Table of Contents
With final outings from series like This Is Us, Search Party, and After Life, returning freshman series favorites like Euphoria and Resident Alien, and more of what we know and love from long-runners like Black-ish and Billions, January has plenty for us to be bingeing and catching up on. Catch up on the family series that started it all before Black-ish returns with Season 8 on Jan. 4. The series’ season 6 premiere on Jan. 4 on NBC marks the beginning of its last outing, so now is the time to catch up! 66 hours (for the first five seasons) 97% Search Party (HBO Max) What it is: A relationship drama turned coming-of-age comedy turned noir-esque murder mystery thriller turned courtroom procedural, Search Party is everything but definable — and that’s exactly what makes it so good.
Where to watch: Amazon, Google Play, HBO Max, Microsoft, Vudu Commitment: Approx. Season 2 premieres Jan. 9 on HBO. Where to watch it: Amazon, Google Play, HBO Max, Microsoft, Vudu Commitment: Approx.
Its third and final season premieres Jan. 14 on Netflix. Where to watch it: Netflix Commitment: Approx. Ray may be the man L.A.’s rich and famous call to get out of trouble, but upon the return of his father, Donovan, a family man himself, develops problems of his own.
Why you should watch it: This Emmy-winning series brings bleakness to the deceptive beauty of the Ozarks, and it establishes Bateman as so much more than the comedic actor most know him as today. Where to watch: Netflix Commitment: Approx. We can’t wait to see what’s in store for Season 3, which premieres Jan. 21 on Apple TV+.
Season 6 premieres Jan. 23 on Showtime. Season 2 premieres Jan. 26 on Syfy. 7.5 hours (for the first season) 84% How I Met Your Mother (CBS) (Photo by Cliff Lipson/©CBS courtesy Everett Collection) What it is: This long-running sitcom centered on the adventures of a single man named Ted Mosby (played by Josh Radnor), his dating life, and his circle of friends, all leading up to him meeting and marrying the woman who would become the mother of his children.
How Long Has The Gang Been Shut In The Bank Of Spain?
89% Synopsis: The gang has been shut in the Bank of Spain for over 100 hours. They have managed to rescue Lisbon, but their darkest moment is upon them after losing one of their own. The Professor has been captured by Sierra and, for the first time, doesn’t have an escape plan.
The end of the greatest heist in history is approaching, and what began as a robbery will turn into a war.
Netflix Has An Extensive Library Of What?
There’s even more to watch. Netflix has an extensive library of feature films, documentaries, TV shows, anime, award-winning Netflix originals, and more. Watch as much as you want, anytime you want.
What Is The Name Of The Show That Aired On American Idol In January Of 1921?
Thanks partly to the vagaries of Covid-19, there is an unusually large amount of prestige hitting the television schedule over the next three months — critical and audience favorites making triumphant returns after varying lengths of time. The safe and easy thing to do with a winter preview would be to fill it with those known quantities. But that wouldn’t be much fun.
Instead here are, in chronological order, 20 new shows or slightly lower-profile returning shows that look interesting. Try to fit in one or two. If you’re looking for a trend, how about notable actresses playing real-life women in some sort of trouble: Amanda Seyfried as Elizabeth Holmes (“The Dropout”), Lily James as Pamela Anderson (“Pam & Tommy”), Renée Zellweger as the convicted murderer Pam Hupp (“The Thing About Pam”), Julia Garner as the con woman Anna Sorokin (“Inventing Anna”).
How Often Does Netflix Add Original Programming?
Sign up for our Watching newsletter to get recommendations on the best films and TV shows to stream and watch, delivered to your inbox. Netflix adds original programming at such a steady clip that it can be hard to keep up with which of its dramas, comedies and reality shows are must-sees. And that’s not including all the TV series Netflix picks up from broadcast and cable networks.
Each recommendation comes with a secondary pick, too, for 100 suggestions in all. (Note: Netflix sometimes removes titles without notice.) We also have lists of the best movies on Netflix and Amazon Prime Video, along with the best TV and movies on Hulu and Disney+.
What Was One Of The First Shows That Fans Would Binge Watch In A Single Weekend?
