Time to Catch Up – Halt and Catch Fire

In a new (hopefully recurring) blog feature, I focus on shows that take time to grow into themselves. More and more I’ve been forced to give a lot of shows I love the qualifier, “Yeah, it’s not great at the start, but stick with it!” This requires a lot of faith and patience, and frankly risk. So I’d like to put some effort into quantifying that risk and patience for you all the best I can, because it often helps me to know what I’m getting myself into.

This edition focuses on a show that returns this Saturday on AMC for its fourth and final season, Halt and Catch Fire. It’s a choice that is convenient timing-wise, because it’s a tiny show (ratings-wise) that is getting the most exposure it is ever gonna get right now, and I’d like to pile one final piece on top. In addition, it is one of the most extreme examples of the shows this new segment is attempting to highlight. When it started, it was not very good. And now it is one of the most consistently excellent, thoughtful, and innovative shows on TV.

When it gets good: 1×08 – The 214s. And technically, not until the end of the episode. This is one of the things that makes it such a hard sell. That’s nearly 8 full episodes that just aren’t very good. But by the end of this one, the story lurches forward, and some really strong character turns make me root for the characters to succeed in the final stretch of the season.

When to give up if you’re not feeling it: 2×03 – The Way In. While the end of Season 1 provided some finally solid plot, Season 2 really was where they redefined the show into what it is today, and it was compelling right out of the gate. The show found the parts that really clicked in the first season, and put them front and center. And yes, that’d be the women.

What to look forward to (mild spoilers):

Initially, the show was largely considered an 80’s Mad Men, with a charismatic but flawed “idea man” at its center (Lee Pace), essentially conning people into building his out-there visions. His mark in Season 1 was put-upon sad sack Gordon Clark (Scoot McNairy), who didn’t realize how much he was itching for the excitement and glory promised to him.

This dynamic, and the challenges of innovating a technology that is ubiquitous to us now, run stale quickly.

Interspersed throughout their masculine ego drama are a couple of comparatively minor female characters as well. The doe-eyed, punk-rock Cameron Howe is a brainy but gruff programming whiz, whose ability and autonomy is immediately undercut by her introduction as our protaganist’s (and her professor/future boss’s) sexual conquest. While she does get to succeed at doing her job well over the first handful of episodes, the character is not given much narrative meat or change to shine compared to her male counterparts.

Then there is Donna (Kerry Bishé), Gordon’s wife and homemaker. We are given the tidbit that she and Gordon used to work together in tech before they started a family, and we get hints that she misses those days, but aside from that, all she gets are the generic “you work too much and neglect your family” moments. Her role is as our male protagonist’s foil, a la Skyler White.

After the four of our characters finally get a hero team up to close the first season, the show goes one step further in Season 2. It makes Donna and Cameron the bosses. It deftly recognizes that charismatic Joe (Lee Pace) is not the anti-hero, but the villain, and that Gordon’s issues around his own emasculation aren’t nearly as interesting as Donna’s journey to becoming the smart and talented breadwinner of the household, or Cameron learning to manage others as well as she can write code.

The narrative then revolves around the much more interesting human challenges involved in growing a business in a still-infant industry, rather than the logistical challenges in how to make your box smaller. Gordon and Joe are still important characters, but they are much more peripheral in the later seasons, and Donna and Cameron are both the central story, and the core relationship, and both actresses knock it out of the park. And as of this, the final season, they are finally getting paid as much as their male co-stars. I’d argue they should be paid more, but one step at a time, right?

I have to give big props to the show runners to recognize what worked and what didn’t in their first season, and be able to pivot so dramatically to the more compelling characters and stories. I can imagine anyone who had only seen the first episode of the show having trouble believing that it will become a nuanced, feminist, character-driven drama, but that’s what it’s been for two seasons now. A prominent (in certain circles) critic named it #2 show of 2016.

With the first 3 seasons currently available on Netflix, now’s the perfect time to catch up before the final season finishes.

2016 TV Rankings – 1 to 10

Well, here it is. The Top 10.

Not sure if I have anything that profound to say about my rankings this year. If you’d like to see my usual self-deprecating rant excusing my rankings for being completely wrong, check out last year’s Top 10. (And they are definitely wrong, as evidenced by Atlanta’s Golden Globe victories Sunday night. (Side-note: You should definitely watch Atlanta. My issues with it aside, it’s a groundbreaking show that is at least worth the conversation.))

The one thing that strikes me about this year’s group is how much more “middle” it feels like there is this year. 40-50 of the shows in the middle fell into the category of “pretty good” if minorly flawed or inconsistent. Many of those shows had “excellent” episodes. But when it comes to the week-by-week excitement and anticipation to get to the next episode, it mostly fell to these 10 shows below. (Well, different kind of excitement for those streaming shows.) Does that mean I regret watching the 700 or so other episodes of TV from those shows? Not at all! The whole fun of it is the digging through the muck for those magical gems of episodes. Just because these shows strung more of those gems together doesn’t mean the others were less worthwhile. And your gems will probably look different than mine. Maybe you’re more after the clever plot twist than the cathartic character moment. Or maybe you’re more fascinated by a real housewife than a fake horse man.

But here are ten shows that had more of those gems and fewer of those turds than any other I saw last year. They were more consistent, did bigger and bolder things with the medium, and induced more of those involuntary emotional thingies: you know, the tears and the laughs. Should I reward them for causing me to lose control of my face? Probably not, but here we go anyway.

 

10_thirteen

Let me start by saying that the nod to Chris Carter in this ranking was completely accidental, and not meaningful in any way. If I’d been stacking the deck at all, I would have placed this at rank 13, but the cards fell where they fell. (Never afraid to mix metaphors.)

I gave this season a big boost in total rating due to its fantastic finale. This series struck a perfect balance of story and character, spending much of its five-episode limited run dealing with the consequences of a thirteen-year abduction of a young woman on her family and friends. There is a police investigation element to it, and while there are developments in the story, and things we slowly learn about her thirteen year disappearance, it never devolves into cheap gotcha twists, but feels organic and truthful to the characters. The final episode was clever in how it created tension but also gave us answers in a natural and unforced way, as well as shining a light on character aspects. An unconventional opening credit sequence, great performances, and a shocking but earned ending all put the icing on one of the most satisfying and intelligent police dramas I’ve seen in a long time.

 

09_gravityfalls

Whether or not to include Gravity Falls was the most agonizing I’ve done over the rules of my rankings. Because network shows are naturally split so that in a calendar year you will have the final half of one season, followed by the first half of the next, including partial seasons has been a natural staple of my rankings for years. But what if a cable show airs nothing but the first two episodes of its season in December? Should I rate them alone, independently of the remainder of the season? I don’t particularly like that. So, like with The Affair this year, I decided that I would rate a show only if it aired a season finale during that year, so I could either rate that season as a whole (including the previous year’s start), or just the half season if there was another first-half in the fall. Seems reasonable.

Enter Gravity Falls. It had its 2nd (and final) season finale in February of 2016. That was the only episode it aired this year. The 2nd season started in August of 2014. That’s right, this season had nearly two years of episodes previous to this year. Still, it technically follows the rule? But I didn’t start watching the show at all until this year. I watched both seasons in 2016, including this year’s finale. (Series finale.) If I had watched Season 2 last year, would I have held off in rating its 19 aired episodes, to wait for the finale to air in the next year? I’m not sure. Am I bending the spirit of the rules to include a two-year-old show because I liked it so damn much and want to include it in my ratings while I can? Maybe. That may have to be guilt I’ll have to be ready to live with. Hopefully I won’t be judged too harshly in the next world.

Okay, back to Gravity Falls: Loved it. It’s hilarious. For adults. Like, to an extent that I don’t think kids would actually like it all that much. Here’s some of the voice talent:

Regulars: Kristen Schaal (MVP), Linda Cardellini.

Recurring: T.J. Miller, J.K. Simmons, Nick Offerman, Will Forte.

Guest-stars: Nathan Fillion, Patton Oswalt, Jonathan Banks, Mark Hamill, Neil DeGrasse Tyson, Justin Roiland, Louis CK, John Oliver, Jon Stewart, Larry King, Coolio.

That’s right, Coolio. Like, this shit is not dicking around.

While Season 1 was bogged down too much by Dipper’s boring and trope-y quest to win over the girl, that storyline ended early on in Season 2 in a really surprisingly adult and natural manner, and they were free to explore more interesting territory, and also allow the girl to be a three-dimensional character in her own right. The show continued that trend of exploring adult themes (not sexual, just grown up), the ultimate example being the show’s best episode, A Tale of Two Stans, which was not only a hugely pivotal moment in the ongoing mythology of the series, but also a complex and emotional story up there with the best of your prestige dramas.

Throw on top of that really fun and creative supernatural elements, some legitimate scares and creepy villains, a strong story arc that plays out in a EPIC 3-part finale, and you have one of the more enjoyable and memorable TV experiences out there, cartoon or not. Recommended for anyone out there who likes fun things.

 

08_gameofthrones_a

Much like The Leftovers last year, Game of Thrones shone brightly when finally free of the shadow of the books. I mean, I don’t think we truly know yet how much of this season was based on what Martin gave them at this point, but the show felt much less handcuffed than in the sullen Season 5. Most of the complaints I’ve heard about this season was it didn’t feel like Game of Thrones anymore with too much “fan service.” My interpretation of that complaint is there wasn’t enough pain and suffering for this to really be Game of Thrones. And sure. We finally got a number of things we wanted as an audience, which nearly never happened in any of the previous seasons. But by the same point, we’ve got to get moving to a resolution soon, right? So unless the end of the series is going to be that we lose every character we’ve invested in and care about, something has to start going right. And the way they are executing on that is just exciting and fun to watch. And honestly, even though those things did happen, we still managed to lose a fair number of well-liked characters this year, so it wasn’t all coming up roses, either! (Roses? See what I did there?)

While the typical big battle Episode 9 was awe-inspiring, if a bit trite and predictable structure-wise, the finale was one of the best episodes ever. I still listen to the gorgeous music from the haunting and jaw-dropping opening scene. And the way they moved all the pieces around in surprising ways, and left us anticipating what will come next season more than the series ever has before… gives the show a unique and hopeful place in my TV dreams for 2017. Go Dany Go!

 

07_youretheworst

This show feels the least authentic when it’s Jimmy being an asshole to Edgar. Based on all his character arcs to this point, dipping into that well again and again feels cheap and dishonest. Now that the negatives are out of the way: Edgar’s storyline was fantastic this season. (Did I mention I ❤ Edgar?) We finally got a well-deserved full episode focusing on him and the topical issues he has to deal with with the PTSD and VA struggles. A very moving and thoughtful examination of his character at the level of Gretchen’s depression in Season 2. On that note, I was happy they chose to follow her trying to deal with that, but it was also frustrating how terrible her therapist was. Lindsay is still the worst, though they really pushed how far we would still go along her shit this season. And while there was a bit of less compelling moves in the Jimmy and Gretchen relationship, I loved their drama in the last arc of the season, followed by the biggest oh shit cliffhanger. Talk about an emotional roller-coaster. And while it wasn’t popular, I got a kick out of the Vernon/Paul bonding episode. They have such a strange but compelling chemistry. Oh, and his podcast!!! Fantastic.

 

06_crazyexgirlfriend

When hearing the title for the first time, or seeing the ironically girly marketing material for Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, you might not expect that the creators would cite Breaking Bad as their top influence when making the show. Described by Rachel Bloom as a “bubbly Walter White,” you can quickly see the parallels in this slightly delusional, self-centered female anti-hero: a character like we’ve never seen before on TV. When we meet her, Rebecca Bunch has unrealistic dreams about where her life should be, finds her self unsatisfied in her mundane and unexciting existence, and makes a rash decision to reclaim some youthful ideal of happiness.

