Friday, February 04, 2022

Top 12 TV Shows of 2021

 


1. White Lotus (HBO) Season 1-Mike White’s astute tableaux of human shallowness explores whether people on vacation can truly escape who they are through three interlocking groups of vacationers in Hawaiian paradise. For those who still mourn the cancellation of “Enlightened”, this is sweet redemption (More here and here)



 


2. Wanda Vision (Disney Plus) Limited Series- With such mind-boggling layers of symbolism, this is as if the world's best escape room writers were tasked with writing a sitcom that entrusts viewers to be active rather than passive participants in decryption. The series takes the viewer on a journey through various sitcom tropes on a decade-by-decade journey with underlying storylines dealing with grief, manipulation, and escapism as a form of evil. With all the painstaking detail that the prodution team implants its easter eggs, this is a sure contender for the most intricate show on television if not its most ambitious. I have little familiarity with the MCU (full disclosure: I hate the MCU) but was able to peace most details together.



 

3. Resident Alien (SyFy) Season 1-Alan Tyduk hits the right notes of not-to-be-believed silliness, as an oblivious alien who improbably manages to integrate into a small town in Colorado. In its own hokey way, the show is endearing, rich in character, and features a marshmellowshly  portrait of small-town life with plenty of scenery porn in the background. The show also features a sizeable Native American cast but doesn't resort to being pedantic. (More here)

 


4. 
We Are Lady Parts (Peacock) Season 1-A six-episode inaugural season takes us into the often unseen world of Muslim urbanites in Europe. The diverse quintet of women in London are united by their love of punk rock. If Dewey Finn’s mantra (whose words, ironically were written in “School of Rock” by Mike White of “White Lotus”) that “one great rock show can change the world”, these hijab-clad women are rocking their way to just that. (More here)

 

5. The Great (Hulu) Season 2-The spiritual sister to “The Favourite” (Show runner Tony McNamara also wrote that film about the decadent court of a European royal) is set in the glorious decadence of the court of 18th Century Russia with bored aristocrats feeding their basest desires. In “Hamilton”, Washington says to the titular character, “Winning was easy young man, governing’s much harder” which is an apt description of this season as Catherine the Great has won.  Now what? This is a slate of psychologically multi-layered characters who are constantly re-evaluating which side of the fence they sit on.  (More here)

 

6. Never Have I Ever (Netflix) Season 2- Never Have I Ever tells the story of a teenage girl breaking away from the mores of a traditional Indian-American family grieving for her late father, and discovering boys. This year, the show proved the epitome of how a show should expand its side characters and mix up the dynamics in its sophomore season.

 


7. Doctor Death (Peacock) Limited Series-Adapted from a podcast, this is a high-takes parable of a medical narcissist (played by Joshua Jackson, yes, that Joshua Jackson) who left a trail of paralyzed patients in his wake while the medical establishment took way too long to catch up with him. It’s a tale of bureaucracy working exactly as it should and still leading to classic nightmare fuel. It’s also a tale of the upstream battle two doctors (Alec Baldwin and Christian Slater at the top of their game) must take to stop an atrocity.







8. What We Do in the Shadows (FX) Season 4-It’s been the best of times (for Colin Robinson who appears to have made at least one trusty comrade) and the worst of times (geez Nandoor, you need some Prozac) for our gang of Staten Island-based vampires. The joke here is that as the quartet (plus everyone’s favorite lackey, Guillermo) ascends the ranks of the vampiric council, they continue to be tripped up by the banalities of life (chain letters, toy store, neighborhood meetings).



9. Mr. Mayor (NBC) Season 4-Another entry in the canon of Tina Fey and Robert Carlock that's a little more "30 Rock" than "Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt." The humor is clever but skin-deep. Don't expect pathos-driven growth with the narrative highs of Kimmy, Titus and Jaqueline. At the same time, the show, set in the Mayor's office of L.A., has much less of an insider vibe. As it's mostly episodic, the show lives or dies by the episode but it's hard to deny that the show has been hitting a lot of home runs in the back half of the season.