Long before streaming led audiences to binge-watch entire series in a single weekend, there was just plain old primetime-television-watching bliss—and fan favorites such as “The West Wing” and “The Sopranos” kept fans glued to their sofas week after week, year after year, to find out what would happen next. Some shows were so good, fans would purchase TV box sets on VHS or DVD to watch them again and again in order to relive the drama or bask in the laughs. Now that we have a multitude of streaming services at our fingertips—Netflix, Amazon, Hulu, and Disney+—and can watch TV anytime, anywhere, the content has become even richer and more diverse, pleasing both fans and critics alike, with original hits like “The Mandalorian” and “Game of Thrones” and revivals of shows like “Arrested Development.”
Shows were ranked by IMDb user ratings, with ties broken by the number of votes. For this list, a series had to have at least 50,000 votes. Some shows on this list may seem obvious to television lovers.
Whether because they saw a limited run, attempted extremely niche genres, or were released very recently yet generated enough acclaim to appear here alongside historic staples. Read on to see how all 100 shake out, refresh your pop-culture memory, remind yourself of an epic binge, or add to your watch list. But do so with caution—this list contains some spoilers.
With final outings from series like This Is Us, Search Party, and After Life, returning freshman series favorites like Euphoria and Resident Alien, and more of what we know and love from long-runners like Black-ish and Billions, January has plenty for us to be bingeing and catching up on. Catch up on the family series that started it all before Black-ish returns with Season 8 on Jan. 4. The series’ season 6 premiere on Jan. 4 on NBC marks the beginning of its last outing, so now is the time to catch up! 66 hours (for the first five seasons) 97% Search Party (HBO Max) What it is: A relationship drama turned coming-of-age comedy turned noir-esque murder mystery thriller turned courtroom procedural, Search Party is everything but definable — and that’s exactly what makes it so good.
Where to watch: Amazon, Google Play, HBO Max, Microsoft, Vudu Commitment: Approx. Season 2 premieres Jan. 9 on HBO. Where to watch it: Amazon, Google Play, HBO Max, Microsoft, Vudu Commitment: Approx.
Its third and final season premieres Jan. 14 on Netflix. Where to watch it: Netflix Commitment: Approx. Ray may be the man L.A.’s rich and famous call to get out of trouble, but upon the return of his father, Donovan, a family man himself, develops problems of his own.
Why you should watch it: This Emmy-winning series brings bleakness to the deceptive beauty of the Ozarks, and it establishes Bateman as so much more than the comedic actor most know him as today. Where to watch: Netflix Commitment: Approx. We can’t wait to see what’s in store for Season 3, which premieres Jan. 21 on Apple TV+.
Season 6 premieres Jan. 23 on Showtime. Season 2 premieres Jan. 26 on Syfy. 7.5 hours (for the first season) 84% How I Met Your Mother (CBS) (Photo by Cliff Lipson/©CBS courtesy Everett Collection) What it is: This long-running sitcom centered on the adventures of a single man named Ted Mosby (played by Josh Radnor), his dating life, and his circle of friends, all leading up to him meeting and marrying the woman who would become the mother of his children.
How Long Has The Gang Been Shut In The Bank Of Spain?
89% Synopsis: The gang has been shut in the Bank of Spain for over 100 hours. They have managed to rescue Lisbon, but their darkest moment is upon them after losing one of their own. The Professor has been captured by Sierra and, for the first time, doesn’t have an escape plan.
The end of the greatest heist in history is approaching, and what began as a robbery will turn into a war.
Netflix Has An Extensive Library Of What?
There’s even more to watch. Netflix has an extensive library of feature films, documentaries, TV shows, anime, award-winning Netflix originals, and more. Watch as much as you want, anytime you want.
What Is The Name Of The Show That Aired On American Idol In January Of 1921?
Thanks partly to the vagaries of Covid-19, there is an unusually large amount of prestige hitting the television schedule over the next three months — critical and audience favorites making triumphant returns after varying lengths of time. The safe and easy thing to do with a winter preview would be to fill it with those known quantities. But that wouldn’t be much fun.