Rebecca’s lack of self-awareness can be painful to watch, as it often was with Walter White. In the first half of Season 1, the show really basked in the awkwardness of her obsessively shoehorning herself into the life of Josh Chan, without admitting to herself or her friends that that’s what she was doing. On top of some freshman season issues with direction and pacing, this kept a truly innovative, at times hilarious, musical comedy from being as strong and consistent and enjoyable to watch as the Top 20.

2016, however, saw the show elevated to another level. Rebecca became a bit more hilariously awkward instead of painfully awkward. The songs, which took a bit of a dip at the end of Season 1, were high in both musicality and humor in Season 2. But most importantly, the cast of supporting characters was fleshed out and allowed to carry some of the dramatic and comedic weight. Where Rebecca’s misadventures in romance cast a cynical eye on “true love,” we are given a sincere, adorable, and unexpected couple that was an immediate hit among the show’s rabid fan base.

Rachel Bloom has an amazing knack for layering interesting complexity in characters that seem at the outset like they are two-dimensional or throwaways. Just when you think “aw, I’ve seen this plot device before”, as the opening sequence suggests, it turns out to be a lot more nuanced than that. She has a way of playing with the viewer’s expectations, kind of teasing you because she knows what you think you want as an audience member, and then she will pull the rug out and show you why maybe that thing isn’t good for anyone, and might not be as satisfying as you thought.

Similarly, she plays with the idea time and again of the characters as people challenging those things that seem like the “most important” things to them at any moment, and trying to take stock of the things you have, and what are going to be the things most helpful to pushing you forward, which all of our characters deal with in different ways. It’s a show that is very psychologically smart, and defiantly uses the term “crazy” to really discourage such easy pigeon-holing and encourage examination of what drives people to make whatever choices they do, even if those choices are sometimes unhealthy for them in the long run.

I’ll close by saying I found out literally an hour ago the show was renewed for a third season, which is super-exciting, especially considering that no one watches it! Well, most of my friends do, I meant more on a macro scale. If you’re not, you should be.

 

05_theamericans

Well, this was the season (Season 4) I felt The Americans grew into the praise it had been getting for years. I’ve always felt the “spy” stuff was the least compelling stuff on the show, and this year they really did a great job of letting the characters be front and center. There weren’t a huge number of twists and turns, but they really lingered on the emotional consequences of each one to an almost uncomfortable degree. But especially this season, it’s that “consequences” piece that sets The Americans apart from other “spy” shows. (As you can tell, I am hesitant to call this a spy show, even though they are spies, and they do “spy things.”) But character deaths on The Americans are very rare, and are felt deeply, and not used purely for shock value and then discarded. A lot of screen time was dedicated to the potential exposure of one of their long-term “assets”, and a lesser show would have taken the easy way out and just had them killed off in a “shocking” way. But this show recognizes that our characters were human beings, and aren’t cavalier about throwing those they’ve tricked to the wolves, or won’t potentially be affected themselves by a long-term relationship, even if it is based on lies. The respect the show has for the humanity of all its characters, and not treating them simply as chess pieces in a political game with casualties, has really impressed me.

 

04_fleabag

My only issue in rating this show so highly is that its peers at the top generally had more content. The six half-hour episodes basically constituted the equivalent of a long movie. But it was a strikingly unique, dark, quirky, self-aware, heartbreaking, and hopeful six episodes. It’s fairly unusual for me to be drawn in so quickly and dramatically as I was by this show’s distinctive voice and personality. The device of having the main character talking directly to the character had a similar effect as that of Frank Underwood in House of Cards, in allowing us to connect more personally to a character who was often dishonest, and rough around the edges. But in Fleabag, they are more capable at mining the device for laughs, as she bounces back and forth with effortless comic timing between internal and external voices, pointing out the ridiculousness of people and situations. I’m sure there was some influence from the long-running British show Peep Show, which also masterfully used the often conflicting inner monologue that let the audience know about the awful things the character was thinking as they were trying to seem like a normal human being. The device does pull back a bit after the first episode, in which it is used heavily to back-handedly introduce us to her world and characters. But the arc of the season is dramatically strong, and we get a strong mix of great comedic moments and extremely powerful and raw character beats.

 

03_bojackhorseman

I was a bit nervous going into the third season of BoJack Horseman. I felt like the first couple seasons had juiced the characters and relationships beautifully, but right up to the point where I felt like it had repeated itself once or twice. They were still powerful moments, but it was a warning sign that maybe they had said all they really had to say with this character. Also, shows can sometimes get in their own heads too much after finally being noticed, like BoJack was after its groundbreaking second season. They can try to do exactly the same thing that made people like it previously, or sometimes go the other route, and try too hard to do something completely different that doesn’t really fit the show. BoJack ain’t those shows.

Season 3, while not perfect, had maybe an even more stellar follow-up to its previous stellar season. A few episodes in the middle felt a little wheel-spinny, but those were offset by a different few episodes that were as near perfection as they come. BoJack, unlike any other show in recent memory, masterfully interweaves quick, razor-sharp, laugh-out-loud comedy with deep, sincere, introspective character beats. While it is tempting to say none of the characters really change, I think they do, albeit slowly, and maybe not exactly in the direction they are trying to. In fact, that change is a favorite theme of the show, at times explicitly, and there is much debate between the characters whether such change is possible.

Finally, on top of those ingredients, which existed in Season 2, but were refined and given even stronger life in Season 3, what I thought really made BoJack stand apart this season was its greater ambition in experimenting with structure and storytelling format. This is where it felt the most to me like Community at its peak, where certain episodes felt completely different than the episode before it, and the stylistic choices were not just stunts, but chosen for a reason that fit where the characters were, or were trying to speak to a message or a theme in a different way. This season really scratched that same itch as a Community in a lot of obvious ways: Community had a sort of surreal, absurdist, and somewhat cynical vibe, following characters who had all kind of failed in one way or another to get where they were, and struggle to redefine themselves. It would also weave back and forth between over-the-top hijinks, densely constructed visual gags and easter eggs, and grounded character moments.

What I admire about both is as crazy and usually hilarious as the comedy could be, it would always be there to serve the characters first. If you didn’t buy into their hopes and fears and flaws and desire to change, then none of it would work. Community was never really as dark as BoJack, however. You can sometimes get whiplash from how quickly you go from complete despair to maybe the funniest animal/celebrity pun you’ll hear all year. It’s this strong dichotomy and unpredictability and experimentation into topics that you really don’t see explored too much on even the more serious dramas that make BoJack Horseman completely unlike any other show before it. Oh, it’s also a cartoon.

 

02_haltandcatchfire

After a somewhat aimless beginning in Season 1, this gem of a show has only continued to get better and better. While the backdrop of the tech industry in the 80’s serves as a useful framework and art direction, it’s the development of our core characters, their relationships, and their ideas, and how all of that evolves that make this show riveting, fascinating, and heartbreaking. One of the most potent scenes for me was one where they had very clearly and strongly established the points of view of a number of characters we cared about; their motivations were known, and we could easily see each of their points of view, none were clearly wrong, but their ideas conflicted. The argument was raw, painful, but inevitable. On paper it would have sounded like a dull board room meeting, but it was masterfully constructed, with no contrivance, just good people you desperately wanted to make things work, but knew just couldn’t. It was easily the most tragic moment for me on TV this year, but just highlighted a season full of meaty character moments, happy reunions, painful misunderstandings, and a whole host of other drama that can go along with trying to create something alongside the people you care most about. I am more than thrilled that it’s been given a fourth and final season to wrap things up.

 

01_rectify

This one probably won’t come as a surprise to anyone who knows me. Pretty sure I’ve raved into the ear of nearly everyone who would listen to me about the beauty that was Rectify this year. Not since Breaking Bad has my choice for #1 been so easy.

Now, I know some of you who haven’t seen either may be tempted to confuse it with the other “-tify” show, Justified. While yes, they do have similar titles, they couldn’t be more different. Justified takes place in Kentucky; Rectify, Georgia. Justified’s protagonist is a charming, intelligent southern man who’s had some misunderstandings with the law; Rectify’s Daniel Holden… well, those things, but doesn’t wear a hat. While Justified has a strong over-arching plot, its main draw is the whip-smart dialogue and comedic timing; Rectify has nearly no shootouts. Justified was the first show in my memory to go out on its own terms, and finish with its strongest season; Rectify was the second.

Okay, fine, I appreciate your patience in going through that little game with me. There are definite parallels that can be made between the two. But Rectify definitely had a very different voice, style, and message. It was certainly much smaller in scale. It was mainly about how a family copes with a major traumatic event: how to coexist with a town that looks down or feels sorry for you, the unseen strain it can place in the relationships. And most importantly how to heal, whether its finding spirituality, putting your faith in others, or just asking for help.

I wasn’t sure how they show would go on this season after where they left us last year. But I think Daniel’s new setting worked amazingly well, both from a character and narrative perspective. There was a lot of empathy and an almost The Wire-level exploration of well-meaning people who were trying to get their life back on track. And Daniel’s exasperation with feeling apart from everyone else led to one of the most moving and emotional scenes on the show, and acted as a climactic point in his character arc, and one told just so vividly and believably.

I also liked how this season was almost an 8-episode denouement. It allowed space for all the characters we’d grown to care about really come to terms with their new lives. Some things worked out superficially better than others, but every character had an arc, and found a way to find some measure of peace in their lives. While Season 3 really did much of the heavy lifting plot-wise, Season 4 was able to close out the story in a satisfying way that didn’t feel like it had a big bow on it.

Rectify is a show that has never been afraid to take its time. It won’t plow through plot points like a Justified. It will sit with the pain or the love or the tension its characters are feeling. But somehow it never drags. It is beautifully shot. The music is sparse, but extremely moving and affecting when that’s what the scene calls for. It masterfully weaves between sadness, relief, and hope, and will sneak attack you with a moment that will make you lose your shit laughing because it was so unexpected yet perfect for that moment.

It’s hard for me to explain the hope and joy I felt week after week for a show about a man who was released after 19 years on death row. It is such an unimaginable and heartbreaking situation, and sounds like a real bummer. And at times it can be sad, for sure. Maybe that’s what makes it such a great story, that someone who has been through that much, lost so much of their life, might actually find a way to be a full person again. I also give a lot of credit to Aden Young, who gives such a weighty and measured performance, and really makes us care, and feel his disorientation from being back in the world. He finds the perfect balance of gentle and weary, with a dry sense of humor, and just the slightest glint of danger. Our investment in Daniel as a person makes the trials and triumphs of his long journey were so compelling and meaningful, made us cringe, or laugh, or cry with joy.

The four season journey came to a marvelously watchable end last year, and that why it’s my unreserved pick for top show of 2016.

 

2016 TV Rankings – 11 to 20

Fun fact: 11 of last year’s Top 20 Shows aired zero* episodes this year. That thinned out a real strong herd of TV, and to be frank, left us with fewer great shows this year. While this is still a strong group, they aren’t at the same level as last year, where I had a legitimately had a hard time narrowing a huge field to only 20.

*The Affair aired only the first 5 episodes of Season 3 this year, so I decided to push that season as a whole into 2017.

 

20_catastrophe

Fun twist to start Season 2, then we’re thrown right back into the same witty banter covering up the craziness of their lives. No other show can navigate so deftly between holy-shit real and stressful situations and sarcastic tomfoolery than Catastrophe. The attempts to give interesting (yet brief) storylines to some of the supporting cast felt a bit trite and uninspired, but they still added laughs where needed.

