (Read more) —Mary McNamara

5. BoJack Horseman

A cartoon man standing next to a bipedal horse
Todd (voiced by Aaron Paul), left, and BoJack (voiced by Will Arnett) in “BoJack Horseman” on Netflix.
(Netflix)

2014 | TV-MA | 6 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Raphael Bob-Waksberg

For reasons known only to creator Raphael Bob-Waksberg, “BoJack Horseman” exists in a universe where some people are people and some are talking, bipedal versions of various animals. BoJack Horseman (Will Arnett) is an upright horse who is also a washed-up sitcom star. In the ’90s, he headlined “Horsin’ Around,” the “Full House”-like tale of a bachelor horse who finds true happiness when he adopts three orphan children.

That show was such a huge hit that BoJack never recovered. Now he lives in one of those big glass houses in the hills favored by writers seeking to make a statement about Hollywood, with a couch-surfing slacker leech/assistant (Aaron Paul). BoJack spends his days watching his own reruns while his agent/sometime lover, Princess Caroline (a pink cat voiced by Amy Sedaris), fails to find him even a walk-on in “War Horse.”

Instead, she pushes him to finish his memoir, which he hasn’t even started. Princess Caroline eventually hires Diane (Alison Brie), a ghostwriter who happens to be living with BoJack’s “nemesis,” Mr. Peanutbutter (Paul F. Tompkins), a golden retriever who had a show similar to “Horsin’ Around.” Diane is there to get BoJack to face his fears, tell his story and, presumably, become a better … horse. (Read more) —Mary McNamara

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4. The Great British Baking Show

Four people stand around an elaborate tiered cake
Paul Hollywood, left, Prue Leith, Noel Fielding and Sandi Toksvig in “The Great British Baking Show.”
(Netflix)

2010 | TV-14 | 6 of 13 Seasons | Reality TV

A niche favorite of Anglophiles and foodies here in the United States, “The Great British Baking Show” is a certified national obsession across the pond. The series follows 12 amateur contestants through a series of highly technical, labor-intensive baking challenges. It feels almost like an insult to describe it as a reality show since it defies so many conventions of the genre.

Filmed in a countryside tent decorated in soothing pastels, the show presents a sunny and perhaps not entirely accurate version of “Brexit”-era Britain where it rarely seems to rain and people are judged not by the color of their skin but by the glossiness of their Italian meringues. The contestants range from precocious teens to eccentric pensioners, from firefighters to fashion designers. Though we see almost nothing of the contestants’ lives outside the tent, their personalities nevertheless shine through. It turns out you can tell a lot from the way a person bakes. Fair warning, though: Netflix currently carries only five “collections,” or seasons, of the 12 that have aired to date. And finding the rest is a challenge worthy of a Paul Hollywood technical. (Read more) —Meredith Blake

3. The Good Place

A woman, left, and a man look at each other face to face in a library
Kristen Bell and Ted Danson in “The Good Place.”
(Colleen Hayes / Associated Press)

2016 | TV-14 | 4 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Michael Schur

In the smart and delightful “The Good Place,” Kristen Bell plays Eleanor, who opens her eyes to find herself in the afterlife. Ted Danson is Michael — a famous angel name, though the milieu is essentially secular — who manages and also designed the portion of it where Eleanor has been assigned to spend eternity.

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It also turns out that she is there by mistake, having lived an insufficiently good life on Earth to get into what turns out to be an extremely exclusive post-life club, its members selected “using a perfectly accurate measuring system” that weighs good deeds and bad. On the negative side these might include “Use ‘Facebook’ as a verb” or “Ruin opera with boorish behavior,” and on the plus, “Hug sad friend” or “Remain loyal to Cleveland Browns.”

“The Good Place” is a utopian small-town comedy whose less well-known players also shine, and a serial story — its episodes are introduced as “chapters” — with surprises in store. As in any system where nothing supposedly can go wrong, things will. That’s not a spoiler. That’s just comedy. (Read More) —Robert Lloyd

2. Orange Is the New Black

A group of inmates at a women's prison stage a protest
“Orange Is the New Black” on Netflix.
(JoJo Whilden / Netflix)

2013 | TV-MA | 7 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Jenji Kohan

When “Orange Is the New Black” debuted on Netflix in July 2013, it boasted no major stars and a relatively modest budget. Several prestigious cable networks had already passed on the series, which was adapted by “Weeds” creator Jenji Kohan from Piper Kerman’s memoir about her time in a women’s prison. In what was then a novelty, all 13 episodes were available for viewers to watch at any time. But with its grim setting, challenging subject matter and hourlong format, “Orange Is the New Black” hardly seemed the kind of escapist fare viewers would consume in giddy binge-watching sessions.

Yet “Orange” would end the year as Netflix’s most-watched original, and it received 12 Emmy nominations for its first season — instantly establishing the streaming network as an awards powerhouse. The series also resonated in a way that went beyond industry bragging rights, helping push criminal justice reform and transgender rights to the forefront of the national conversation. Through flashbacks that showed how each character wound up in prison, “Orange” encouraged viewers to identify with a vast array of characters whose race, religion, class, politics or gender identity often differed from their own.

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“Orange” was neither Netflix’s splashiest original series nor its most prestigious, but it became the model for a new kind of hit in the streaming era: a show with little star power that debuted quietly but grew into a phenomenon, fueled by social media, the mysterious Netflix algorithm and good old-fashioned word-of-mouth. (Read more) —Meredith Blake

1. Seinfeld

Three people stand in the doorway to an apartment and look at a man lying on a couch
“Seinfeld” arrived on Netflix last month.
(NBC via Getty Images)

1989 | TV-14 | 9 Seasons | TV Comedies
Created by Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David

There may be no greater indicator of “Seinfeld’s” enduring influence than the dustup over Netflix’s transfer of the curmudgeonly NBC sitcom: More than 30 years after its debut, “the show about nothing” is still worth fighting over. Indeed, if the streamer’s 16:9 aspect ratio for “Seinfeld” is all wrong — potholes be damned! — the series itself remains as right as ever, delivering one of the highest rates of classic episodes, unforgettable images and culture-defining catchphrases in TV history: “yada, yada, yada,” the puffy shirt, the “soup Nazi,” Festivus, “master of my domain” and countless others. Even its much-maligned jailhouse finale now feels like a canary in the coal mine of the Golden Age of Television, rife with darkly funny ambiguity and a high-than-usual dose of discomfort. I’ve started to think of it as a distinctly Seinfeldian prelude to “The Sopranos’” cut to black. (Read more) —Matt Brennan

Updates

12:15 p.m. May 2, 2023: Removed “New Girl” as it is no longer available. Added “Beef.”

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