Instead here are, in chronological order, 20 new shows or slightly lower-profile returning shows that look interesting. Try to fit in one or two. If you’re looking for a trend, how about notable actresses playing real-life women in some sort of trouble: Amanda Seyfried as Elizabeth Holmes (“The Dropout”), Lily James as Pamela Anderson (“Pam & Tommy”), Renée Zellweger as the convicted murderer Pam Hupp (“The Thing About Pam”), Julia Garner as the con woman Anna Sorokin (“Inventing Anna”).
How Often Does Netflix Add Original Programming?
Sign up for our Watching newsletter to get recommendations on the best films and TV shows to stream and watch, delivered to your inbox. Netflix adds original programming at such a steady clip that it can be hard to keep up with which of its dramas, comedies and reality shows are must-sees. And that’s not including all the TV series Netflix picks up from broadcast and cable networks.
Each recommendation comes with a secondary pick, too, for 100 suggestions in all. (Note: Netflix sometimes removes titles without notice.) We also have lists of the best movies on Netflix and Amazon Prime Video, along with the best TV and movies on Hulu and Disney+.
What Was One Of The First Shows That Fans Would Binge Watch In A Single Weekend?
Long before streaming led audiences to binge-watch entire series in a single weekend, there was just plain old primetime-television-watching bliss—and fan favorites such as “The West Wing” and “The Sopranos” kept fans glued to their sofas week after week, year after year, to find out what would happen next. Some shows were so good, fans would purchase TV box sets on VHS or DVD to watch them again and again in order to relive the drama or bask in the laughs. Now that we have a multitude of streaming services at our fingertips—Netflix, Amazon, Hulu, and Disney+—and can watch TV anytime, anywhere, the content has become even richer and more diverse, pleasing both fans and critics alike, with original hits like “The Mandalorian” and “Game of Thrones” and revivals of shows like “Arrested Development.”
Shows were ranked by IMDb user ratings, with ties broken by the number of votes. For this list, a series had to have at least 50,000 votes. Some shows on this list may seem obvious to television lovers.
Whether because they saw a limited run, attempted extremely niche genres, or were released very recently yet generated enough acclaim to appear here alongside historic staples. Read on to see how all 100 shake out, refresh your pop-culture memory, remind yourself of an epic binge, or add to your watch list. But do so with caution—this list contains some spoilers.
With final outings from series like This Is Us, Search Party, and After Life, returning freshman series favorites like Euphoria and Resident Alien, and more of what we know and love from long-runners like Black-ish and Billions, January has plenty for us to be bingeing and catching up on. Catch up on the family series that started it all before Black-ish returns with Season 8 on Jan. 4. The series’ season 6 premiere on Jan. 4 on NBC marks the beginning of its last outing, so now is the time to catch up! 66 hours (for the first five seasons) 97% Search Party (HBO Max) What it is: A relationship drama turned coming-of-age comedy turned noir-esque murder mystery thriller turned courtroom procedural, Search Party is everything but definable — and that’s exactly what makes it so good.
Where to watch: Amazon, Google Play, HBO Max, Microsoft, Vudu Commitment: Approx. Season 2 premieres Jan. 9 on HBO. Where to watch it: Amazon, Google Play, HBO Max, Microsoft, Vudu Commitment: Approx.
Its third and final season premieres Jan. 14 on Netflix. Where to watch it: Netflix Commitment: Approx. Ray may be the man L.A.’s rich and famous call to get out of trouble, but upon the return of his father, Donovan, a family man himself, develops problems of his own.
Why you should watch it: This Emmy-winning series brings bleakness to the deceptive beauty of the Ozarks, and it establishes Bateman as so much more than the comedic actor most know him as today. Where to watch: Netflix Commitment: Approx. We can’t wait to see what’s in store for Season 3, which premieres Jan. 21 on Apple TV+.
Season 6 premieres Jan. 23 on Showtime. Season 2 premieres Jan. 26 on Syfy. 7.5 hours (for the first season) 84% How I Met Your Mother (CBS) (Photo by Cliff Lipson/©CBS courtesy Everett Collection) What it is: This long-running sitcom centered on the adventures of a single man named Ted Mosby (played by Josh Radnor), his dating life, and his circle of friends, all leading up to him meeting and marrying the woman who would become the mother of his children.
How Long Has The Gang Been Shut In The Bank Of Spain?