 

19_broadcity

While the main appeal of Broad City is still the frenetic energy of the insane misadventures of a couple of young New York ladies, Season 3 tried to venture out a bit more from Abbi and Ilana’s comfort zone to challenge them in new ways. We got to explore Abbi’s past a bit (Tony Danza!!), and Ilana for the first time (in the show) had to deal with relationships she had kind of taken for granted start to break away. While the shenanigans and over-the-top social commentary continued to break ground creatively and have me rolling on the floor, both actresses/writers managed to bring more depth and a wider range of emotion sprinkled through the season, resulting in what I thought was the best season yet. Kudos.

 

18_preacher

Not since American Horror Story have I seen a show so unapologetically wild and insane. Not all of it worked, but even when it didn’t I applauded the effort. Dark, engrossing, and often hilarious, Preacher has a unqiue tone and style which combines sci-fi and pulp. There’s not a lot of optimism to be found, but it’s a hell of a fun ride, especially thanks to Joseph Gilgun (Misfits) as the extremely likable and charismatic vampire sidekick.

 

17_casual

Casual Season 2 built on the fairly dull base it had constructed last year, and really started digging into the characters in new and interesting ways. The main characters started spending more time outside of their weird family unit and finding fresh storylines to take part in on their own. Alex got to do more than sit around and whine. (He got to go out, make stupid decisions, THEN go home and whine.) Val also got to get out of her shell and have some actual fun for herself. The season really had a nice progression to it, finally finishing with its best episode yet, a delightfully dark and hilarious episode that brought the whole family back together in a wholly unexpected way.

 

16_ojmadeinamerica

A really fascinating documentary about not only the intricacies of the trial and media circus around it, but of the man, and the trajectory that led him to do what he (most likely) did. It also does a fantastic job of weaving in what was going on in the black community and comparing and contrasting to OJ’s life, and finally to where we were as a society when the trial starts. The episode about his Vegas shenanigans after the trial was a bit messier, and could’ve done a better job at painting a picture (as it did so well in the first 4 eps), but overall it was an extremely tight, compelling, and illuminating piece of television.

 

15_strangerthings

Half of the appeal of this highly addictive series is the totally spot-on 80’s movie vibe of the whole project. Not only are the hair and makeup and costumes and props perfectly designed, but the camera style, credits, music, direction, all recreate with startling authenticity delightfully retro 80’s scifi flicks. The special effects are obviously CGI elements, but are seamlessly integrated in the same style, so you could with some stretch of the imagination believe they were physical effects. While the painstaking detail of the homage shows a lot of love for that specific time and genre, a lot of the tropes from that period are established and subverted. Characters who seem like the same two-dimensional caricatures we’ve seen a hundred times take a sharp turn and become something else. The nagging mom who just “doesn’t get it” is actually really good at listening and being there for her kids. Throw on top of that just a lot of fun and fast-paced sci-fi storytelling with maddeningly irresistible cliffhangers, and a nearly flawless cast, and I’ve got one of the most entertaining (if somewhat fleeting) TV experiences of the year. Watch it.

 

14_agentcarter

While the first season showed stretches of promise, and was maybe a bit heavy-handed with its feminist presence, season 2 let Peggy just let her awesomeness be the message. Gone are the cartoony macho Mad Men-esque co-workers, and in their place are characters with their own interests and agendas, which rings a lot more believable and compelling. On top of that, the two scary villains were both women and also great. This season’s arc felt tighter and more interesting, and the ensemble really clicked in a way it didn’t quite last year, surrounding a very strong lead. The only quibble I had was the fairly anticlimactic resolution to the season arc, but for me that didn’t take much away from a very enjoyable season, with an incredible and unexpected musical number.

 

13_thenightmanager

Combining the kind of slow-burn tension of a Breaking Bad with the wit and charisma of Tom Hiddleston, and you have an extremely compelling British spy drama. Throw in a layered villain performance from Hugh Laurie, and a brilliant Olivia Colman as a very capable and pregnant investigator and handler, and you’ve got a very unique TV experience. If they had been able to maintain the kind of subtle tension and character interactions from the first 4 eps through to the end, it may well have ended up in my top 3 this year, but a couple missteps made it a little more generic than I was initially hoping for. Hugh Laurie began twirling his mustache, and Tommy Hidds (as I call him), starting making silly mistakes, and a seemingly interesting character ended up not much more than a typical Bond girl. But even in the slightly disappointing final episodes, there were still some genuine thrills, holy-shit moments, and emotional rides I enjoyed taking. It just didn’t quite live up to the promises it had made.

 

12_thenightof

How to describe The Night Of? The double-sized premiere and double-sized finale were fantastic, and then they stuffed 6 half-baked episodes in the middle. Oversimplified a bit, but that’s certainly what you’d see in my episode ratings. The opening 2 hours was a dark, compelling journey of a Pakistani-American college student from a working class family on an adventure filled with so much tension and foreboding, but also hope and optimism. Obviously, it doesn’t go well, and then it becomes a deep dive into the seemingly boring minutia of the criminal justice system, a la The Wire. Enter the heroic but laughed at public defender, played marvelously by John Turturro. His character was the one constant draw through a less subtle parade through prison cliches and legal maneuvering that bogged down the middle episodes. I have no idea why Turturro’s character’s battle with eczema was one of the more compelling storylines through that middle arc, but it felt inspired. And the finale managed to really kick the show back in gear and pull together a satisfying ending, even if they kind of did a disservice to one of the more interesting and seemingly capable characters in the process, in order to service the plot. (I docked it a couple points for that, FYI.) Certainly worth a binge, where the middle chapters won’t feel as drawn out as they did week-by-week.

 

searchparty3b

Veronica Mars meets Girls? Ugh, I hate it when people do that. But it’s close. Four millennials, led by Alia Shawkat (Arrested Development) try to find an acquaintance of theirs from college who has gone missing in New York City. It’s one part private detective story, one part character study (what is missing in Dory’s life that makes her so invested in this?), one part comedy (her friends are self-involved millennial types.) A very unique blend of styles, sometimes cringe-worthy, sometimes super intense. And Alia is quite impressive in this complex role. Top it off with an intense and shocking finale, and it was one of the bright surprises of the year.

2016 TV Rankings – 21 to 40

Alrighty, finally, here’s the next batch of shows. Maybe not quite the “cream” of the crop, but maybe more like the… almond milk? I’ll leave it to the philosophers.

40  Last Week Tonight with John Oliver 3  80.5

39  Lady Dynamite  80.7

Another show I appreciated more than I enjoyed. I thought the pilot was delightfully strange and meta, taking cues from surrealist shows like Childrens Hospital, while also having a frank conversation about serious issues like mental illness. Unfortunately, I felt like the formula got stale pretty quickly, and the jokes weren’t breaking out of an already set pattern. It felt like one strong flash of inspiration dragged out over 12 episodes. That said, I did appreciate how the finale tied up a lot of the plot and thematic threads she had established, and made it feel like a whole piece. It was just too long.

38  You, Me and the Apocalypse  80.9

What an unusual fusion of Britain and America. Not only in the cast, but in the distinct styles that seemed to work together in weird and outrageous ways. It also combined wacky, off-the-wall comedy with very dark comedy with really moving dramatic beats as well. Occasionally the pacing felt a bit off, or rushed, like with the quick flash forwards that began each episode, but I can honestly say I’ve not seen anything like it. I also give it strong points for a really satisfying finale that brought together all the disparate threads that spanned the globe and seemed at first to have no connection, and finishing it with an episode with tension, and action, and heartbreak, and a ginormous cliff-hanger. I hope they eventually make a second season? Eh, even if they don’t, it was a fun ride.

37  The Hunt  81.0

If you loved Planet Earth, you’ll like The Hunt. There aren’t as many holy shit moments, but they’re there. Some of the bits felt like cutting room retrieval, but still interesting enough. Though definitely watch it on streaming or Bluray or something less compressed than my Comcast recordings. Thousands of birds look a little too boxey at that bitrate.

36  Atlanta  81.1

I really liked the style and unique voice that Donald Glover presented in Atlanta. He gives us a fleshed out and sympathetic glimpse of the people and struggles of a community, injected with his own brand of great comedy. Like Louie did for years, Donald also plays with the style and structure of his story, giving us an episode entirely focused on Vanessa, the mother of their child, or an episode that played like a talk show on a BET parody network. And while I really loved the experimentation, it was really that latter episode that soured my excitement for this show. After establishing a grounded, nuanced world that was sympathetic even to the weirdos, that episode felt shallow and mean-spirited. While the fake commercials were cute, the episode was basically a tirade against the PC police. One second they are presenting a caricaturized overly-sensitive feminazi, spouting hot words like microaggressions with little context, then coming around to the idea that it’s kind of okay to belittle a group if you don’t understand them. The worst was a straw man piece pointing out how ridiculous it would be if a black person “identified” as being white. The whole episode just felt completely tone-deaf and out of place inside this otherwise thoughtful show.

35  iZombie 2  81.3

Strong back half to the second season. Unfortunately no Season 3 this year. While they made things overly complicated with all sorts of zombie-to-human transitioning, they really ramped up the story arc in fun and exciting ways. The morality on this show is sometimes confusing/troubling. Sometimes it seems okay to kill/abduct/do whatever to nameless zombies when it’s convenient for the plot, but we are also supposed to see our main character as a full-fledged human. You gotta pick a lane, guys. If Liv’s human, you’re murdering people.

In conclusion: Ken Marino.

34  The Grinder  81.5

Sadly that was it. Only one season. The back half wasn’t quite as consistently funny as last year’s, but it still had plenty of brilliant moments. They wisely chose to play around a bit with the formula established in the pilot. Rob Lowe’s character doesn’t stay delusional about his skills as a lawyer, but finds other things to be delusional about instead. Sometimes that worked smoothly, other times not as much. The extended amount of screen time for rival Timothy Olyphant (Justified) playing a wacky version of himself was delightful, and almost made the lack of Justified more bearable.

33  Girls 5  81.7

Girls on the comeback! Now with less infuriating self-delusion! Seriously though, one of the best seasons yet, with some long-awaited character growth. Shoshannah in Japan was also a highlight.

32  Pitch  81.8

Alright, so I don’t know if I would QUITE categorize this show as a “guilty pleasure,” but for sure I wouldn’t get half the fun out of it as I do if I were not such a big baseball fan. The show is full of shout-outs and baseball fan service, and it’s cool to see a fictionalized world behind the scenes in the baseball universe. It’s also a strange mashup of real and fake universe. Some real baseball players exist on their real teams, and many others don’t. You get to see Salvador Perez launch a homer off of our main character’s slider, but all the Los Angeles Dodgers are fictional people.

Into the actual meat, though: This show can be real, emotional, heart-breaking, but also boring and infuriating. I was of course instantly intrigued just by the premise: a female pitcher works her way into the male-dominated Major Leagues, and has to deal with breaking into in the boys club. And the pilot did a very quick but enjoyable surface-level exploration of that, giving our main characters some basic arcs to resolve. But it got into much more interesting and unpredictable territory as the show went on, as the scenario plays out with all the potential ramifications of such a world-bending event taking place. On top of the really strong “what if” game they play, Ginny Baker is a great character played by an impressive breakout actress (Kylie Bunbury), and adds a lot of investment into what she’s going through.

Then there’s Zack Morris– er, sorry, Mike Lawson, played by Mark-Paul Gosselaar. As much as I’ve really hoped for his adulthood to mature him into a strong actor, he just doesn’t have much in the way of range. Instead of his child-like adorable arrogance in his early years, he spends his time sinking into his inability to emote with a gruff, bearded, mumbling acting style. Which works for much of the series, as it fits with the character’s tough exterior, but sometimes he needs to be sad, or inspirational, and then the whole illusion falls apart.

