[There Can Be Only One] What's your single favourite TV show?
It's tough picking one.
But that's why I'm asking. It's easy to do a top 3, even easier to a top 5.
But when you have to choose a singular show? When you're forced to pare it down? What sticks above the others for you?
Babylon 5 for me.
It's got plenty of issues but it's still my darling and despite all the behind-the-scenes BS it's still the best long-form sci-fi story I've seen onscreen.
Edit: Screwed up the title. Bad Dalacos.
The greatest TV show of all time, Star Trek: The Next Generation.
I grew up on it so I feel like I'm pretty nostalgic about it but watching it helps me reinforce my value system. It taught me young that our differences are what make us strong and that we can triumph against great odds if we can learn to accept each other and work together. In a world where violence and hate seem so prevalent every day, that message hits a lot harder than it did when I was a kid. Throwing on an episode of TNG lights up that little spark of hope I have left for our species. Well, as long as it's not episode 4, Code of Honor. Lmao.
Love me some TNG. The scene where Picard berates Riker and La Forge for not trying to get along with Barclay was informative and sadly beautiful.
Also, the episode where La Forge's visor tech saves a planet where blindness would've been eliminated at birth is still a "go-to" of mine as an example of why we need IDIC.
I am currently watching seaQuest (yes it's in camelCase). Somebody described it as "Star Trek under the sea" to me. Fair enough, I like it.
The plots are OK, but nothing compared to TNG's psychological insight and complex morals.
SeaQuest unfortunately gets weird towards the end. But i loved it anyways. I thought Darwin was so damn cool lol.
The Wire. It's the best TV show ever made and will almost certainly always be that. Nothing else comes close.
Absolutely brilliant show. Quality wise is up there at the top in writing and acting. Although for me personally, a lot harder to watch and enjoy long term, like I loved it when I watched it and I have great memories of it but I'm not sure I'd rewatch it.
The scene where they say fuck and only fuck like a hundred times in 10 minutes still fascinates me to this day in what good acting can be. And the character that's always whistling... (Sorry I can't remember their names, it's been so long) what an amazing role and actor.
The whistling guy was Omar, a stick up man. His scene while on the stand getting cross examined by the dirty lawyer was one of the most memorable scenes of the whole series. https://youtu.be/P3i36ybA8Ms
The actor unfortunately died a few years ago but was excellent in The Wire and also excellent in Boardwalk Empire.
Surprised it wasn't mentioned before. It's not the genre I like but I've heard it in the same breathe as B5 so many times I know I'm missing out on something great.
watched it this year for the first time. It's in my top 3. It made Idris Elba famous and I loved the character.
Hands down, it's first by a mile. It's in a field of it's own. I also doubt I'll ever watch something as good again. Though I will say, the first season is the worst of all the seasons, and one might not understand what they are missing if they stop there.
Band of Brothers
I can watch this once per year and never get tired of it
Such a good show!
Burn the land, boil the sea, you can’t take the sky from me….
The movie has a quote that breaks me.
"I am a monster."
An antagonist who knows they don't get redemption. It was a new thing for me. Shouldn't, but was.
I'm a leaf on the wind 😭
The show I'd have to choose if only one is allowed. Not a single bad episode, amazing actors that loved their roles and became a family and it shows. And the best spaceship in all of SciFi.
I don't know, Red Dwarf is as suprisngly resilient and comfortable ship.
Star Trek TNG
It's almost impossible to say just one because the other 2-3 that I thought about just hit different depending on my mood. Comedy vs drama vs Sci fi etc.
Yeah it's hard to choose. I'll probably go with Chernobyl, because there's no bad episode, and everything from the writing, acting, to the score and cinematography is amazing.
there's a lot of clever, tightly written, whimsical comedies out there but the venture bros reigns supreme
Frisky Dingo still hits it best for me, in that regard. But the humour is so abstract I have a hard time recommending it.
That's a pretty Batman choice.
Jollyrancher82, never get henchmen.
Better call Saul. Such a great character study. Fun high jinx. Every major character has an arch. Deals with corruption, justice and revenge. The choices they make, where it leads them, and how they reckon with it. It was the show breaking bad tried to be.