89% Synopsis: The gang has been shut in the Bank of Spain for over 100 hours. They have managed to rescue Lisbon, but their darkest moment is upon them after losing one of their own. The Professor has been captured by Sierra and, for the first time, doesn’t have an escape plan.
The end of the greatest heist in history is approaching, and what began as a robbery will turn into a war.
Netflix Has An Extensive Library Of What?
There’s even more to watch. Netflix has an extensive library of feature films, documentaries, TV shows, anime, award-winning Netflix originals, and more. Watch as much as you want, anytime you want.
What Is The Name Of The Show That Aired On American Idol In January Of 1921?
Thanks partly to the vagaries of Covid-19, there is an unusually large amount of prestige hitting the television schedule over the next three months — critical and audience favorites making triumphant returns after varying lengths of time. The safe and easy thing to do with a winter preview would be to fill it with those known quantities. But that wouldn’t be much fun.
Instead here are, in chronological order, 20 new shows or slightly lower-profile returning shows that look interesting. Try to fit in one or two. If you’re looking for a trend, how about notable actresses playing real-life women in some sort of trouble: Amanda Seyfried as Elizabeth Holmes (“The Dropout”), Lily James as Pamela Anderson (“Pam & Tommy”), Renée Zellweger as the convicted murderer Pam Hupp (“The Thing About Pam”), Julia Garner as the con woman Anna Sorokin (“Inventing Anna”).
How Often Does Netflix Add Original Programming?
Sign up for our Watching newsletter to get recommendations on the best films and TV shows to stream and watch, delivered to your inbox. Netflix adds original programming at such a steady clip that it can be hard to keep up with which of its dramas, comedies and reality shows are must-sees. And that’s not including all the TV series Netflix picks up from broadcast and cable networks.
Each recommendation comes with a secondary pick, too, for 100 suggestions in all. (Note: Netflix sometimes removes titles without notice.) We also have lists of the best movies on Netflix and Amazon Prime Video, along with the best TV and movies on Hulu and Disney+.
What Was One Of The First Shows That Fans Would Binge Watch In A Single Weekend?
Long before streaming led audiences to binge-watch entire series in a single weekend, there was just plain old primetime-television-watching bliss—and fan favorites such as “The West Wing” and “The Sopranos” kept fans glued to their sofas week after week, year after year, to find out what would happen next. Some shows were so good, fans would purchase TV box sets on VHS or DVD to watch them again and again in order to relive the drama or bask in the laughs. Now that we have a multitude of streaming services at our fingertips—Netflix, Amazon, Hulu, and Disney+—and can watch TV anytime, anywhere, the content has become even richer and more diverse, pleasing both fans and critics alike, with original hits like “The Mandalorian” and “Game of Thrones” and revivals of shows like “Arrested Development.”
Shows were ranked by IMDb user ratings, with ties broken by the number of votes. For this list, a series had to have at least 50,000 votes. Some shows on this list may seem obvious to television lovers.
Whether because they saw a limited run, attempted extremely niche genres, or were released very recently yet generated enough acclaim to appear here alongside historic staples. Read on to see how all 100 shake out, refresh your pop-culture memory, remind yourself of an epic binge, or add to your watch list. But do so with caution—this list contains some spoilers.
With final outings from series like This Is Us, Search Party, and After Life, returning freshman series favorites like Euphoria and Resident Alien, and more of what we know and love from long-runners like Black-ish and Billions, January has plenty for us to be bingeing and catching up on. Catch up on the family series that started it all before Black-ish returns with Season 8 on Jan. 4. The series’ season 6 premiere on Jan. 4 on NBC marks the beginning of its last outing, so now is the time to catch up! 66 hours (for the first five seasons) 97% Search Party (HBO Max) What it is: A relationship drama turned coming-of-age comedy turned noir-esque murder mystery thriller turned courtroom procedural, Search Party is everything but definable — and that’s exactly what makes it so good.
Where to watch: Amazon, Google Play, HBO Max, Microsoft, Vudu Commitment: Approx. Season 2 premieres Jan. 9 on HBO. Where to watch it: Amazon, Google Play, HBO Max, Microsoft, Vudu Commitment: Approx.