Okay, enough on his acting. He’s actually kind of a cool character. He’s a catcher in his waning days. He’s got ailing knees, as happens to many catchers in their later years. But he’s a strong leadership presence who still has a pretty live bat, so he’s valued, but lives in constant fear of that career-ending injury. And at first, he’s skeptical of this cocky girl who thinks she can make it against Major League hitters, but surprise surprise, he comes around and becomes a friend and mentor. It was a great partnership with a lot of sweet moments. No way this network show would bastardize that relationship and turn it into a will-they-won’t-they shitshow, right?

*watches winter finale*

Fuck you, Fox.

31  UnREAL 2  81.8

Oof. I’m sad I didn’t watch the first season last year so it could get a nice high ranking while it deserved it. Season 1 was a perfect mix of dark comedy and character study. Season 2 decided to tackle race in a naive and heavy-handed way, insulted the intelligence of our main character by having her become romantically involved with a weasely co-worker again, and threw in a hastily executed double-homicide as well. I rarely use the term “jump the shark”, but this certainly went in that direction pretty quickly. That said, there were actually a few standout episodes where they focused on Rachel’s issues quite intelligently and effectively, and that kept it out of the basement for me. But I hope they can even it out better next season, even without co-creator Marti Noxon (Buffy, Angel), who may have been the glue holding this thing together.

30  The OA  81.9

I don’t think I can really get into my thoughts on this show in a useful way without talking about the ending, or specific plot points. I’ll just say it is understandably controversial, and not easily digested. It may require a re-watch to really get my thoughts on it in order. But it had many touching moments, was very moving and spiritual and thought-provoking. You may hate it or maybe you’ll love it. Not sure.

29  The Last Man on Earth 2/3  81.9

As it did last year, The Last Man on Earth continues to re-invent itself over and over again. Still one of the weirdest shows on TV (probably the weirdest one on network TV). The Season 3 premiere had one of the most brilliant cameos in TV history. I almost coughed up a lung. The show definitely has that “auteur” feel, as some episodes are great, and other miss the mark. But it has a singular voice, and I appreciate the unique vision for yet another year.

28  Veep 5  82.2

The character of Richard was a revelation. Adds a brand new element to the chemical formula of the show and makes it twice as… potent? Insert better chemistry analogy here. Solidly funny season, with the highlight being the dark episode “Mother” where Selina has to deal with the politics of a dying mother. Just fantastic.

27  The Good Place  82.8

The one question I had after a really solid and charming pilot was: “How is this going to sustain itself as a show?” Well, don’t worry– unlike your typical network comedy, they were not concerned with keeping the status quo and giving the undiscerning viewer the exact same experience every week. The characters and situations evolve in interesting and often hilarious ways. Kristen Bell is a great choice as adorably wicked, but trying to reform, Eleanor. Hearing her fake-swear (you can’t actually swear in heaven, a handy device for a network show) with her unique attitude brings continuous gigglies. The supporting cast is strong as well: Chidi (William Jackson Harper) as a former ethics professor who has to lie to protect his not-really-soulmate has a delightful and tortured earnestness. And Janet is an anthropomorphized Siri who cheerily responds to any question, even if the answer is awful. She also goes through some shit. The final arc of the first half blows everything up and gives us a fantastically cast guest arc from Adam Scott (Parks and Recreation).

26  Orphan Black 4  82.8

I’m glad next season will be its last… I think the stories have reached their natural shelf life. I was glad of fewer “bake-off” type suburban storylines this season, but the show still kinda drowns in too many players with not enough clarity in motivation. That said, the season ended with a more straight-forward antagonist, with at least some stated principle for their actions, so maybe there will be a more consistent vision down the stretch. This season was also hurt by reduced Helena screen time, who is probably at least half of what I enjoy about the show. She did eventually re-enter with a vengeance, so it wasn’t all bad.

25  The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story  82.9

As someone who was old enough to absorb the OJ events on a very surface level, but too young to really get it, this was a particularly fascinating look at the trial, and all the players involved. I thought they did a particularly good job of framing the whole ordeal against the context of the growing racial unrest, the media’s lust for sensational, juicy headlines, and the public scrutiny the prosecution was getting that they just weren’t prepared for. I thought Sarah Paulson’s sympathetic portrayal of then-despised Marcia Clark was very strong and moving. The show was best when it gave us the human perspective, and slightly less so when it focused on the machinations of the justice system.

24  Baskets  83.2

Certainly not everyone’s cup of tea, but I found Zach Galifianakis’s oddball dramedy mesmerizing and unexpectedly touching. The characters are certainly very tough to latch onto. Zach’s Chip Baskets is mean and off-putting, and self-delusional to a point that would make Rebecca Bunch envious. But over the course of the season he gains a bit of sympathy as he deals with even-worse twin brother Dale, or overly zealous mother, played with full sincerity by a quite excellent Louie Anderson. I found my viewing experience of this very similar to that of the first season of The Leftovers: Like that show, Episode 9 serves as a flashback episode that puts the character and situations from the previous episodes into a much clearer context. For Baskets, it was an extremely moving and heartfelt episode that was one of the best half-hours on TV this year.

23  Mr. Robot 2  83.3

As one who was somewhat skeptical and disillusioned by Season 1’s smoke and mirrors, I’m a little surprised by the outrage over this season’s continued smoke and mirrors. Yet another “super-clever” twist we didn’t see coming, but did it really add anything? The finale was a bit of a letdown, I suppose, but I had very little in the way of expectations, since conventional story-telling was not the name of the game this season, to understate. So while a consistent story thread was lacking, what we did get were a bunch of tiny stories, with varied levels of success. What the hell even happened with Angela this season? Based on her confused expression in 80% of her scenes, maybe she doesn’t even know? I mean seriously, I’m pretty confident the ratio of her time on screen with a doe-eyed stare (and no one else talking) to her time with lines was at least 5:1. I don’t know if this was a direction thing, or an acting thing, but I was getting no subtext from the staring. It was just staring. And it was a lot of wasted time. Two bright spots this season: Leon, Elliot’s sometimes lunch buddy, who has many thoughts on the themes of Seinfeld, and is happy to do all the talking while Elliot looks on confused. And FBI Agent Dom, the latest in a growing trend of characters that give a nuanced and sympathetic portrayal of anxiety and depression (See: You’re the Worst, Crazy Ex-Girlfriend). I really liked how strong and unflappable she was at her job, but just had a lot of trouble keeping it together when she went home. Her conversation with her Echo was one of my favorite scenes on TV this year. So, this season was highly uneven, brilliant at times, really frustrating at others. At times it felt like a bunch of different shows all jammed together in some soup that wasn’t stirred at all. So I have to give it a ranking that splits the difference.

22  Better Things  83.3

A very charming, funny, and real show about being a single mom, in a similar style and feel to the better seasons of Louie. This is no coincidence, of course, as Pamela Adlon (the show’s main character) and Louie CK are head writers on both shows. If I had to nail down the characteristics that set this show apart, it would probably be that it has a more grounded and adult feel. Louie has a bit of a tendency to wax poetic about being a ridiculous man-child, or dream-like sequences where he fantasizes about leaving everything and running away. Pamela focuses more directly and consistently about how ridiculously difficult and punishing being a parent can be. It will sit in that a lot of the time, then bask in the little moments where everything somehow goes right, or somehow she is able to connect with her teenage daughter in a way she hadn’t before. It’s these moments… that are the better things. (Nailed it.)

21  Better Call Saul 2  83.4

Better Call Saul is unconventional in many ways. In different ways than its predecessor, but not necessarily worse. Most obvious is the quite lower level of tension and stakes in the drama presented. Yes, at some point Jimmy becomes Saul and becomes a criminal lawyer. But the path there is fairly subtle and indirect. What about Jimmy resists doing things by the book? Why does his brother resent him so much, and is it that resentment that drives him to rebel? This relationship is really at the core of the show, and it is not afraid to take its time (a lot of time in some cases) playing out those scenes. But what sometimes makes the show feel a bit disjointed is that the Mike stories (and to a lesser extent the Kim stories) rarely connect with the other threads, and it’s like we’re watching two different shows. There are thematic ties, sure, but they aren’t clear enough to me to make the show feel like a whole. That said, I thought Kim really shone when we were given more time with her, and the end of the season arc with Jimmy and Charlie was gripping and extremely well played and directed. A lot of the rest of it was appreciated more than enjoyed.

Other Stuff

(In parentheses: 2015 Ranking)

Continuing series that were on my 2015 list that didn’t air any episodes this year

  • The Leftovers (1)
  • Jessica Jones (3)
  • Rick and Morty (6)
  • Fargo (8)
  • Homeland (24)
  • Louie (32)
  • Master of None (38)
  • Episodes (61)

Continuing series that were on my 2015 list but aired no season finales this year

  • The Affair (19)

Continuing series that aired only a winter special this year

  • Doctor Who (49)
  • Sherlock
  • Sense8 (56)

Continuing series that were on my 2015 list that I didn’t finish this year

  • Bob’s Burgers (46)
  • Agents of SHIELD (52)
  • The Mindy Project (55)
  • Another Period (60)

2016 TV Rankings – 41 to 69

It’s 2017. And that means… all the 2016 TV is over! Guess who watched (nearly) all of it? That’s right, ME!

Here are the 65 shows I watched this year, and how they ranked in order of awesomeness.

New this year: Ratings. Rankings were based on the 0-100 ratings I gave each show independently. These were loosely based on the episode ratings I’ve been making this year (708 of them!), with modifiers for peak episode and strength of ending. One thing that will be clear from this is there isn’t too much gap between #15 and #50. Most shows were good but flawed. Only a handful were great, and fewer still were bad. And now you can see it with colors!

**UPDATE 1/3/2017: Added 4 shows that fell through the cracks: House of Cards, Prey, Love, London Spy

69  Flaked  46.7
Was actually drawn in initially by Will Arnett’s character’s backstory, an alcoholic trying to get clean and make amends for running someone over while drunk. But the show didn’t know what to do with it, and made the character more misunderstood and a victim of circumstance rather than actually troubled. The twist toward the end was almost interesting, if telegraphed a bit too early, and then immediately undercut by Arnett’s ego. There is an air of unearned self-aggrandizement to the whole thing that just completely loses whatever wheels it may have had by the end. You can avoid this one.

68  The X-Files 10  56.0
Ugh, I really didn’t like it, and I really wanted to. I will admit, I was probably holding it to a high bar, especially coming off of re-watching much of the original show. But how can you not! They just seemed BORED! Or sleepy? The actors just didn’t seem to give a shit, the plots were vacuous and awful. They had a decent Darin Morgan episode that did have its moments, but mostly just made me want to watch the better Darin Morgan episodes. All in all, it was nice to see them again, but I wish there had been more than the couple moments I actually enjoyed.

67  The Big Bang Theory 9/10  60.2
See my review for last season, which still mostly applies. It honestly feels like there are these moments, outside of the control of the writers themselves, that for whatever reason, be it momentary inspiration from one of the actors, an especially caffeinated day from the director… but against all odds, these moments just work. And brilliantly. A couple of my biggest laughs this year were to this show. One moment almost brought me to tears. And the other 98% of the content hurt me and made me feel ugly. I’m almost interested in this as a human experiment, to see how much torture I will put myself through for the glimmer of hope for one of those moments. This show isn’t good.

66  It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia 11  62.0

65  The Expanse  66.0
Man, I was hoping for a new space show I could dig into. The Expanse isn’t that. It’s based on some novels I haven’t read. Its style was 100% ripped from Battlestar Galactica, from sets to cinematography to a mysterious unseen enemy launching an unprovoked attack on humanity. But its real crime is being boring. They do a dreadful job at explaining the overly complicated politics of this universe, and what they do explain isn’t interesting. I don’t like any of the characters, or have any attachment to them, because the dialogue is stiff and terrible. That said, they finally put some of the pieces together in the finale that had been held apart for WAAAY too long, and it looks like maybe things will start happening? I’ll give it a few episodes next season to see, but it’s got a short leash.

