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Top 25 TV Shows of 2022

Featuring lawyers, rebels, schoolteachers, vampires, pirates, chefs, supervillains, and office drones

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Top TV Shows 2022
Illustration by Allison Aubrey

    Our 2022 Annual Report continues with our list of Top TV Shows of the year. As the year winds down, stay tuned for more awards, lists, and articles about the best music, film, and TV of 2022. You can find it all in one place here.


    One of the most exciting things about covering TV these days is witnessing how creators continue to innovate within a format that has experienced huge changes in the last 10 years, but remains one of our greatest modern-day sources for powerful, important storytelling.

    Consequence’s best shows of the year encompass tough documentary work, wild comedies, and beautifully nuanced dramas, taking us from Las Vegas comedy clubs to 1990s Calgary to the farthest edges of the galaxy. We said goodbyes to some dearly beloved shows, though not before they delivered their final notes on their own terms, and we sailed the high seas, investigated murders in the building, spread mayhem throughout Gotham, and talked about Bill Cosby — all without leaving our couches.

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    For a while, it was the Golden Age of Television. Then, it was the era of Too Much TV. Now, we’re on the verge of something new, where there are still a lot of shows out there, certainly too many to be watched by everyone — but while actual “water cooler” series might be few and far between, there’s greater diversity in what’s available. It’s not just diversity in terms of who’s making these shows, but in what kind of stories they’re telling. Thus, the challenge of picking the 25 best shows of the year is harder than ever — because the options available are truly magical.

    Liz Shannon Miller
    Senior Entertainment Editor


    25. Westworld (Season 4)

    Westworld Season 4 Cast Interviews

    Westworld (HBO)

    Created by: Jonathan Nolan, Lisa Joy
    Cast: Evan Rachel Wood, Thandie Newton, Jeffrey Wright, James Marsden, Luke Hemsworth, Angela Sarafyan, Ed Harris, Tessa Thompson
    Network: HBO

    If you bailed on Westworld at some point, consider their fourth (and final) season a reason to bring yourself back online. Picking up where the futuristic plotlines of Season 3 left off, the show takes our favorite robot gang to New York City (among other majestic locales) and sees the evil Charlotte Hale-slash-Dolores, a.k.a. Halores, play God to disastrous effects. While the season ends on an equally evil cliffhanger (hello, eleventh-hour cancellation), the “Christina” plotline alone makes it all worth it. Just as the hosts on the show can (mostly) never die, we won’t give up hope that Westworld gets rebooted again one day, too. — Gab Ginsberg

    24. Russian Doll (Season 2)

    Russian Doll Season 2 Review

    Russian Doll (Netflix)

    Created by: Natasha Lyonne, Leslye Headland, Amy Poehler
    Cast: Natasha Lyonne, Greta Lee, Elizabeth Ashley, Charlie Barnett, Chloë Sevigny
    Network: Netflix

    After the first season of Russian Doll, it was hard for a lot of people to even imagine where the story could go next. But Natasha Lyonne, along with co-creators Leslye Headland and Amy Poehler, proved that the existential comedy had more than one trick up its sleeve, as Nadia (Lyonne) and Alan (Charlie Barnett), her partner in defying death, got caught up in a whole new mindfuck, this time a time-traveling intergenerational mindfuck. While a third season is not a given, Lyonne did tell Variety that “I don’t think I’ll ever be done with this show,” and if it happens, we’ll know to expect the unexpected. — Liz Shannon Miller

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    23. Ms. Marvel

    Ms Marvel Review Iman Vellani

    Ms. Marvel (Disney+)

    Created by: Bisha K. Ali
    Cast: Iman Vellani, Matt Lintz, Yasmeen Fletcher, Zenobia Shroff, Mohan Kapur, Saagar Shaikh, Laurel Marsden, Azhar Usman, Rish Shah, Arian Moayed, Alysia Reiner
    Network: Disney+

    Iman Vellani’s masterful performance as Kamala Khan balances the glee of a teenage Captain Marvel fan discovering she has superpowers with the guilt of hiding the secret from her close-knit immigrant family. Kamala’s journey to discover her identity as a Pakistani-American and burgeoning superhero offers a history lesson that doesn’t feel forced as she uncovers her ancestor’s own secrets. Despite its multi-layered story, the show is still one of the few Marvel series that actually arrives at a satisfying conclusion. — Eddie Fu

    22. House of the Dragon

    House of the Dragon Season 1 Episode 10 Review

    House of the Dragon (HBO)

    Created by: Ryan Condal, George R. R. Martin
    Cast: Paddy Considine, Matt Smith, Emma D’Arcy, Rhys Ifans, Steve Toussaint, Eve Best, Sonoya Mizuno, Fabien Frankel, Milly Alcock, Emily Carey, Graham McTavish, Olivia Cooke
    Network: HBO

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    Has there ever been a show that faced higher expectations before premiering than Game of Thrones’ first spin-off? But rather than being overshadowed by its predecessor, House of the Dragon introduced compelling new characters and crafted a more self-contained storyline to make viewers fall in love with Westeros all over again. — Spencer Dukoff

    21. The Sandman

    The Sandman Review Netflix

    The Sandman (Netflix)

    Developed by: Neil Gaiman & David S. Goyer & Allan Heinberg
    Cast: Tom Sturridge, Gwendoline Christie, Vivienne Acheampong, Boyd Holbrook, Charles Dance, Kirby Howell-Baptiste, Mason Alexander Park, Jenna Coleman, Joely Richardson, David Thewlis, Kyo Ra, Stephen Fry
    Network: Netflix

    It’s possible that Neil Gaiman’s classic The Sandman is still impossible to adapt; nothing will ever compare to reading those graphic novels. But the team behind Netflix’s TV series got it just about as perfect as fans could have hoped. Spectacular production design, strong performances (Tom Sturridge, Boyd Holbrook, and David Thewlis in particular), and innovative storytelling structures set Sandman up for potentially years of worthy genre television. — Ben Kaye

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    20. A League of Their Own

    League of Their Own Queer Stories

    A League of Their Own (Prime Video)

    Created by: Will Graham & Abbi Jacobson
    Cast: Abbi Jacobson, Chanté Adams, D’Arcy Carden, Gbemisola Ikumelo, Roberta Colindrez, Kelly McCormack, Priscilla Delgado, Molly Ephraim, Melanie Field, Kate Berlant
    Network: Prime Video

    A League of Their Own follows the trials and tribulations of professional women’s baseball players as they travel across an America still entrenched in the battles of WWII. As well as featuring lovable characters and comedic scenarios, the show highlighted the compelling real-life circumstances women, white, POC, and LGBTQ+ people faced during this period in history. A League of Their Own proved to be a delightful successor to the original 1992 film for many fans. — Caitlyn Taylor

    19. She-Hulk: Attorney at Law

    She Hulk Review Disney Plus

    She-Hulk: Attorney at Law (Disney+)

    Created by: Jessica Gao
    Cast: Tatiana Maslany, Jameela Jamil, Ginger Gonzaga, Mark Ruffalo, Josh Segarra, Mark Linn-Baker, Tim Roth, Benedict Wong, Renée Elise Goldsberry, Jon Bass, Rhys Coiro, Patti Harrison, Charlie Cox
    Network: Disney+

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    It’s the Marvel curse: Fans demand something different, and then complain when what arrives isn’t the same — which is what makes She-Hulk Season 1’s madcap ending the crazy turn we all deserved. As a procedural legal comedy with a plethora of amusing non-powered side characters (Ginger Gonzaga’s Nikki, Griffin Matthews’ Luke), She-Hulk finally smashed an increasingly stale formula. Plus, it gave us a bonafide star in Tatiana Maslany and brought Daredevil into the fold. If you didn’t have fun watching this one, sit your Smug Hulk ass down. — B.K.

    18. Stranger Things (Season 4)

    spotify upside down playlist stranger things vecna kate bush running up that hill max

    Stranger Things (Netflix)

    Created by: The Duffer Brothers
    Cast: Winona Ryder, David Harbour, Millie Bobby Brown, Finn Wolfhard, Gaten Matarazzo, Caleb McLaughlin, Noah Schnapp, Sadie Sink, Natalia Dyer, Charlie Heaton, Joe Keery, Maya Hawke, Brett Gelman, Priah Ferguson, Matthew Modine, Paul Reiser
    Network: Netflix

    The scariest season since Stranger Things’ first had a good needle drop (“Master of Puppets”) and an all-time great needle drop (“Running Up That Hill”). But most importantly, it had Jamie Campbell Bower’s Vecna, a worthy foil to Eleven (Millie Bobbie Brown) and one of the most thrilling villains of 21st century horror. — Wren Graves

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    17. Hacks (Season 2)

    Emmys 2022 Winners

    Hacks (HBO Max)

    Created by: Lucia Aniello, Paul W. Downs, Jen Statsky
    Cast: Jean Smart, Hannah Einbinder, Carl Clemons-Hopkins
    Network: HBO Max

    Season 2 of HBO’s Hacks features main characters Deborah (Jean Smart) and Ava (Hannah Einbender) out on the road, their unlikely bond being strengthened amidst the malaise and wonder of middle America. It’s also an even deeper investigation of the sacrifices required by show business, and its bittersweet ending — including an unforgettable scene where Meg Stalter’s Kayla joins Jimmy (Paul W. Downs) in quitting her father’s talent agency — lines the show up for an unexpected and intriguing Season 3. — Paolo Ragusa

    16. Harley Quinn (Season 3)

    Harley Quinn Season 3 Review

    Harley Quinn (HBO Max)

    Developed by: Justin Halpern, Patrick Schumacker
    Cast: Kaley Cuoco, Lake Bell, Alan Tudyk, Ron Funches, Tony Hale, Jason Alexander
    Network: HBO Max

    Harley Quinn jumped back in action with a sensational Season 3. Following her breakup with the Joker, Harley has set her sights on becoming the greatest villain in Gotham. With the help of her ragtag crew of morally dubious misfits and Poison Ivy, her bombastic adventures provided audiences with a load of laughs and heartfelt tears. With the deepening of Harley and Ivy’s relationship into lovers, the ever-expanding meta humor, and even the appearances of fan favorites from the DC universe, Harley Quinn continues to make waves. — C.T.

    15. Reservation Dogs (Season 2)

    Reservation Dogs Season 2 Review

    Reservation Dogs (FX)

    Created by: Sterlin Harjo, Taika Waititi
    Cast: Devery Jacobs, D’Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai, Lane Factor, Paulina Alexis
    Network: FX

    The Reservation Dogs crew splintered at the end of the first season, forcing them to pick up the pieces at the beginning of Season 2 — and every actor in the core quartet seized the opportunity to shine within their respective storylines before tragedy inevitably brings them back together. Willie Jack (Paulina Alexis) in particular proves herself to be the beating heart of the show, shedding her tough exterior with a devastating portrayal of a teenager learning to process grief. — E.F.

    14. Our Flag Means Death

    our-flag-means-death-rhys-darby-taika-waititi_5

    Our Flag Means Death (HBO Max)

    Created by: David Jenkins
    Cast: Rhys Darby, Ewen Bremner, Joel Fry, Samson Kayo, Con O’Neill, Nathan Foad, Vico Ortiz, Kristian Nairn, Matthew Maher, Guz Khan, David Fane, Samba Schutte, Rory Kinnear, Nat Faxon, Taika Waititi
    Network: HBO Max

    Longtime collaborators Taika Waititi and Rhys Darby are the heart at the center of David Jenkins’ wildly entertaining pirate romantic comedy. All aboard the Revenge, folks, where there’s truly room for all kinds of kinds — as one of the most heartwarming ensemble pieces in recent memory, the show’s strong first season leaves us ready to see what’s next for Stede and Blackbeard. — Mary Siroky

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    13. Fleishman Is in Trouble

    Fleishman Is In Trouble Review

    Fleishman Is In Trouble (FX)

    Created by: Taffy Brodesser-Akner
    Cast: Jesse Eisenberg, Lizzy Caplan, Claire Danes, Adam Brody
    Network: FX

    Why are comedies that fill the viewer with existential dread so irresistible? Like BoJack Horseman or Barry before it, Fleishman Is in Trouble starts as an innocent enough satire tackling online dating and New York City class structures. By the end of the season, however, the adaptation of Taffy Brodesser-Akner’s novel has thoroughly examined unanswerable questions of love, life, and self-identity. Wrap all of that into a genuinely engaging mystery, and you have one of the best-written shows of the year. — Jonah Krueger

    12. Only Murders In the Building (Season 2)

    Only Murders in the Building Season 2 Review

    Only Murders in the Building (Hulu)

    Created by: Steve Martin, John Hoffman
    Cast: Steve Martin, Martin Short, Selena Gomez, Aaron Dominguez, Amy Ryan, Cara Delevingne, Tina Fey, Jackie Hoffman, Da’Vine Joy Randolph, Nathan Lane, Michael Cyril Creighton
    Network: Hulu

    The first season was a pandemic balm last year, and it’s gratifying to see Hulu’s cult hit mystery losing barely a step in its second go-round. Steve Martin, Martin Short, and Selena Gomez got plenty of moments to reinforce their adorable dynamic, even as the show blossomed past its true-crime parody remit and grappled — sometimes unsuccessfully — with the world they built. — Clint Worthington

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    11. The Bear

    The Bear Review Hulu FX

    The Bear (FX)

    Created by: Christopher Storer
    Cast: Jeremy Allen White, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Ayo Edebiri, Lionel Boyce, Liza Colón-Zayas, Abby Elliott
    Network: FX

    FX’s The Bear is tailor-made to match the high-energy rhythm of a busy restaurant kitchen, and luckily, it’s paired along with an emotionally resonant story arc. With dynamic, delectable performances from Jeremy Allen White, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, and Ayo Edibiri — who could not handle the show’s rapid-fire beat changes better as the talented chef Sidney — The Bear is one of the most captivating debut seasons of 2022. — P.R.

    10. High School

    High School Interview Tegan Sara

    High School (Freevee)

    Created by: Clea DuVall
    Cast: Railey Gilliland, Seazynn Gilliland, Esther McGregor, Olivia Rouyre, Amanda Fix, Brianne Tju, Geena Meszaros, Cobie Smulders, Kyle Bornheimer
    Network: Freevee

    There have been no shortage of shows about the adolescent experience over the years, but High School proved to be both expansive and intimate. Grounded in Tegan and Sara Quin’s own coming-of-age story, the series features Railey and Seazynn Gilliland as the young versions of the indie pop stars, who in the 1990s are just beginning to discover who they are as people, including their innate talent for music.

    The series is packed with period-appropriate details (yes, kids, in the days before cell phones, you had to call your crush’s house and hope they were home and that you didn’t have to talk too long to their parents before your crush got on the line). The plaid flannel and grunge tunes flow freely. But what makes the series truly special is how co-showrunners Clea DuVall and Laura Kittrell took the Quins’ memoir and found the universal in it, in part thanks to a narrative structure that doesn’t just let events unfold from Tegan and Sara’s points of view, but deliberately showcases the perspectives of the entire ensemble, including the twins’ mother, Simone (Codie Smulders).

    The result, accompanied by a great soundtrack and great performances, is a sweet and nuanced take on what it means to get older and understand that adulthood is as complicated and messy as being a kid. Anyone can watch High School for free — it’s streaming now with ads on Freevee. And really, everyone should. — L.S.M.

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    09. Atlanta (Seasons 3 and 4)

    Atlanta Season 4 Review Donald Glover

    Atlanta (FX)

    Created by: Donald Glover
    Cast: Donald Glover, Brian Tyree Henry, Lakeith Stanfield, Zazie Beetz
    Network: FX

    Getting two full seasons of Atlanta in one year was a truly special gift, and both installments proved to be complementary in many ways. The show’s return for Season 3 was packed with wild creative swings and huge ideas, but with multiple stand-alone episodes featuring new characters in alternate storylines, meaning less screen time for the show’s core quartet.

    Then, Season 4 brought the gang home literally and figuratively, with the final episodes drilling harder into these characters as they all finally settle into adulthood: Alfred’s (Brian Tyree Henry) stardom is confirmed, while Earn (Donald Glover) and Van (Zazie Beetz) commit to life together as a family, and Darius (Lakeith Stanfield) commits to his dream-like existence.

    It’s not that Season 4 didn’t include its own wild swings (“The Goof Who Sat by the Door” might be the best episode of television aired this year), but the final season of Atlanta put the focus back on the characters we’d been following from the beginning, showcasing their journeys while never losing sight of what made this show special from the beginning. — L.S.M.

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    08. We Need to Talk About Cosby

    Hannibal Buress Cosby Doc

    We Need to Talk About Cosby (Showtime)

    Created by: W. Kamau Bell
    Network: Showtime

    As the #MeToo era enters its next phase, one where the nuances of being “canceled” struggle to be understood, it makes sense to examine the legacy of one Dr. Bill Cosby, who spent decades being beloved by the world before the world found out about his horrifying history of sexual assault.

    Writer/director W. Kamau Bell, a self-professed child of the Cosby generation, brings keen insight and empathy to this four-part series, which not only lets many of Cosby’s survivors speak about their experiences, but examines the cultural forces which kept Cosby’s crimes out of the spotlight for decades. It’s a complex, sharp, and essential exploration of a man who has been a symbol of so many different things over the years, and Bell and his producers are to be commended for the way they managed to adapt to the abrupt change in Cosby’s incarceration status while the documentary was still in production.

    Cosby is currently a free man, and he may one day try to get his comedy career going again. Bell’s unflinching breakdown of how Cosby came to be, and how his actions affected so many, may not be the nail in the coffin for that effort. But it’s impossible to imagine watching Cosby now, and Bell is to be thanked for creating the definitive answer for why that is. — L.S.M.

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    07. Barry (Season 3)

    Barry Season 3 Review

    Barry (HBO)

    Created by: Alex Berg, Bill Hader
    Cast: Bill Hader, Stephen Root, Sarah Goldberg, Glenn Fleshler, Anthony Carrigan, Henry Winkler, Sarah Burns
    Network: HBO

    Remember when this show was a dark comedy, emphasis on the comedy? Somehow, though, even as Bill Hader and company slowly shift their focus from making us belly-laugh to making our skin crawl (especially the season finale, I mean, holy shit), the show continues to get better and better. Maybe we’re all just masochists.

    Season 3 brings along with it a new Barry, one who’s far more broken, delusional, and morally reprehensible than ever before. As he attempts to navigate his relationship, acting career, and hitman responsibilities, his depression and inescapable past lead him down an increasingly chaotic path. Don’t worry, there are still plenty of laughs to be had — they’re just the type of laughs that make you feel slightly guilty afterward. — J.K.

    06. What We Do in the Shadows (Season 4)

    What We Do Shadows Season 4 Review

    What We Do in the Shadows (FX)

    Created by: Jemaine Clement
    Cast: Kayvan Novak, Matt Berry, Natasia Demetriou, Harvey Guillén, Mark Proksch
    Network: FX

    Sunrise, sunset — it’s not just the Fiddler on the Roof number Matt Berry’s Laszlo belts during the finale (which shares its title), but the main vibe of the vampire mockumentary’s fourth season, still one of the best comedies on TV. Our vampire gang and friendly familiar Guillermo went through a lot of changes: Gizmo came out of the closet, Colin Robinson was reborn into an uncanny boy-child, Nandor explored married life and found himself wanting.

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    The more things change, the more they stay the same, though, and the show’s best gags revolve around our immortal subjects bristling against the sameness of life. But isn’t the existential ennui of repetition just the way of the sitcom? And this fractured family is still the most devious (and hilarious) in all of Neeww Yooorrkk Citttyyyyy. — C.W.

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