I watched it through all seasons for the first time this year and it’s so good. Agreed on the character archs and breaking bad. I had given up after season one with too much lawyer stuff and not enough illegal activity but very glad i picked it back up.
The one show I can always hit shuffle on and as long as it's before Browder it's gonna be good, Stargate SG1.
Ahh I like the Fargate too. Claudia Black was delightful.
I did miss O'Neill though. "Two LLs" holds up three fingers
The other one has no sense of humor.
That show is packed with fun Easter eggs, when Sam starts daring someone and is humming in the elevator, it’s the MacGyver theme song which Anderson did not expect
Stargate SG-1.
I'm not saying it's always better than every other show, but it's my personal warm feelings favourite ♥️
I've seen all of it like 4 times.
It hits a lot of great points. Consistent story. Great characters. Loads of content you can binge.
Also episodes I can just enjoy without needing several episodes of backstory. They do little flashbacks when you need relevant info from a previous episode.
Those are rookie numbers!
And there's a good amount of it, the story is internally consistent and the characters are likable.
Yeah SG1 is just consistently awesome. Super fun show that doesn't take itself too seriously but still tells really thought provoking stories.
Ted Lasso. The tempo and overlapping subplots interspersed with rocketship sized fireworks - it's like a song.
I'll go with "The Good Place".
To me the show has everything. Comedy, Surprise, deep emotions, and it even is educational. If also is full of positivity, which in today's times seems harder to do right.
Where lesser shows might have drawn out the ideas over multiple seasons, they constantly moved on from one setting to the next.
And they nailed the finale.
The good place is such a feel good show. It's never great laughs, but after each episode you just feel a little warmer inside
Feel good show is an apt description. And it is one that accomplishes it while having plants of educational philosophy at its core rather than being purely entertainment.
Expanse
I'd have chosen Firefly, I never get tired of it, and I just love it.
So many other amazing shows though, a few already mentioned in other comments, like BSG would be a close second to Firefly.
But there are some shows that haven't been mentioned and I think they deserve it just as much. And because having to choose only one would make me regret losing these other ones, here they are:
Breaking Bad, it absolutely fascinates me and I just can't get over the character development and the writing and acting from the whole cast.
And probably the newest show that for me is on the very top, and actually I must admit it might have gone past the other ones (except firefly), Arcane. Everything about it, I love. The writing, the animation, the music, the characters, the world building, the character growth, ...
If I choose Firefly, I'd regret not choosing Arcane, but I just can't not choose firefly.
I think arcane s2 had some great stuff but a lot of it made very little sense or was outright bad imo. This is from someone who's deeply immersed in runeterra (which might be a bad thing in this case)
Oh? I'm surprised, I think your comment is the first negative opinion on Arcane that I see (to be fair, I wasn't really searching for them either). So I'm curious if you don't mind explaining further, what for example did you find outright bad or making no sense? I would love to hear your opinion, also about season 1 as you specifically mention season 2, was the first better for you? I personally cannot say there was a lot bugging me and usually plotholes or characters acting against their role and background and personality just for the story's sake bother me plenty.
For context, I did know about runeterra and a bit of the stories from before Arcane came out, but I would never consider myself versed in it. I did read some of the background stories officially posted by Riot, some of the comics, and played a bit of league and legends of runeterra, but of course there's not that much story in the games anyway.
Let's see if I can remember, if I am factually wrong skit anything please correct me as it was some time ago. Also on phone so might autocorrect something I don't notice.
S1.
Expectations: very low.
Seeing the kids grow up, slowly showing you all the points where Vi gets angry and powder gets messed up. Silco seems like a standard violation but gets emotional and instead of just using Jinx for his own gains he's ready to die for her like she's his own child.
They managed to make the vi Cait romance realistic under weird circumstances which was fresh to see. I enjoyed seeing Viktor and Jayce rise and fall in separate directions.
Was not a big fan of the chemtech depiction how you just pumped it into people and they were super soldiers that only Jayce and Vi stood a chance against. Also the vander ww hints didn't excite me really.