64  Inside Amy Schumer 4  67.1
Unfortunately, it seems like Amy is either running out of material, or shortchanged her show to make her movie. A lot of recycled ideas, including an actual clip show as the finale. A CLIP SHOW. In 2016. Something a 9-year-old can put on YouTube. In an age of streaming, how is this even a consideration?

63  Brooklyn Nine-Nine 3/4  68.5
There were a bunch of brutal stinkers this season, but also a few gems. The witness protection plotline went nowhere and slowly. Pimento was a great addition.

62  11.22.63  70.2
Many times over the course of the show, including at the very end, I would just ask, “Why?”

61  Togetherness 2  70.9
Yeah… that finale was stupid, and I kind of didn’t like any of the characters by then anyway.

60  Portlandia 6  71.1

**59  House of Cards 4  73.5
House of Cards works the best when Frank and Claire are teammates. The ending felt like a bit of a mess.

58  Childrens Hospital 7  74.0

57  Colony  74.5
What if the New Caprica arc on Battlestar Galactica was an entire series? And Sawyer from Lost was Ellen Tigh? And the lady from Prison Break was.. Anders, maybe? Anyway, yeah, this show basically poses the same moral conundrums as that part of BSG, but does it a lot slower. All hail the alien (maybe?) overlords!

**56  Prey  74.6
Engaging, if well-tread material. Loved that John Simm and Philip Glenister were the individual leads for the two seasons. Really wish I could’ve seen them yelling at each other for nostalgia’s sake. Second season was a bit more interesting to me.

55  Marvel’s Daredevil 2  75.0
Daredevil is at its best when it’s focused on the conflicts within Matt Murdock’s complicated life. When Frank Castle is working to convince him his life wouldn’t be so hard if he let go of his moral hangups and just kill the bad guys. When former lover Elektra pulls on him to stay out late chasing criminals in costume instead of preparing for an important case. Daredevil isn’t a flashy superhero with gadgets or a thunder hammer, so his strength is how much he really cares for and is a part of his community. It’s about his relationship with the Catholic Church, and reconciling that with what he does. It’s about long marathon single-shot fist fights where a masked man grows more exhausted with each punch and fall. Season 2 did not give us as many of these human moments as Season 1. I personally really missed Claire, who was a great ally who challenged and grounded Matt so many times in the first season. The romance plot it had did feel shoe-horned in, with no real chemistry or believability. The first conversation between Frank Castle, aka The Punisher, and Matt was much anticipated, since I knew the fundamental difference of opinion going in. But no real interesting ground ended up being tread. Neither side really made any good points, just spouted off some well-worn dogma. Then there was The Hand. Oh, The Hand. What was your motivation? Why so many similar ninja fights? I had no idea what anyone was fighting for at the end. Why was the Blacksmith plot even there? Could you have given Frank Castle an arc? I found myself strongly pulled into this show at times, but a lot of the time feeling disappointed, wishing the substance would match the style.

**54  Love  75.1

Couldn’t really get on board with a romance between two people I really didn’t like at all. Felt really artificial at many points. Bright spot was overly-cheery aussie Claudia O’Doherty, who was just delightful.

53  Man Seeking Woman 2  75.3
Unfortunately, Season 2 wasn’t nearly as inspired or hilarious as the first. This season did actually have TWO female-centric episodes, but both were about half as good as the one from S1.

52  New Girl 5/6  76.4
Basically the new normal for New Girl: Great banter that occasionally gets dragged down by dumb storylines. Give me 30 minutes of Nick and Schmidt just talking and I’m happy.

51  Kabaneri of the Iron Fortress  76.7
My fears came true in the end. The male character, who was whiny and lame, and in dire need of a heroic journey, got to be the hero in the final act, and the best character, who was a woman, ended up powerless against the villain, and in need of rescuing. Halfway through this series, I would have been up front singing its praises for its strong female protagonist, but it just fell on its ass in the second half. If that’s not enough, the interesting premise and story arc absolutely didn’t pay off either, as we got explosions and carnage without any good motivation or point to any of it. Not to mention a final minute unexplained deus ex machina that didn’t make sense, and you have a show with a ton of promise, but ended up being mostly a letdown. That said, there were some killer action scenes and unexpected twists throughout, a female protagonist who is very funny, strong, and has agency through the first 2/3 of the season, so I got a lot of enjoyment from watching it, even if I was let down by the end.

50  The Walking Dead 6/7  77.2
This is the first time in 6 seasons The Walking Dead has slipped out of the top 20. And man did it slip. I wonder how much of this year’s issues have been in trying to preserve the grand scale of the Negan storyline from the comics. Because the first half of the year was 8 episodes leading up to his introduction, and the second half was establishing him as the biggest asshole in the show’s history. Like throwing episodes at it would make him seem more important. But my reaction, and I think the reaction of other viewers (the ratings have dropped for the first time in the show’s history), is one of Negan fatigue. I get it. He’s the worst. The creators don’t need to bludgeon us over the head with it. (See what I did there?) And it’s also possible the strict 8-episode arc structure may lead to that too. It kinda makes sense from the macro level to have a clearly delineated arc for each of those stages in this story. But the problem is: there just isn’t that much story there! It’s stretched to within an inch of its life. And then this season they’ve tacked an extra 30 minutes onto FOUR of the episodes!! WUT? That behavior seems to imply they thought they had so much story it wouldn’t fit in the conventional schedule. Or maybe the network is like “this is our most profitable show. Fill up some more space between the ads, please, but we’ll still call it a regular 8 because a contract says it needs to be 8.” And of course, the one big event that was gratuitous and over the line, but necessary to do because the comics did it and we wouldn’t want the comic nerds to be mad. I’m hoping the show can course correct and find its way again. Because there were a few shining moments in the darkness this year, and I think they can be that again.

49  The Girlfriend Experience  77.2
Definitely appreciated this show more than enjoyed it. Interesting character study, even though she spends most of the time with a blank stare. But the dichotomy of her character: she hates being around people, so she turns to sex work, is fascinating. The finale was also fascinating in how brazenly un-finale it felt. It was almost determined to not touch any plot whatsoever but provide a thematic denouement instead.

48  Silicon Valley 3  78.4
Some of the plotlines this season were spot-on, others infuriating in the stupidity of seemingly rational decision-makers. Overall, I feel like the show is running out of steam.

47  Outcast  78.7
Really cool pilot and setup; uneven execution. Not enough of our protagonists actually working together as partners before they start acting like idiots. Chunky plotting and a very anti-climactic ending brought the show down a few notches.

**46  London Spy  78.7

I really liked a lot of this, but the ending felt so contrived.

45  HarmonQuest  79.3
This series was born out of the regular Dungeons & Dragons roleplaying campaign played on the Harmontown audio podcast. That campaign was a major draw for the podcast audience, with its instant rockstar dungeon master Spencer, plucked from the podcast’s live audience in its second aired episode. His drole, confident, dramatic, and deadpan stylings and detailed world-building were a huge hit with both audience and Harmon himself. Guest stars on the podcast would get guest characters in the elaborate campaign, and could play along with comedic and improv skills, while Spencer would handle all the intimidating rulebook and dice stuff. So the story would go delightfully off the rails with the strong personalities who took quite joyfully to the improvised characters. The show they started producing shortly after (so actually quite a while ago) has the same people, various guest stars, and later quite good animations layered over the audio. However, it also has much more of a “produced” feel which frankly sucks quite a bit of the magic out. There are very few tangents, quite numerous and often hilarious on the podcast, much less intoxication, much tighter editing out of things that might slow down the story or not fit neatly into a half-hour adventure. On the whole, however, the guests seemed to have fun and added a fresh flavor to each episode. The adventure was enough by-the-numbers to fit neatly into a ten-episode arc, with enough space for player choice to at least make it seem like their actions mattered. I think the ideal format would have been to extend the episode length by maybe ten minutes, and leave in ten minutes of the random questions and fumbling around that made it feel more natural and less polished.

44  Westworld  79.4
This may be the most controversial show I’ve ever had to rate. It’s certainly the show that the most people I know are watching, and there is a whole spectrum of opinions on it. Clearly, from my ranking, I wasn’t too keen on it. It’s probably the show I’ve thought the most about, partially because I’ve been prodded into many conversations about it, and asked to justify my lukewarm reaction to it. In short, it was an interesting show that evoked almost no emotional reaction from me at all. I didn’t care about any of the characters, and so I wasn’t invested in their stories. It was difficult to be invested in their stories, when you only got tiny pieces of them dispensed in unclear order, that only really came together in the final hour (mostly.) Did I appreciate the puzzle elements to the show? Sure, a bit. It was a bummer that the answers were unavoidable on the internet in the form of accurate fan theories, but they were also decently telegraphed, so it was clearly encouraged to work them out ahead of time. So their reveals not only felt anti-climactic, but also delivered with such a build-up and hoopla that my reaction every time was “yeah, okay… and?” The revelations never felt satisfying or really worth all the work to get there. They do connect to the larger story, but I don’t think in a significant enough way to justify the 9 hours of abstraction and story soup to get there. That said, there were finally some viscerally enjoyable bits to the final hour, and I am intrigued by what’s to come next season. Also, some really great acting, breathing more life into the characters than was on the page.

43  The Fall 3  79.7
Pretty strange final season. In some ways, felt superfluous, because very little further plot really needed resolving. It served more as a character study to help explain some of the actions and motivations we’d seen from the first two seasons. Almost like a full season’s worth of resolution. Probably overkill, but with some strong and emotional character beats.

42  Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt 2  80.1
Far more uneven than S1 for me. The increased presence of Lillian and her anti-gentrification plot was tedious. Each return of one of Kimmy’s bunker mates immediately sucked the life out of the show, because they didn’t have anything interesting to do with them, and they were just naive in a not funny way. Jacqueline’s native american backstory took more of a forefront this season, and while I’m not sure it deserves all the offensiveness outrage I’ve seen online, it mostly just wasn’t funny, and really just made her character kind of confusing. Are we supposed to find her “attempts” at reparations sympathetic, or hilariously misguided? They really just landed somewhere in the middle, making those scenes just fall flat. There were a handful of episodes (7-9) that were just brilliant both in humor and construction. Jacqueline’s rivalry with a fellow gold-digging alpha-mom looked at first like old hat, but that character was so deconstructed and unpredictable that their scenes together were sometimes amazing. Kimmy’s strongest character moments were when some of the cracks began to show in her bubbly personality, and Tina Fey’s turn as her night-drinking shrink was a clever and run way of digging into that. Finally, Joshua Jackson. That is all.

41  Black Mirror 3  80.4
Wildly uneven. Mostly more of the same this season, with two exceptions: “Hated in the Nation”, which felt more like an X-Files episode with a Black Mirror twist– and “San Junipero”, which felt like Black Mirror turned on its head. For my money, the best episode they’ve done yet.

Also, “Nosedive”, which heavily “borrowed” the main conceit from a much more interesting episode of Community. Come on, think up your own dystopian futures, Brooker.

Next time, we’ll hit up 21-40!


2015 TV Rankings – 1 to 10

So here we are. The final 10. These were my favorite shows.
In a lot of ways, this is a very personal list. One of the major criteria for my rankings is, did it make me feel something? Each of these top 10 either made me cry (well, tear up, men don’t cry… well, except for Justin Theroux, but he can get away with it), or made me spit out my Cool Ranch Dorito laughing so hard at least once, or made me go “OH SHIT NO YOU DIDN’T” and throw my remote at the face of Timothy Olyphant, ruggedly and handsomely framed on my 50″ Panasonic plasma. By definition these reactions are going to be subjective, and many of these shows might not make you feel anything at all. My hope is that many of these moments touch on common human experiences that might move other people as well, but who knows.
But as an amateur (very) critic, I am also looking for something that contributes something new to the cultural landscape. As someone who (as clearly evidenced) has watched an astronomical amount of TV, and also watched a few movies and read a few books, this is not only important for my nigh-professional blogger-self, and for culture as a whole, but also just because I get bored really easily. If I’ve seen this plot device on 10 other shows before, I’m out. So even the more detached, critical part is slightly intertwined with the emotional aspect, and therefore should be taken with the same grain of salt. What if you’ve never seen the movie they ripped off in that scene?
And my final criteria: HAIR! If I have to watch a character on the screen for 60 whole minutes, they better not be sporting a Rachel bob from the nineties. (Okay, not really, though I do notice some good hair, a la Boyd Crowder.)
All this is just to say, I hope people take what they want from my list. While I sometimes use some dismissive language with regards to the somewhat more “mainstream” shows, I don’t judge viewers of them. And while these 10 shows are the ones that moved me the most this year, they won’t be everyone’s cup of tea, and in fact, my own regard toward them may fluctuate from week to week. But for this particular week, they are the most exciting viewing memories I have from the past year. If they prompt you to try one show and enjoy it, I’ll be happy.
So without further ado, here are the 10 objectively best television programs of 2015:
(If you missed it, here is the previous installment.)

 

This show certainly came out of nowhere, but did not go unnoticed in its premiere season on USA. One of the most critically acclaimed shows of the year, Mr. Robot is understated, atmospheric, and places an emphasis on a realistic portrayal of hacker culture. It’s also one of a number of shows that delves in a sympathetic and unique way into the realm of mental illness, as our main character deals with anxiety, a drug problem, and other psychological symptoms. Their wink-to-the-camera “homage” of another work (that I leave intentionally vague to avoid spoilers) I didn’t fully buy into, partly because I didn’t like that other work, and partly because I didn’t feel like it served the story all that much. But a superbly crafted series with great direction and a compelling story.

Like Inside Amy Schumer, I also binged both seasons early this year, and felt that Season 2 carried on the momentum it had gained at the end of the first with a distinctive voice and great comic timing. The central relationship between Ilana and Abbi is funny, touching, and at times confusing (in a good way.) Hannibal Buress makes me crack up every time. The “pegging” episode was one of the most perfectly-crafted half-hours of comedy in recent memory.

 

My biggest gripe with Season 1 was that it didn’t stray far enough from the original source material and build its own identity. Season 2, which takes place 30 years earlier, manages to keep the same quirky/dark feel without relying on the same archetypes and story beats. In fact, it would’ve been difficult to make a show more distinctive and unique than Fargo Season 2. It took a number of established tropes of the original film and first season and even the genre as a whole, and twists them in all sorts of new and unusual ways. The bizarre but amazing deus ex machina toward the end of the season was completely out of left field and somehow completely appropriate. The finale was both touching and unexpected yet expected. Patrick Wilson made a fantastic young Keith Carradine. The cast was all pretty fantastic, but the highlight was a slightly delusional housewife searching for meaning, played by a wonderful Kirsten Dunst. I was turned off a bit by the mob war stuff, which did serve more as a backdrop putting things into motion for the more interesting characters, but still went on a bit too long for my taste.

 

While still nearly as funny as the first season, You’re the Worst pushed new storytelling ground and took some real risks this season, that really gave it more weight. I really don’t want to say too much more about it at risk of revealing too much. But we got to dig deeper into all of the characters and their particular brand of problems. It was good seeing Edgar break off and find something for himself, because he is the least worst of them all. Aya Cash was fantastic in a turn for Gretchen. Lindsay is the worst and the best. The most bold and daring comedy this year.

 

 

Not sure what profound things I can say about this season. All the strengths of Season 1 were taken to a new level in Season 2. Highly imaginative concepts, a pointed effort to avoid expected formula and shatter expectations. But in typical Harmon fashion, Rick and Morty never (well, hardly ever) does insane for insane’s sake. It’s always to serve the characters. The addition of big sister Summer (Spencer Grammer) to the majority of the galaxy-faring adventures was a welcome one, not only for a better gender balance, but also for adding a fun new perspective and story possibilities. But mostly, Season 2 was just freaking hilarious.

 

 

Hey, another show I didn’t watch in 2014, but made it onto the 2015 list! Season 1 floundered quite a bit figuring out what direction it wanted to go in, but the last three episodes of that season were quite good, making me optimistic for a strong season 2. It was even better that I could have… optimisted? Season 2 flipped the script, and made it about the women. The nerd boy fantasy girl and the nagging housewife from Season 1 were now running the show, and we follow them running a startup tech company. Kerri Bishé, who I don’t think was even in the opening credits for Season 1, was now arguably the main character, and crushed it (to borrow a term I kinda loathe). The two male “entrepreneurs” from Season 1 went on a journey to discover their place in a world that turns out, didn’t really need them. I’m oversimplifying a tad; they still had plenty of screen time, but the challenges that the characters faced this season were substantially more compelling, and had me totally bought in all season long. Best feminist computer series in recent memory.

Well, in what turned out to be the final season, Defiance went out on an exceptionally strong note. The ramifications of the end of Season 2 were largely emotional ones, that added great new and interesting conflict between Nolan and Irisa. In addition, we’re given the best villain on the series to date, who raises the stakes by offing some people I’d been hoping would get offed for a while. His arrival also sets into motion some fantastic morally questionable choices by everyone’s favorite morally questionable Tarr family, and ultimately one of the best-constructed hours of TV. Basically, this season, the chaff was cut, and the strongest characters and actors were given great conflicts to deal with, resulting in some really really good scenes and moments and episodes. And while I would’ve liked to see what was next, it ended in a way that was pretty satisfying.

Speaking of feminist shows in nerd genres… Jessica Jones is the cursing, drinking, screwing P.I. that would make Jack Nicholson in Chinatown envious. I really really don’t want to say too much here, because part of the joy for me of the series was knowing next to nothing about the characters going in. The first episode feels like a straight detective show with a few odd things going on, and you try to put together the clues as it slow burns over the first 6 or 7 episodes before you understand the full history of it all. So, I’ll just say, trust me, this is not the Marvel superhero show you’re used to. And David Tennant is in it. And he’s great. And forget about the B– in Apt 23. Though James Van Der Beek plays himself in this as well. (Not really.)

 

It’s a pretty rare thing these days for a show to go out on its own terms; it’s even rarer for such a show to go out at its creative peak. Justified is that pink unicorn, ending its strong 6-season run with arguably its best season yet. It turns out Justified was like the original Star Trek movies with its even-number pattern, so it was a smart move to produce an even number of seasons. While the weaker third and fifth seasons began to choke on their intricate web of characters, feuds, and extended history, the final season wisely kept a tighter focus on the central characters, only adding more into the mix if it was going to serve that story, and not bog it down. What resulted was a finely crafted arc that acknowledged the long history of the characters without relying on that history to populate an infinite number of betrayals and loyalties. Which isn’t to say that betrayal and loyalty were not strong themes this season. But each such decision came with weight and clear reasons, and ultimately felt earned. In fact, my favorite choice they made this season was a pivotal twist that was both completely unexpected yet perfect for that character. (And by twist, I don’t mean the cheap Shymalan or Fight Club variety, but the kind that pulls the plot forward in a completely unexpected direction.) Top it off with a finale just about as perfectly appropriate for that show as any I’ve seen, and you’ve got one of the finest final seasons (or any other seasons) of all time.

As I finish gushing about the near-perfect final season of Justified, it is of some note that it had been my aim for about eleven months to crown it as my #1 of the year. It was awesome to see it go out on such a high note, and I was thrilled and excited to be able to give a proper send-off to some of my all-time favorite characters with a well-deserved top spot in 2015.

Even after I finished watching The Leftovers in November, I felt good about sliding it right into that #2 spot, thinking, “man, that was something else,” but never even for a moment considering bumping my guy. That was locked in there, no question.

It wasn’t until I re-watched The Leftovers with my family over the break that it kinda dawned on me what a special, unusual, and meaningful season of TV that was. It was a meaty beast that begged for making connections, and unpacking meaning from its dense imagery for days and weeks after.

Season 1 was an uneven exploration of people looking for meaning after an unexplainable tragedy affects everyone at once. There was a lot of focus on a particular group of nihilists whose only aim was to make everyone else as sad as they were. The end of the season gathered a forward momentum, brought some positive character growth, and even a bit of hope, as it ended pretty strongly.
This is also where the book the show was based on ended, and so Season 2 begins unshackled from the somewhat gloomy original source material. This is immediately evident in the first 2 minutes, as we are thrown back millennia to witness a cavewoman giving birth, as a thematic introduction to many of the ideas touched upon this season. Sure enough, the season departed (pun intended) in story structure, the characters we were following, and even the much peppier, tongue-in-cheek opening title sequence. “Let the mystery be,” the song insisted at the clear behest of Lost showrunner and noted pariah Damon Lindelof.
Lindelof has publicly stated that the central mystery, that is the premise of the book and the show, of where 2% of the world’s population disappeared to and why, will never be definitively answered. He is clearly trying to preempt any Lost-like outrage from the audience that they were somehow “cheated” of resolution to a story they invested time into. I mean, it’s sad this is necessary, but I get it.
But it is almost immediately clear that this isn’t a show about solving the mystery, it’s about how the people left behind deal with the fact that it happened. And nowhere were these reactions more complex or varied than in season 2. We are introduced to a new place that is supposedly “special” in a number of ways. It could be an “axis mundi.” And people go there to find hope. Is it special? How do the people who live there feel about it?
Obviously, I can’t say too much, especially because even talking too much about the setup could spoil Season 1. But Season 2 touched more deeply on spirituality in its many flavors. When is it important to have faith? How can faith be a dangerous thing? What happens to that faith when it is challenged? What kinds of reasons do we attribute to things that we can’t explain rationally?
While Justified was fantastic, and was doing all the things it has been strong at doing over the years in top form, The Leftovers was just pushing the medium in new ways, and was a more significant achievement in the art form. The ambition of “International Assassin,” or the extremely powerful finale, were reminiscent of certain moments in Lost, but much more finely honed and expertly crafted.
There is still mystery around whether a third season will be in the cards. If it doesn’t happen, there should be some satisfaction for Damon in a finale which, in a couple of surface-level ways, resembled the somewhat silly final episode of Lost, but which actually worked and served the themes and characters beautifully this time.

Apology section

These shows were on my list, probably would have been good, but didn’t get prioritized for viewing (to completion) this year. In italics are the shows that were on last year’s Top 20.

Narcos, The Man in the High Castle, Banshee, Comedy Bang Bang, Nurse Jackie, Outlander, Orange is the New Black, The Blacklist, Orphan Black, Broadchurch, W/ Bob & David

That’s it for this year. Hope you found my flawed analyses interesting. Feel free to comment with your own contrary opinions or additional insights. I like hearing what other people got out of TV this year, which will surely be different than my own experiences. What shows added appreciably to your 2015?

Happy New TV Year!

2015 TV Rankings – 11 to 20

Alright, here we are. The classic Top 20. Best of the best, top of the heap, Kylo of the Rens.
(If you missed it, see the previous installment.)



After a three-year absence, Britain’s despicable odd couple returns for their final season, and they went out on a high note. The schemes were even more ridiculous and awful, and the narcissism and self-deception is way up there. The last episode managed to feel like there was a bit of closure without it going out of its way to feel like a “finale.” I am definitely going to miss Mark and Jeremy and their brand of absurd voice-overs.

