Tuesday, 24 December 2024

2024 in Review: Top 10 Best TV Shows

There were plenty of great shows to watch in 2024, as well as a handful that missed the mark or otherwise made you question your sanity. I'm looking at you, Acolyte and The Rings of Power Season 2. Thankfully, we won't be concerning ourselves with the duds as I go through my shortlist of what I consider the very best of the best, the crème de la crème so to speak. So without further ado, these are my Top 10 TV shows for 2024.

10. Skeleton Crew



Star Wars shows are pretty much hit or miss these days, as Lucasfilm continues to find creative ways to fumble the ball. So it was indeed a breath of fresh air when the Skeleton Crew was unveiled and it actually looked promising. And now that the show is finally here, it is delivering on that promise of a Spielbergian adventure, proving that there is still plenty of lighthearted fun and wonder to be had in a galaxy far, far away.

9. Baby Reindeer



Based on a true story, Baby Reindeer is a show I found instantly engrossing owing to its disturbing subject matter. It basically tells the real-life story of comedian, Richard Gadd (who plays himself), as he details his experience with a stalker named Martha after she develops an unhealthy obsession over him. It was one of the buzziest shows this year, helped in no small part by the controversy surrounding its release.

8. 3 Body Problem



Most people can hardly hear the names Benioff and Weiss without experiencing some form of PTSD. And who can blame them after that less-than-stellar final season of Game of Thrones? So when I heard that the duo had worked on a new Netflix show called 3 Body Problem, I approached it with great caution and some mild curiosity. Thankfully, the sci-fi mystery left me feeling that perhaps they weren't the talentless hacks many had accused them of being.

7. The Gentlemen



Not to be confused with the 2020 movie of the same name, The Gentlemen is a crime comedy series on Netflix. Both were directed by Guy Ritchie which means the show effectively shares the same DNA with the movie, from its signature dark humor to its quirky characters. And since I am somewhat of a Guy Ritchie fan myself, I ate it all up as I had a blast binging the whole thing over the course of a single weekend.

6. Silo Season 2



Silo recently returned for its second season on Apple TV+, after leaving viewers with one helluva cliffhanger at the end of the last one. And even though I have read the books the series is based upon, I was still eager to see how it would adapt the one scene I was most anxious to see in the show. And the showrunners definitely did that scene justice, and have continued to do the story justice as they slowly unravel the mystery behind the titular Silo and its so-called Founders.

5. Fallout



Between Fallout and Silo dropping this year, it would appear that post-apocalyptic wastelands are all the rage right now. But what immediately helps to set both shows apart is the video game roots of the former. You see, Fallout fully leans into the tongue-in-cheek humor and over-the-top violence fans of the popular game series have come to expect. And sometimes, that's all it takes to win over this lifelong gamer. 

4. House of the Dragon Season 2



It was hard not to feel shortchanged by the truncated eight-episode season of House of the Dragon we got this year. I mean, the season ended just when it felt like things were about to get really good. But getting blue balled aside, everything that led up to that abrupt ending was of the same high standard the show had set for itself in season one. So I can't complain that much, especially considering the travesty taking place on the Tolkien side of the fence.

3. Arcane Season 2



Speaking of shows that ended abruptly, Arcane was another that suffered a similar fate. For what I can only assume were budgetary concerns, Netflix had decided it needed to wrap up the series with season two. So rather than more of the excellent character development and worldbuilding we had in season one, we instead got a race to the finish line that fell short of true greatness. At least all of it was still gorgeous to look at, and it did end with quite the bang, all things considered.

2. The Penguin



You wouldn't typically think of comic book characters when thinking of prestige television shows. Well, all that changed when The Penguin hit HBO and Max this year. Picking up from where The Batman left off, the show trades the top hat and gun umbrella of the comics for the kind of crime drama that wouldn't feel out of place in a show like The Sopranos. This results in a grounded, introspective look at the titular Penguin as he makes his way up the ranks of Gotham City's criminal underworld.

1. Shōgun



It didn't take very long into the first episode of Shōgun before I got the feeling it just might be something truly special. Perhaps it was the excellent production design that first paved the way for those thoughts, or maybe even how the well-written characters were brought to life with stellar performances across the board. Whatever the case may be, it was immediately evident that the show existed in a class all by itself.

This is not a knock on all the other shows that debuted or returned this year, but more to illustrate how high of esteem I happen to hold this particular one in. And after watching it clean house at the Emmys, it was clear I was not the only one that felt that way. This is hands down one of the best shows to grace televisions in years, and easily my favorite one for 2024.

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