Its third and final season premieres Jan. 14 on Netflix. Where to watch it: Netflix Commitment: Approx. Ray may be the man L.A.’s rich and famous call to get out of trouble, but upon the return of his father, Donovan, a family man himself, develops problems of his own.
Why you should watch it: This Emmy-winning series brings bleakness to the deceptive beauty of the Ozarks, and it establishes Bateman as so much more than the comedic actor most know him as today. Where to watch: Netflix Commitment: Approx. We can’t wait to see what’s in store for Season 3, which premieres Jan. 21 on Apple TV+.
Season 6 premieres Jan. 23 on Showtime. Season 2 premieres Jan. 26 on Syfy. 7.5 hours (for the first season) 84% How I Met Your Mother (CBS) (Photo by Cliff Lipson/©CBS courtesy Everett Collection) What it is: This long-running sitcom centered on the adventures of a single man named Ted Mosby (played by Josh Radnor), his dating life, and his circle of friends, all leading up to him meeting and marrying the woman who would become the mother of his children.
How Long Has The Gang Been Shut In The Bank Of Spain?
89% Synopsis: The gang has been shut in the Bank of Spain for over 100 hours. They have managed to rescue Lisbon, but their darkest moment is upon them after losing one of their own. The Professor has been captured by Sierra and, for the first time, doesn’t have an escape plan.
The end of the greatest heist in history is approaching, and what began as a robbery will turn into a war.
Netflix Has An Extensive Library Of What?
There’s even more to watch. Netflix has an extensive library of feature films, documentaries, TV shows, anime, award-winning Netflix originals, and more. Watch as much as you want, anytime you want.
What Is The Name Of The Show That Aired On American Idol In January Of 1921?
Thanks partly to the vagaries of Covid-19, there is an unusually large amount of prestige hitting the television schedule over the next three months — critical and audience favorites making triumphant returns after varying lengths of time. The safe and easy thing to do with a winter preview would be to fill it with those known quantities. But that wouldn’t be much fun.
Instead here are, in chronological order, 20 new shows or slightly lower-profile returning shows that look interesting. Try to fit in one or two. If you’re looking for a trend, how about notable actresses playing real-life women in some sort of trouble: Amanda Seyfried as Elizabeth Holmes (“The Dropout”), Lily James as Pamela Anderson (“Pam & Tommy”), Renée Zellweger as the convicted murderer Pam Hupp (“The Thing About Pam”), Julia Garner as the con woman Anna Sorokin (“Inventing Anna”).
How Often Does Netflix Add Original Programming?
Sign up for our Watching newsletter to get recommendations on the best films and TV shows to stream and watch, delivered to your inbox. Netflix adds original programming at such a steady clip that it can be hard to keep up with which of its dramas, comedies and reality shows are must-sees. And that’s not including all the TV series Netflix picks up from broadcast and cable networks.
Each recommendation comes with a secondary pick, too, for 100 suggestions in all. (Note: Netflix sometimes removes titles without notice.) We also have lists of the best movies on Netflix and Amazon Prime Video, along with the best TV and movies on Hulu and Disney+.
What Was One Of The First Shows That Fans Would Binge Watch In A Single Weekend?
Long before streaming led audiences to binge-watch entire series in a single weekend, there was just plain old primetime-television-watching bliss—and fan favorites such as “The West Wing” and “The Sopranos” kept fans glued to their sofas week after week, year after year, to find out what would happen next. Some shows were so good, fans would purchase TV box sets on VHS or DVD to watch them again and again in order to relive the drama or bask in the laughs. Now that we have a multitude of streaming services at our fingertips—Netflix, Amazon, Hulu, and Disney+—and can watch TV anytime, anywhere, the content has become even richer and more diverse, pleasing both fans and critics alike, with original hits like “The Mandalorian” and “Game of Thrones” and revivals of shows like “Arrested Development.”
Shows were ranked by IMDb user ratings, with ties broken by the number of votes. For this list, a series had to have at least 50,000 votes. Some shows on this list may seem obvious to television lovers.
Whether because they saw a limited run, attempted extremely niche genres, or were released very recently yet generated enough acclaim to appear here alongside historic staples. Read on to see how all 100 shake out, refresh your pop-culture memory, remind yourself of an epic binge, or add to your watch list. But do so with caution—this list contains some spoilers.