The second season shook up the formula in more ways than one. Most obviously, where in season 1, each episode was split into the perspectives of Noah and Alison (both of the Affair-ers), season 2 threw the former spouses into the mix, and alternated them in every other episode. This expanded the previously narrow scope of the narrative, and gave us a bunch of really interesting peripheral stories for these characters who were less entwined in our main characters lives now. Beyond that, we got to see a lot of transformational moments in all four of our characters, partially assisted by frequent time jumps, eventually bringing all the disparate threads together for a quite satisfying finale. Though the high point for me was the episode featuring Cynthia Nixon as Noah’s therapist. It should come as no surprise this would land in the wheelhouse of Sarah Treem and Hagai Levy, creators of the HBO show In Treatment. The back-and-forth and masterfully crafted insight into Noah’s (often less than sympathetic) character was a really great change of pace in an at times more plot-focused season.

Unfortunately, Season 1 of Manhattan was one of the excellent shows that slipped the deadline for me last year, or it would have been a prime Top 20 candidate. While Season 2 continued strong, a couple things kept it from being as strong as last year. First, while one of last season’s strengths were the moral grays of the characters involved in building a weapon of mass destruction, there were a few moments this season that felt like they were trying to make it easier on the audience by giving the characters more black and whites. This wasn’t always the case, and the unnamed spy was a good example of the former. Second, while parts of the finale worked for me, there was just a bit too much convenient plot contrivance which made me feel like I was watching a different show. Like “this is a finale, and ALL the things need to come to a head!” Still, these are minor nitpicks on a compelling, thoughtful thriller of a season.

Oh shit, you’re fuming, I can tell! “You cheated!” you’re thinking out loud, “That’s a video game, not a TV show!” Yeah, I’m ready for the riots and protesters outside my door. It is true, this episodic adventure didn’t air on network TV, or basic cable. It wasn’t available on HBO Now or Netflix. In fact, it wasn’t even a Yahoo! Screen exclusive. This series was distributed under the guise of a video game. Telltale Games has consistently been producing TV-quality interactive storytelling for the last 5 years, but Tales From the Borderlands was the first time it really felt like it was pushing the boundary between the media in a new and compelling way. The voice acting, writing, direction, and soundtrack all worked in tandem to create a truly transporting experience, where you could play a (granted, minor) part in crafting some really quite excellent storytelling. I’m going to call out the soundtracks one more time, as each episode began with some of the tightest, dramatic, entertaining, hilarious opening title sequences of any TV show, much less video game, each with its own distinctive feel. They weren’t interactive, but set the scene and pulled you into the action that was to come. After the bleak and heavy The Walking Dead, The Wolf Among Us, and Game of Thrones, Tales From the Borderlands was a refreshing jolt of fun and adventure injected into the Telltale formula. Instead of the setpieces being “mash a button to hack off my own leg before the zombies eat me,” it was “jump out of the way of a speeding RV, grab a chain, swing onto another truck, kick the driver out of the door, and grab the wheel, while bullets whiz past”. These sequences weren’t as awe-inspiring as, say, an Uncharted action scene, but when thrown into them in the middle of a dialogue where you get to guide the narrative or try to keep some difficult secondary characters from turning on one another, it gives you just enough agency to feel like you’re a part of the story. I was genuinely sad to be saying good-bye to these people when Episode 5’s credits rolled. If you have a computer, or game console, or tablet, or phone, you should check it out.

While perhaps not as tightly crafted as the masterful Season 2, the final season of Hannibal still had just enough macabre delights and cinematographic wonders to be one of the most enjoyable shows this year. While the first half of the season felt at times a bit aimless, it also had a great amount of Gillian Anderson, in a much expanded role. And the conclusion of the first arc was both chilling and satisfying. The Red Dragon arc that took up the second half was a lot tighter, and ended with one of the most riveting and beautiful scenes I’d seen this year. It’s a shame that no one was watching this gem of a show.

Well, having not been compelled to continue with Season 1 last year, I was drawn by the critical buzz around Season 2, and so gave it another chance. And was I glad I did. While there was a lot that was funny here, it was the well-drawn (pun intended) characters that really stood out toward the end of the first and through the second season. Bojack is a tragic character, searching for purpose and happiness years after his popularity from his hit sitcom has faded. We bounce back and forth between empathy and exasperation as he tries to fix his life and himself, and makes mistakes along the way. Will Arnett makes this half-horse feel very human in many ways.

Season 3 felt more personal and relateable than the previous seasons, and pulled me in a lot more. Some of the challenges of balancing family with ideology came to a head this season in ways that were merely touched on in Season 1. The acting was again top notch, and the direction for some of the biggest scenes this season was powerful in part because of how minimally directed they were.

This season finally put some more focus into the more plot-heavy whodunnit elements of the show, which have never been the most captivating. That being said, the direction the story moved was still fairly satisfying, and the character work was still very strong. In fact, they pulled off the monumental task of making Teddy Jr, previously one of the most repellent and characters on TV, somewhat sympathetic.

While not bad, this past year was certainly the weakest stretch for my favorite (and only*) zombie show. Even disregarding the truly botched plot twist (thanks, Talking Dead), there was too much focus on the weakest supporting characters this year, and sitting with their over-the-top brooding. That’s not character arc, that’s a pity party. The show had previously been pretty good at recognizing when an actor and character are really working well, and spending time there, but made some missteps this year. Despite that, this season had some very strong moments, highlighted by a very ballsy 90-minute flashback episode that stepped away from the action that everyone clearly wanted resolved immediately. While much of the internet reaction was outrage at such an out of place hippy-dippy episode, I thought it was the perfect time for it, and that it worked really well. Alexandria lives on.

* (not really only, but only that uses zombies as a horror/gross-out device)

 

Finally caught up earlier this year on the comedy that no one told me I should have been watching. In addition to just plain hilarious sketch comedy, Amy is a loud and unapologetic female voice who jabs at injustice and hypocrisy in our society. Her obvious highlight this season was ’12 Angry Men Inside Amy Schumer’, the full-episode commentary on how women are treated in Hollywood. As someone who often makes the mistake of reading internet comments, it was shocking how many of the ridiculous things the rather cartoonish men say rang too real: “Her ass makes me furious!” (I will not be able to see Paul Giamatti again without hearing that.)

 






Alright, just one more! Stick around for the final 10, coming out tomorrow!




2015 TV Rankings – 21 to 40

Alright, seriously, from here on out, these are some really good shows. The drop-off in quality between 20 and 40 is pretty minimal, which is why I had such a hard time ranking this year. These probably would’ve all been as good as the Top 20 like 4 years ago. But I made some tough calls, and these are the middle of the best.

(If you missed it, see the previous installment.)

40  Marvel’s Agent Carter

While occasionally heavy-handed on the gender thing, there was a genuine pleasure in watching a 40’s dame do the action hero thing better than her male counterparts and irritate them. Also fun was the rapport with nervous “butler” Jarvis, and the period clothes and advanced gadgets.

 

39  Brooklyn Nine-Nine 2/3

38  Master of None

This spot on the list is one of the bigger places I diverge from the critical consensus. I definitely recognize the significance of the series, and a lot of the things it has to say from the perspective of a 2nd-generation Indian immigrant. My biggest issue was that it felt like it borrowed a lot of its structure and devices from Louie, and did a much poorer job of delivering those messages subtly and naturally. Louie played with structure and format in a way that felt like we were getting random glimpses into his life, that sometimes were just whimsical, and sometimes were significant and meaningful. With Aziz, it felt more like “this is the gender episode,” “this is the racism episode.” Yes, they were often surprising and clever circumstances that as a white man I don’t often consider, and I appreciated that. But as a writer, it felt like he was pushing too much, and felt like a young man’s attempt at imitation of a much older writer’s style. Assuming he still has more to say, I would expect Season 3 to be amazing, as he really nails down his own voice.

 

37  Man Seeking Woman

Maybe the most daring and unique new series of 2015, Man Seeking Woman struck a really nice balance of the genuine and surreal. The fact that all the characters treat all of the crazy fantasy, scifi, or twilight-zone tropes as serious and normal really sells this show. Even when the metaphors are a bit on-the-nose, they’re always pretty fun, and somehow usually relatable. I also loved that they flipped it for one episode and explored the sister’s misadventures using the same device. The sad-sack nerdy guy dating woes are a bit played, so seeing the show from her perspective was both a great change of pace and surprisingly touching.

 

36  Mad Men 7

The finale was quite good.

35  The Last Man on Earth 1/2

Maybe the second most daring an unique new series of 2015, The Last Man on Earth was the master of re-invention. In fact, it nearly transformed what kind of show it was from episode to episode. Will Forte’s character is infuriating a lot of the time, and deliberately so, but somehow also you still need to see what happens next. The show transitions effortlessly between dark and goofball, so much so that you really aren’t sure what turn they might take next. I’d definitely say I appreciate the show more than I actively take joy from it, but it is often painfully funny as well.

 

34  Veep 4

Hugh Laurie was fantastic.

33  The Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt

30 Rock is back!! Well, kinda. It’s as funny as 30 Rock, and I was surprised how funny Ellie Kemper is as the central character. She’s got great timing, and Titus Burgess is fantastic as well. As was the hilarious actor who cameo’d as Richard Wayne Gary Wayne, but I won’t spoil who that was.

 

32  Louie 5

Season was a step up from last year, but the finale really bugged me. Setting up his character as a close-minded asshole that he’s never been before just so he could grow at the end of the episode felt contrived.

 

31  The Returned 2

For someone who barely remembered everything that happened in the first season (2 years ago), throwing in a whole bunch of new characters and expanding the scope left me pretty lost for the first few episodes. But it settled into a really touching and satisfying end to a quite good spiritual French zombie show.

30  Better Call Saul

A solid follow-up to Breaking Bad that showed us a lot of unexpected depth in the previously one-note Saul Goodman. Bob Odenkirk does an admirable job in bringing the man to life and allowing us to empathize with Jimmy, as he is known before a yet unseen transformation to our “criminal lawyer.” While there are great character moments, and using Jonathan Banks was an essential ingredient, the stakes aren’t as high, and the show lacks a bit in direction. There are some good stories, and the dedicated Mike episode was the best among them, but I am not compelled to come back week-after-week like I was with Breaking Bad, and for better or worse, that is always going to be the comparison.

 

29  The Grinder

This show looked stupid. I read some strong reviews, and watched. Turns out, they were right, and it’s very funny. Rob Lowe brings some elements of his Parks & Rec character and is over-the-top ridiculous and funny. But the more understated winner is Fred Savage, who does the best straight man since Jason Bateman, and has a delightful rapport with both Lowe and his on-screen wife, played by Mary Elizabeth Ellis (It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia). The rest of the supporting cast also delivers the laughs, especially the father of Lowe and Savage, played by William DeVane (24). Grinder rests.

 

28  Marvel’s Daredevil

Certainly taking cues from the Nolan era Batman movies, Netflix’s Daredevil series is dark, gritty, and atmospheric. It gives us a slow-burn rise of a superhero who stumbles, gets hurt, and doesn’t have a real costume until Episode 13. Vincent D’Onofrio’s Kingpin is a fascinating, fleshed out character who you occasionally empathize with. If they had really stuck the landing, I would have ranked it higher, but while the first 12 episodes felt grounded and human, the finale felt like a comic book. Ugh, that costume. Hoping Season 2 pulls back a bit to the stuff that made it interesting in the beginning.