S2.
Expectations: sky high
Starts off great, the tension between the uptown people and downtown which messes with Caitlin and Vi. Didn't enjoy ambessa much except for her interactions with the black rose which was pretty cool.
The ww/ambessa/singed union didn't make sense at all to me. She's looking for something to up her army but following a random monster makes little sense to me. Now add Viktor to that mess and all of a sudden Warwick is not just a chemtech junkie gone monster but a necessary ingredient for Viktor to transcend.
Heimer and ekko in time was great tv, normally I'm skeptical about these kinds of side quests but this was amazing.
Jayce in time had its moments all in all pretty cool.
The endgame is where it all collapsed imo. The city invasion with like 20 soldiers running around in the harbour, ambessa vs Caitlin duel felt unnecessary imo, jinx/vi/vander fight felt forced even though Jinx probably needed to die but the manner was silly.
I get that it's hard to close out when the scope is so big but I was disappointed.
So I guess it mainly boils down to high expectations and poor execution on certain parts. But as you can read from my review I am a fan and will definitely check out s3.
Cheers!
I read Schuiten and Peters graphic novels in the 80s, and Arcane seems like such a rip-off that it just turns me off
Interesting, I didn't know them and it seems like I might enjoy it. I'll have to check it out.
The animation studio of Arcane is a small French company, I wouldn't be surprised if some of the artists have grown up reading those graphic novels and were inspired by them. Rip-off sounds a bit harsh though, or is it more blatant than what I could see on a quick search?
‘Bojack Horseman’. Outstanding in every way, and the only series that I've watched twice without a twenty-year break inbetween. Also the only show where I needed to slow playback down a bit to get all the jokes, instead of my usual 110% speed.
I fell in absolute love with Scavenger's Reign.
I watched the first few minutes of it and realized it was something I'd probably love but not in that moment. It looked like something I needed to be in the right headspace to really appreciate. I do that plenty, knowing sometimes I want popcorny action and other times I want, well, a mood.
It was on my watchlist so long it damn well got cancelled, but it's still sitting there waiting for me to enjoy. One of these days. That and a rewatch of Mars Express should make for a good weekend binge.
My husband, every time we are looking for something to watch on TV, says "why can't we find something like that one show? It was so good!". Scavenger's Reign? "YES, that one."
For me, I think I agree with Star Trek TNG as the one if there must be one, , but damn, Scavengers Reign and also Preacher were perfect shows.
It will always be Babylon 5.* Great writing, great characters, great storytelling, and the ability to go from light and humorous to deep and meaningful or tragic and somber without any of it ever feeling out of place.
* OK, obviously I would like for something even better to come along and replace it, but I'm not holding my breath.
Archer. Even if you include the 3 "coma seasons" it's still some of the most consistently funny TV there's ever been.
I would say the original Battlestar Galactica has a special place in my heart. As a kid watching it, I couldn’t believe it — it was like having Star Wars in my home. The production spent money on the first half of the season, and it showed.
The 2004 one is pretty good too.
Battlestar Galactica (the new one).
Then probably MASH.
Babylon 5 is my favourite show, but "The Hand of God" in season one is my favourite episode of all time. (33 was pretty damn good too.)
I like B5 very much. I really should watch that again.
Battlestar was a masterpiece to me, right up until the last 30 minutes. I mean WTF?
Yeah it was fantastic, just didn't stick the landing
The last season was a bit weak, but it also has my favorite episode where the dead return for a night. I actually have a copy of the script for that somewhere in the house. Written by Neil Gaiman and guest starring Penn & Teller.
I know the episode. I loved it.
Garibaldi getting a visitation from Dodger (when he loves Duck Dodgers) was great. Also, sexy redheads are dangerous.
But the thing I love the most about that episode, despite many awesome points, is that G'Kar lamented sleeping on the bridge and not getting to experience it. Showed a lot of character growth on his part, wisdom, to realize what he'd missed out on.
True Detective Season 1. I have never watched a better show than this although there are many good ones out there as well
There's so many good ones it would have to be Red Dwarf for me though.
With Spaced in second place.
Currently rewatching Red Dwarf for the nth time.
I think my choice would be Peep Show though.
Ah that's a classic as well, and responsible for so many odd phrases making it into my daily life.
If I could only pick one and it were to be "locked in" for life - I'd have to go with Deep Space Nine.
I understand why people say Babylon 5, but for me it's a bit too "rough around the edges" to be an all time #1.
I could argue DS9 is a bit of a cheat answer due to it being Star Trek, however even if it were in a vacuum I think it'd still be my number one. There are just too many singular episodes that stand out with a great overarching storyline to boot.
I loved and am happy that we got both. Regardless of the business BS behind them.
Without B5 we'd never have got Garak. And both are some of my favourites, ever. It's that meme, I want both. Both is good.
Night Court
I wish I could watch it but my VCR is in the shop
I still remember how much of a game changer it was to finally figure out that I could pre-record the show I wanted to watch on a tape then watch it later that night after work. (Was Angel, a spinoff of Buffy.)
Then I realized I could fast-forward the ads by doing so.
My god. I was living the life then.
Wondering what you thought of the reboot?
Didn't know that there was one. Not sure I want to know. I tend to hate reboots of shows and movies that I previously liked.
Can't imagine the show without Anderson. I met him at a SAM (Society of American Magicians) meeting in the early 90s. Dude was hilarious and his magic style was so smooth. The rest of the cast was pretty irreplaceable too.
If they didn't try to subvert expectations by royally fucking up season 8 so badly that it ruined the entire show for me, it would have been Game of Thrones.
So instead I'll say Avatar the Last Airbender. Honestly an amazing show, and to this day its the only show I've managed to rewatch without getting bored and dropping it.
They fucked that show up well before season 8.
Seasons 5 and 6 were noticeably worse than the first four, but I still enjoyed them. Season 7 was bad, but not show ruining bad. Had it gotten even a decent season 8, I think it would have been an amazing show all around. Not flawless 10/10 material, no, but still a great show.
Season 8 was honestly impressive in just how many plot points it threw down a well. Jamie's redemption? Nah, screw that noise, he changed his mind. And I don't think I've ever felt so deflated after S8E3. 8 years of buildup and that's how they end it? What a monumental waste of time it turned out to be.
As always to this, Babylon Berlin
The music in that show is awesome
While it had ups and downs the ups are brilliant, skona with the general mood and how they blend fiction and history.
Father Ted. Man, I miss that show. The humor was just so dry and on the nose.
The Goodies. Irreverent comedy with large lashings of brilliant slapstick. It was my childhood.
Columbo.
For comfort and warmth, I might have to go with a sleeper: Joe Pera Talks With You.
But Deadwood is way up there, too.
It has to be Mad Men, which I've watched all the way through three or four times, definitely three at least.
Ted Lasso. It’s such a feel good show.
Firefly, even after the deluge of post-marvel Whedonesque slop that has worn away some of the charm of the banter. Only a little bit though, it's fortunately not quite the same.
It managed to slip in just before they killed off episodic story telling for genre shows, but just after there was a very noticeable increase in production quality. So it's got that rewatch factor nothing made after like 2005 has but without my girlfriend rolling her eyes at sets and costumes that were designed to be viewed on a tiny 4:3 CRT.
Obviously there were other episodic genre shows made in this weird interstitial period but none have nearly as many banger episodes, even those that got additional seasons.
The Wire is the best, IMO.
I'd most likely go for something I have a deep connection with though: Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Home Movies, or Monty Python's Flying Circus.
Actually, I'll pick Aqua Teen Hunger Force. It's endlessly fun every time I watch it.
If I am allowed to pretend it went off the air after season 8, I’ll go with the Simpsons.
I was at first leaning toward Bojack Horseman, but after thinking it over, I have to say Babylon 5, too. That has a lot to do with how I experienced it.
I first heard of it before it even aired, because they used Lightwave on the Amiga for the CGI sequences. I think I still have the VHS tape from the first airing of The Gathering. It turned out to be an interesting show. I quickly forgot about watching for the CGI, and found myself watching for the story.
Not only that, but the shows creator engaged fans directly during production on CompuServe, and later, Usenet. (That was totally new at the time.) Since it was back in the ancient times, episodes aired once a week. We fans had plenty of time to discuss each episode, and speculate about where it was going.
Then, And the Sky Full of Stars hit like a ton of bricks. ("Wham! Wham! Wham!" as JMS liked to say online.) The story, the imagery, and the music just created the perfect storm of grief and dispair, and we got the full treatment of what it meant to have a 5-year story arc. (Oddly enough, I just realized that it was also the 8th episode of Bojack in which that show demonstrated real depth, and started to get really good.)
As the show continued, my personal life fell apart, as major depression took hold. I don't quite recall when I stopped being able to catch it when it aired, or why. (I think it moved to cable after PTEN folded?) But it wasn't until years later that I watched the 5th season, when I was scrabbling out of the deep hole of depression.
Holy hell. Getting to the series finale was emotional enough, but That Scene hit like 20 tons of bricks. It was played well, yes, but I had known these characters for literal years by then, learned what they'd gone through, felt the weight of all that they had done and felt, and I cried for a long time. And it was amazing to feel anything so deeply, which is why the show will always be special to me.
In many ways, I think that the streaming format robs us viewers of something vital. Binge-watching doesn't allow time for the characters and stories to really settle in your soul. And then there's no social group to share the experience with. I didn't watch Game of Thrones when it was new, and I know that the experience wouldn't be at all the same now. I did binge The Good Place last year, and the effect was like a summer thunderstorm—intense, but brief. It's a great show, but didn't affect me so deeply. As such, I'm glad I watched Bojack when it was new, to be able to share the experience online with other people. It was made for streaming, and the season-at-a-time release, so it couldn't be any other way, but nothing will quite match the experience of a dedicated fan base and weekly episodes.
I was a lil shit then so I'm sort of glad I wasn't on usenet to embarrass myself but at the same time I feel like I missed out on something great I could've been in on. Having JMS there and bare to answer any questions would be amazing. (I say this as someone that's had him answer my Q's in reddit AMA's a couple times. So at least I got that.)
/envy
I used to be a big proponent of the binge-release. But as time moves on I find myself more appreciative of the weekly releases lending itself to conversation. Particularly for the mystery-box shows.
Now I think of release format as a part of the artistry of the show itself. Arcane for example, releasing in segments of three by three and knowing ahead of time that that was how it'd be released, was a canny and smart way to do it. Similarly certain shows released (Like they used to) the first two episodes as a longer intro to the show then going to weekly is a smart idea too.
IMHO, it should be part of the showrunners consideration how a show is released, rather than up to the company that's releasing it. It's an artistic choice that can dramatically change how the show as a whole is perceived.
I'd say probably The Adventures of Tintin just because it has the nostalgia value of not just being a show from my childhood but also memories of watching it every Sunday morning at my dad's house (he had HBO so it was rare to see it).
Star Trek: TNG
Still stands, the Picard monologues are famous.
For me personally it's gotta be Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood. Such a fantastic story, and one of the few shows I've gone back and re-watched several times. Even got my gf, who is not into anime, to love the show too, though her favourite remains Avatar The Last Airbender.
Honorable mention to Pantheon too, that one kinda broke me for a couple days. Just wish we got a bit more of the show so season 2 didn't have to be as rushed.
I quite liked season 1, still need to watch season 2.
Similar vein to that one I'd recommend if you haven't seen it, Terminator: Zero. I went in with low expectations but it was surprisingly good.
Oh really? I gave up in like one of the first scenes where someone was dodging a minigun or something like that
Light spoiler: there's a scientist that has conversations with AI that I found entirely intriguing. Can't even remember much of the action.
Interesting, I'll consider giving it another go at some stage then, thanks
Party Down.
Aside from the fact that it's consistently well written and funny, it's also very accurate in my experience. I used to work in hospitality/event catering when I was younger and we all had some kind of reason why we were temporarily working in the industry. No one gave a fuck except the manager/supervisor, who would always be extremely stressed and wishing everyone else would put in the same amount of effort as them.
Underrated as hell show
James Burke's Connections
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vincenzo_(TV_series)
Took me a little while to get used to the wild humor related tone swings, but the characters, plot, action, drama, and revenge are amazing.
Go team venture!
That's difficult, and the answer would change over time because picking a "favorite" is as much a product of what the mind is like at the time of asking as it is from an objective internal perception of favorite.
That being said, narrowing it down some helps.
First, ima wipe out anything generated by a streaming service. That narrows the field a lot, and it's no more arbitrary than any other criteria to do so.
Then, ima wipe out any serial shows that didn't get a finish of a reasonable kind as part of the original run. That's because I can't genuinely highly rate a show that isn't over. The story is "pending" for me, and that always makes a show a disappointment. It does, unfortunately, eliminate firefly since its "ending" wasn't aired. By aired, I mean shown on a network of some kind, be it cable or actual broadcast over the air. I also exclude anything not yet finished because how a show ends matters.
This eliminates thousands of shows, so I can maybe process things.
As contenders, there's wide range. Winnowing those, I have to factor in repeatability. If the show suffers over repeated viewings for me, that's a major loss. Something like Bones as an example, that I liked well enough when it was being aired, but has killed almost all enjoyment of it when watched one episode after another over a few weeks.
So, I have to decide if I want to include or exclude shows that aren't serial. Now, I can automatically eliminate sitcoms because even the ones that are properly serial can't hold up for me. But there's sketch comedy ala snl and madtv. There's stuff like the Twilight zone as well. Because of the quality of sketch shows and anthologies, I gotta leave them in. But they're usually prone to more full on bad episodes than other types, so it leaves gaps.
All of which, nobody but me really cares about, but I'm bored and wanting to think this through in writing.
It does lead me to a few finalists though. Buffy has to be in there, though its ending was barely an ending, but counts enough. Monty Python has to be as well; even the weakest episodes still make me laugh. Trek has to be a possibility, but which iteration? Then there's quantum leap that manages to be nostalgic without feeling super dated (unlike a show like knight rider that's still fun, but really feels less enjoyable than it did in its era).
Since narrowing Trek down is nigh impossible for me, I think that disqualifies any individual series from making the grade. Tos and tng are just too closely tied to pick one.
Quantum leap though, damn. I've seen it front to back a dozen plus times and still enjoy it, even with the era's proclivity towards cheese.
However, Buffy manages to be cheesy and it not (for me) trigger the rueful chuckle, so I guess that bumps leap down a notch.
That essentially leaves me picking between Buffy and Python.
Which one I'd cue up first isn't certain on any given day. That being said, I think the fact that I could always just shrug and default to Python if I didn't know what I was in the mood for bumps it into favorite status for me.
Yeah, that's as good an answer as any other.
I will say that some shows, like the walking dead as a perfect example, could push those down if the overall series hadn't been mismanaged.
Then there's shows like Dr Who that I've spent more years and hours watching, but suffer from a ton of bad sections that make it hard to weed out; I'd have to pick a favorite doctor to be honest with myself about the show's overall enjoyment factor. Like, Tom Baker era, or the Tennant/Smith era, they top Buffy for sure, but those are small segments of the show as a whole. Plus, the show technically hasn't ended only individual eras have.
Loooota caveats in there though lol
Yeah, honestly my criteria are easy-to-watch and endless fun too, which makes Python a perfect pick. It won't let you down on any given day.
Gotta be a three way tie between star trek the next generation, person of interest, and the X files. Heck your rules
I'm french so the answer is extremely easy. It's kaamelott
Chris Carter's Millennium, from the late 1990s. The first season was not great, the third season was lousy, but the second season was spectacular!
From. I just love that show and cannot wait for new seasons!
Probably DS9 with Babylon 5 as close 2nd, or the Simpsons
Why u gotta make me Google ds9? For those who don't know: Star Trek:Deep Space Nine
Probably Farscape even though I am not too sure it aged well. Following would be Buffy and Stargate SG1.
The Andy Griffith Show. Genuinely funny show, with a great heart. Barney Fife, played by Don Knotts, is literally the funniest character ever on TV.