 


10. Bless the Harts (Fox) Season 2-Though the show was cancelled, we can at least celebrate how the show got a lengthy second season run. The brainchild of ex-SNL writer and former North Carolina native Emily Spivey, the show split the difference between homage and parody of small-town Carolinian life. The show is about a lower-class family in small town North Carolina features a waitress with modest aspirations to rise within her station, her sly mother (whose primary motivations in life are besting her rival, feeling young enough that she can flirt with construction workers, and pulling off semi-fraudulent schemes), her boyfriend (a trucker persona with a teddy bear persona underneath), and her dead panning daughter. It’s an extremely strong quartet of characters who exhibit great chemistry.

 


11. American Crime Story: Impeachment (FX) Season 3-As a child of the 90s, I knew very little about this incident other than feeling my heart broken by Bill Clinton when  he went on TV and flat-out admitted to saying he did the thing he previously said he didn’t do a million times. Boy, would 8th grade me loved to have heard all the juicy details (for educational purposes about sex, if nothing else). Better late than never! ACS is essentially found art: Monica and Bill is such a juicy news story, that even in mediocre hands it would make good TV. However, the credit goes to Ryan Murphy and crew for such adept casting and editing.


12. House Broken (Fox) Season 1- Lisa Kudrow plays a poodle, Honey, who leads a therapy group for all the neighborhood pets. There’s a lot of low-hanging fruit here for the jokes—simply imagine what your pet would say if they could talk to a therapist and viola! – but the jokes really hit and the large ensemble of characters (for example, Will Forte voices a turtle who’s in love with a croc shoe and Clea Duvall plays a rescue cat in desperate need of validation) establishes their comic beats with an extremely impressive speed. (More here)








Honorable Mentions:

AP Bio (Peacock) Season 4, The Chair (Netflix) Season 1, Cruel Summer (Freeform) Season 1, Ghosts (CBS) Season 1, Locke and Key (Netflix) Season 2, Kevin Can Go F*** Himself (AMC TV), Maid (Netflix) Limited Series,  Studio C (BYU TV) Seasons 13 and 14, Saturday Morning All-Stars (Netflix) Season 1, Schmigadoon (Apple TV) Season 1


Everything Else I Saw:

And lest you think I’m being hard on these shows, this is everything else I watched this year that didn’t make my top 12 or Honorable Mention list that these shows rank above:
Abbott Elementary (ABC)^,  Animaniacs (Hulu), AP Bio (Peacock), Attack of the Movie Cliches (Netflix), B Positive (CBS)^, Call Me Kat (ABC), Call Your Mother (ABC), Cobra Kai (Netflix), The Circle (Netflix), Disenchanted (Netflix), Frank of Ireland (Amazon), Explained (Netflix),  Great North (Fox), Inside Job (Netflix), It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia (FX), Home Economics (ABC), Kevin Hart’s Olympic Show (Peacock), Kim’s Convenience (CBC), La Brea (NBC/Peacock), Lost Symbol (Peacock), Love Death and Robots (Netflix), Mr. Mercedes (Amazon), Mighty Ducks (Disney Plus), Miracle Workers: Oregon Trail (TBS), Mosquito Coast (Apple TV), McGruber (Peacock), Mr. Corman (Apple TV), Mythic Quest (Apple TV), Nora From Queens (Comedy Central), Nine Perfect Strangers (Hulu), Only Murders in the Building (Hulu), The Premise (Hulu), Rebel (Amazon Plus), Reservation Dogs (Peacock), Rutherford Falls (Peacock), SNL (NBC), Solar Opposites (Hulu), Squid Game (Netflix)^, To Tell the Truth (ABC), Young Rock (NBC)^

 

^ means I watched just one or two episodes. I didn’t necessarily watch every episode of a show if it’s not marked


No comments: