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The 25 Best TV Shows of 2023

This year, television fans ate well

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best tv shows of 2023
Best TV Shows of 2023: Jury Duty (Freevee), The Curse (Showtime), Beef (Netflix), Abbot Elementary (ABC), Succession (HBO), and The Bear (FX)

    Our Annual Report continues with our list of the 25 Best TV Shows of 2023. Stay tuned throughout the month for more awards, lists, and exclusive features about the year’s best in music, film, and TV. Find our complete Annual Report all in one place here.


    At this point in the 21st century, there’s something reassuring about the fact that no matter what happens, it seems like there will always be television. A global pandemic couldn’t stop it. A two-guild strike couldn’t stop it. It genuinely feels like when civilization itself crumbles around us, there will still be television to watch, write about, and rank.

    In 2023, we said goodbye to a lot of brilliant series, but those shows delivered equally brilliant endings worthy of what came before. Meanwhile, Nathan Fielder continued to do Nathan Fielder things, and those things left us gasping for breath (on multiple levels). And, proving nothing ever truly dies, some great revivals and continuations surprised us with their quality, including an animated series that was more than a remake and a tragically canceled comedy finding new life after over a decade.

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    This is because the best movies come and go, but television is an enduring presence, telling stories in a way no other medium can capture. Here are the 25 best TV shows of the year.

    Liz Shannon Miller
    Senior Entertainment Editor


    25. Blue Eye Samurai

    best tv shows 2023

    Blue Eye Samurai (Netflix)

    Created by: Amber Noizumi, Michael Green
    Cast: Maya Erskine, George Takei, Masi Oka, Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, Brenda Song, Darren Barnet, Randall Park, Kenneth Branagh, Ming-Na Wen
    Network/Platform: Netflix

    One of the year’s best surprises, this exceptionally graphic (in terms of both sex and violence) series also delivered some of 2023’s most beautiful animated sequences. Set in Edo period Japan, Blue Eye Samurai depicts a time when the presence of white people was outlawed, meaning that someone like the titular mixed-race Samurai was considered an abomination. That’s a big factor in their quest for vengeance which runs throughout the series, resulting in a lot of dismemberment and death, sometimes accompanied by an anachronistic but otherwise very appropriate hard rock soundtrack. Also worthy of note is the voice cast, with Ming-Na Wen getting to show her steel as a ruthless madam and an unexpected villain turn from Randall Park. — L.S. Miller

    24. Daisy Jones and the Six

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    Daisy Jones and the Six (Prime Video)

    Created by: Scott Neustadter, Michael H. Weber
    Cast: Riley Keough, Sam Claflin, Camila Morrone, Suki Waterhouse, Will Harrison, Josh Whitehouse, Sebastian Chacon, Nabiyah Be, Tom Wright, Timothy Olyphant
    Network/Platform: Prime Video

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    It was always going to be a tall order adapting Taylor Jenkins Reid’s novel, especially considering the book’s emphasis on inexpressible emotion, Rumours-esque conflict, and original songs beloved in an alternate version of the ’70s. Still, Daisy Jones and the Six’s creators managed to physicalize the fictional band’s heyday in an inspired fashion. The relationship arcs between bandmates are more developed and dynamic, and the show’s breakout performer, Camilla Morrone, absolutely nails a meaty, comprehensive role. Oh, and the original songs are a true delight — one listen to Aurora and you’ll be transported straight to the Pacific Coast Highway in 1978. — Paolo Ragusa

    23. What We Do in the Shadows (Season 5)

    best tv shows 2023

    What We Do in the Shadows (FX)

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

    FX’s vampire comedy continues to bite with both fangs in its fifth season. Guillermo’s wish to become a vampire finally comes true — sort of — and the fallout from that half-committed decision creates new wrinkles in the vampire residence’s fragile social fabric. While the show occasionally coasts on its pitch-perfect cast (who have never been better), this season had heaps of highlights, from Colin Robinson running for local office to Laszlo’s ongoing science experiments. Sometimes, it’s okay for a show to just hang out for a bit, especially when its essential ingredients deliver so very consistently. — Clint Worthington

    22. History of the World, Part II

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    History of the World, Part II (Hulu)

    Executive Producers: Mel Brooks, Wanda Sykes, Nick Kroll, Ike Barinholtz
    Cast: Brooks, Sykes, Kroll, Barinholtz, Jack Black, Kumail Nanjiani, Florence Pugh, Josh Gad, Johnny Knoxville, Taika Waititi
    Network/Platform: Hulu

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    There’s no better sign of how revered Mel Brooks is than his 1981 film History of the World, Part I getting an eight-episode sequel series, packed with what feels like every notable comedy actor working today. Not every sketch is a laugh-out-loud banger, but there are also no shortage of standouts, from the Jesus-centric parody of The Beatles: Get Back to (a terrified) Zahn McClarnon’s stand-up routine: “You might be a colonizer!” Even if we never get a Part III, we’ll always have Part II as a loving tribute to one of comedy’s most iconic voices. — L.S. Miller

    21. Welcome to Wrexham (Season 2)

    best tv shows 2023

    Welcome to Wrexham (FX)

    Producers: Drew Palombi, Jeff Luini, Aaron Lovell
    Cast: Rob McElhenney, Ryan Reynolds
    Network/Platform: FX

    Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney knew they were taking a big risk by buying Wrexham, but it certainly appears to be paying off: After 15 years in the fifth tier of English football and a record-breaking, mind-blowing rivalry with Notts County this season, Wrexham AFC finally gained promotion out of the National League. The euphoric finale of Welcome to Wrexham is definitely satisfying, but the journey to get there is equally rich — not only are we given a great first look at Wrexham’s women’s team, we’re taken deep into the lives of these footballers, supporters, and the people that keep this club running. There isn’t another show quite like Wrexham right now, and its novelty is rewarding. — P. Ragusa

    20. Paul T. Goldman

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    Paul T. Goldman (Peacock)

    Created by: Jason Woliner
    Cast: Paul T. Goldman
    Network/Platform: Peacock

    In a year where Freevee’s Jury Duty has gained plaudits for its comic blending of fiction and reality, it’s a shame more people haven’t seen Peacock’s own swing for the metafictional fences. Borat 2 filmmaker Jason Woliner connects with nebbishy self-published novelist Paul T. Goldman to adapt the man’s autobiographical book into a thriller — starring the middle-aged schlemiel himself. Over six episodes, the show gradually turns from a goofy study in self-delusion to a quest to peel back the layers of its mysterious subject. Who is Paul T. Goldman, anyway? The answers may surprise even the man himself. — C. Worthington

    19. Fargo (Year 5)

    best tv shows 2023

    Fargo (FX)

    Created by: Noah Hawley
    Cast: Juno Temple, Jennifer Jason Leigh, David Rysdahl, Joe Keery, Lamorne Morris, Richa Moorjani, Sam Spruell, Sienna King, Dave Foley, Jon Hamm
    Network/Platform: FX

    After a couple of disappointing seasons, Noah Hawley’s surreal anthology series of Midwestern crime and ignominy roars back with a vengeance in Season 5. It does so by going back to the basics, starting out as a quasi-funhouse-mirror refraction of the Coen film’s plot (a Dakotan housewife gets kidnapped in broad daylight, but this time she’s ready for them) before warping into something far odder. What’s more, the show digs devilishly into how “Midwestern nice” has warmed into something meaner in the post-Trump era, with angry school boards, gun-greedy militias, and so much more. — C. Worthington

    18. The Other Two (Season 3)

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    The Other Two (Max)

    Created by: Chris Kelly, Sarah Schneider
    Cast: Heléne Yorke, Drew Tarver, Case Walker, Ken Marino, Molly Shannon, Wanda Sykes, Brandon Scott Jones, Josh Segarra
    Network/Platform: Max

    The first two seasons of HBO’s The Other Two were absurd, satirical, and quite a bit of fun. Season 3, on the other hand, gets downright silly — the jokes are sillier, the characters are sillier, and the critiques on celebrity culture are so sharp they could only be described as, well, silly. It’s unfortunate that the show wrapped up after only three seasons, but what a hilarious, impressive high to go out on. — Jonah Krueger

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    17. My Adventures with Superman

    best tv shows 2023

    My Adventures With Superman (Adult Swim)

    Created by: Jake Wyatt, Brendan Clougher, Josie Campbell DEVELOPED
    Cast: Jack Quaid, Alice Lee, Ishmel Sahid
    Network/Platform: Adult Swim

    After so many years of Zack Snyder’s muted color palette and ultra-grim approach to the DC Universe, the anime-style My Adventures with Superman was almost a shock to the system, sneaking very much under the radar to deliver an earnest Clark Kent (voiced by Jack Quaid) discovering the full extent of his alien superpowers while crushing hard on his fellow intern Lois Lane (Alice Lee). For those who fondly remember the animated Justice League, this is probably the first show to come as close to matching that series’ ability to capture the glorious weirdness of comic books — as well as all the qualities that make Superman one of pop culture’s most enduring characters. — L.S. Miller

    16. One Piece

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    One Piece (Netflix)

    Created by: Eiichiro Oda, Matt Owens, Steven Maeda
    Cast: Iñaki Godoy, Emily Rudd, Mackenyu, Jacob Gibson, Taz Skylar, Vincent Regan, Jeff Ward, Morgan Davies
    Network/Platform: Netflix

    Manga and anime aren’t for everyone — and Netflix has an unfortunate track record demonstrating adaptations of that material are rarely for anyone, even fans. It’s quite a wonder, then, that the streamer broke its own curse with a live-action retelling of one of Japanese animation’s most sprawling stories in One Piece. By earnestly committing not just to the visuals and lore of the Straw Hat Pirates, but the hearts of the characters therein, co-showrunners Steven Maeda and Matt Owens deliver a show enjoyable to diehards and newcomers alike. Seeing these peculiar characters in this resplendently exaggerated setting feels fresh and exciting, with engaging world building and performances just campy enough to sell the whole concept. Even potentially grating characters like Monkey D. Luffy become lovable as the show develops, creating uncommon anticipation for the greenlit Season 2. — Ben Kaye

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