 

27  iZombie 1/2

Zombie Veronica Mars. Need I say more? Yes. The procedural elements take up more time than I’d like, but the writing is often clever, Ravi is great, the device where Liv inherits a different personality each episode is often fun (sometimes not), and the S1 finale was balls to the wall great. S2 started a bit slow, and I’m not sure if they can sustain this premise forever, but all in all it was a good viewing experience, and quenched a bit of that Veronica Mars gap in my life.

 

26  Show Me a Hero

Another really interesting examination of race relations from The Wire creator David Simon. Took a little while to get going, but Oscar Isaac delivers a great performance in a compelling and powerful look at the effort to establish public housing in Yonkers.

 

25  Game of Thrones 5

This season lacked a bit in the powerful, jaw-dropping moments, but characters got shuffled around making some awesome meetings possible, we got a massive zombie battle, and a child was burnt alive. So all in all, still pretty cool. Shame! Shame!

 

24  Homeland 5

Another very strong season of Homeland. In fact, despite the lower ranking, I’d say it was an even stronger season than last year. (The competition is a lot stiffer this year.) I might even say as a whole, it worked better than Season 1. Solid character drama, an excellent bad guy, some heart-wrenching moments, and episodes of thrilling action. This year it in some ways didn’t sit in any one genre for too long, which helped sustain it through the 12 episodes.

 

23  Crazy Ex-Girlfriend

Guys, the title is tongue-in-cheek. If you’re not already watching, you should be. It’s dark, bubbly, ironic, sad, and full of freaking amazingly funny songs. A fresh take on self-delusion and psychological issues lightly dressed as a romantic comedy. Don’t expect a happy ending though; creator and star Rachel Bloom is too cynical for that.

 

22  Catastrophe

This fresh, honest, and hilarious romantic comedy from across the pond debuted on Amazon almost a year after airing in England. But it’s well worth the wait. So much happens in the first episode, it’s almost disorienting. As the predicament just descends and descends, somehow the series stays cute and upbeat and you just need to see more.

 

21  Last Week with John Oliver 2

Oliver continues to nail it with his in-depth analysis of issues we don’t think about too much. The topics this year didn’t all feel quite at the same level of urgency or importance, but I am continually impressed by the research and details uncovered on things going on both in the US and around the world. And yes, he also manages to make these horrible things funny somehow.

Tomorrow I’m gonna hit ya with 11-20! And pictures!

 

2015 TV Rankings – 41 to 63

Yeah, that’s right. 20 was no longer cutting it. I’m doing them all now. Why? Well, the main reason was that it felt like there were far more than 20 shows I wanted to rave about this year. Trying to cut them out of the top 20 was becoming a painful venture. But on top of that, there were also things I had to say about shows further down the list that my previous format wasn’t allowing me. So this year, I am ranking ALL shows that I watch ALL episodes of this year, and optionally giving some reasons why.

Note that even shows toward the bottom (well, top if you’re looking at the page) were shows I considered to be pretty good. I did a good job this year and stopping shows I was not enjoying much, so even these 63 are for the most part the cream of the crop.

63  Childhood’s End

Not really the cream of the crop. It was kind of interesting, but probably the only show on the list that I wouldn’t say was worth the time put in.

 

62  Girls 4

61  Episodes 4

60  Another Period

A very funny, if at times tonally inconsistent show. Christina Hendricks was probably the most delightful surprise with her scheming comic turn here.

 

59  True Detective 2

I worry how much the sheer disappointment from a dramatically superior season 1 is influencing my ranking here, given that the second half was somewhat enjoyable. But the grueling mess that got us there, and some painful performances/characters really didn’t do the sophomore season any favors.

58  Big Bang Theory 9

One of the great points of confusion in my life over the last couple of years is why I continue to cause myself pain by watching the inane misadventures of 4 stereotypical nerds who don’t actually seem to like each other at all. And yet, while this whole addiction process began with a few sick days and fevered desperation to have something mindless to occupy my optic face holes, that rationale fell short in the months ahead. Was it some sort of variation on Stockholm Syndrome, where I just couldn’t quit my cartoonish, offensive, and racist captors? Was it that I was hanging on to this glimmer of hope, because time after time these people had come really close to seeming like actual relatable human beings, and it seemed improbable they wouldn’t find some way to push past that barrier after hundreds of painful half-hours? Was I suffering under the illusion that the approximately 2% laugh/joke rate they were sustaining was actually increasing very slightly over time, and that at some point it would hit some exponential growth curve despite no corroborating evidence to expect that to be the case? To this date, I am not entirely sure, but for whatever reason, I continued to plug along, with a strangely excited curiosity when a new episode would pop up, and then a considerable amount of disappointment, both at the show, and really at myself, once those end credits cut short any possible catharsis or satisfying character growth that I was positive would happen to resolve another painfully cliché storyline. And then 2015 happened, and against all odds, this bumbling oaf of a show, maybe through monkey-at-a-keyboard-itis, started clicking in a way it never had before. There were maybe 6 or 7 genuinely moving character moments that didn’t rely on cheap tricks or canned audience reactions. While the joke success rate probably didn’t move the needle hugely, the effectiveness of those that landed was occasionally very high, largely due to the expanded roles and comedic chops of Melissa Rauch and Mayim Bialik. Even Jim Parsons, who had very much dipped into one-note territory very early on in this series, got to see his character soften a bit this season, which in my mind only made the contrast with his cluelessly rude self even better. I don’t care enough to figure out which, but there were one or two episodes this season I felt were masterfully constructed, and made me wonder if they’d hired new writers, until the following week was the same old childish dreck. So, to be clear, this is all to explain why for the first time since I started watching this “nerd comedy”, I didn’t feel it was the worst choice I had made that year. It is not a good show. For the most part, it is not innovative or clever or funny. The writing is lazy and hacky. Simon Helberg is a terrible actor, and his character is almost as bad. The central romance, which occasionally suckered me into caring about, is at its worst points offensive, and at its high points lacking in any kind of chemistry or believability. But this year, the program showed a glimmer of actual life, of characters having some self-awareness and growth. If you’re not watching it, don’t start.

57  Childens’ Hospital 6

56  Sense8

This is a show that was excellent at parts, but really thought it was excellent overall. While I appreciate the ambition, I wonder if being reined in by an executive would have actually helped this show find a consistent voice. There were some really compelling storylines, and some that just completely fell flat. In addition, it felt like it was trying to make some sort of commentary, but where it stood was really never clear. Violence was mocked and admonished, while then seemingly glorified in gross gratuity in the next scene. But perhaps most peculiar was why in a show created by a transgender woman the gender roles were troublingly archaic. The female characters were victims, and the male characters were heroes responsible for their rescue. There was a transgender female character, but she spends the first half of the series captured or running, and has to be rescued by the muscular dude cop. You could argue that the Sun, the Korean woman, has martial arts skills and does help bail out some male characters, but her storyline never progresses from being trapped. She has no agency over her own circumstances, and gets no hero story arc like literally every male character does. Male character encounters obstacle, gets temporarily knocked back, then overcomes it, usually with quite intense violence. That these gender lines were so stark seemed very out of place for an otherwise really modern and boundary-pushing series. There were things I liked about it. The idea of these very different people from different cultures all coming together and learning from one another was compelling and strong. There were a number of very moving scenes between these characters. The locations were gorgeous, and the cinematography involved in filming the same scene in two places at once must have been herculean. I’d certainly say on the whole I enjoyed myself while watching it, and that it only breaks down if you think about it too much.

55  The Mindy Project 3/4

A solid end of third season, a laborious (no pun intended) 4th season on Hulu. Rehashing of old storylines, endless dragging on of this one storyline involving balancing career and motherhood, and what I can only assume was a lack of money leading to Chris Messina’s prolonged disappearance. But I can still count on Ike Barinholtz and Beverly for consistent laughs, and the addition of Garret Dillahunt (Deadwood, Sarah Connor Chronicles, Raising Hope, Justified) was a solid move.

54  Parks and Recreation 7

I was initially skeptical about the 2 year jump, but the last season was actually quite good, and the finale made me– well, not cry, but whatever Ron Swanson does when his face scrunches up. Ah right, eat steak.

53  The Late Show with Stephen Colbert

Well, I technically may have missed an episode or two, but I saw most of them, and guess what, he’s still funny without the conservative windbag persona. In fact, it was fascinating, especially at the start, to see his interviewing style, which is so genuine and thoughtful, which was clearly throwing people off at the beginning. Expecting to be on the defensive the whole time because “Stephen Colbert” would trounce on weakness, there was noticeable hesitation and confusion on the part of many of his first guests. But Stephen not only throws that style out the window, but kind of subverts the fluff-piece style of late night interviews altogether, digging for the real human moments, like in his amazing Joe Biden interview. He is also a bit more political than his counterparts, as you might guess. But I think was struck me most was the absolute joy he exudes every night up there, casting off the jaded irony of his previous persona, and embracing a lighter, more sincere and optimistic brand of comedy. I dig it.

52  Agents of SHIELD 2/3

While certainly not without its stumbling points, Agents of SHIELD is certainly finding a bit more of a solid rhythm in the past year. While Season 1 felt small and claustrophobic, especially with its limited cast, the show is perhaps overcompensating, with a sprawling universe and a cast that is now too big. I’m uncertain why they haven’t been using the less successful characters to die off and raise the stakes, but now would be a good time for that. But aside from them, some of the better characters are feeling more fleshed out and compelling. And one of the best hours on TV this year was a tightly scoped episode that just focused on Simmons’ space adventures, and Elizabeth Henstridge really ran with the opportunity and did a fantastic job. Plus, Coulson becoming a kick-ass action star, the still surprisingly watchable Ward, and Fitz as Indiana Jones, all highlights. Oh sorry, almost forgot Kyle MacLachlan’s awesome work. Hope he comes back.

51  Portlandia 4

50  Helix 2

Some really weird shit. Some of it worked.

49  Doctor Who 9

Well, this season was a far cry from the stink-fest that was Season 8. It had a number of solid episodes and legitimately thrilling moments. But for my money, it still just hasn’t managed to bring back the wild fun from the Smith years, or give a satisfying resolution to a convoluted Moffat plotline. But I really liked Capaldi this season, and his chemistry really cemented with Clara. Maisie Williams’ turn was kinda fun, but I never really got her character. Any season without Danny Pink is a step up in my book though.

48  Togetherness

Along with Casual, one of the two quirky spawn of Six Feet Under this year that didn’t really know what it was trying to say. Still amusing at times.

47  Casual

Along with Togetherness, one of the two quirky spawn of Six Feet Under this year that didn’t really know what it was trying to say. Still amusing at times.

46  Bob’s Burgers

Still funny.

45  House of Cards 3

Solid: Doug’s whole arc. Less solid: The rest of it.

44  New Girl 4

Getting funny again.

43  Transparent 2

I was kinda struggling through this season. Those Pfefferman kids are just the worst, and really didn’t slow down heading into this season. In fact, the one character that gave some relief last season, Maura, started showing her narcissistic side as well, and I was ready to sign out completely. But the last few episodes kinda redeemed it for me. I really liked how the flashbacks to thirties Germany connected with the present day, and gave a really interesting context for their family. I also liked the Womyn festival storyline, and how there was a bit of a persecution competition that I wouldn’t have expected. (And as much as I love Kathryn Hahn, I really hope she gets as far away from those people as possible. RUN!)

42  Wet Hot American Summer

More ridiculous Wainy goodness. But this time, with more amazing Jon Hamm comedy.

41  Community 6

In some ways, Harmon has gone off the deep end, but mostly in a good way. It felt like he was leaning less on past gimmicks (somehow despite yes, another paintball episode), and was back to playing around with format in the way he does. They weren’t all winners, but all in all a pretty funny season of Community (probably the last).

 

Stay tuned for tomorrow: 21-40!