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Tag: best of 2025

  • The Best Horror Movies of 2025

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    We all want to belong to someone or something. Or, to have someone or something that belongs to us. Though of course, like anything, there are levels to it. Desire can all too quickly turn to obsession, companionship to possession, and communal progression to cultural regression. Ownership defined much of 2025. From found families and clans to theft and entrapment, this year in horror circled the notion that survival or ruination isn’t entirely in our hands, and that the individual can only do so much to survive the monsters in our midst. We are either placed in the hands of others, or others are placed in ours. Both can be terrifying experiences that test the boundaries of control.

    What we saw on the screen in horror this year also existed in the atmosphere beyond the screen. With ownership came a real need for us to feel a part of something, even if it came down to simply not being a part of something else. Yes, there was tribalism and labels, which we all felt with even greater intensity this year, but there was also community, a necessary and occasionally desperate attempt for us to be claimed, to find others like us with shared experiences, interests, and desires for the future.  But ownership also comes with a desire for some measure of control and acquisition. Be it cult-like tactics of extremist movements, colonialism in its many forms, or corporate acquisitions, ownership comes in the form of a boot as often as it comes as a handshake.

    We saw explorations of ownership from the positive, but let’s be honest, to the mostly negative, across numerous horror movies this year, both critically acclaimed and not. Companion, Bring Her Back, Weapons, Opus, Frankenstein, I Know What You Did Last Summer, Queens of the Dead, The Monkey, Clown in a Cornfield, Good Boy, Control Freak, The Man in My Basement, and The Home, to name just a few, all dealt with ownership on some level.

    And then of course, there was Sinners, which you can be certain I’ll get further into later on. But what an encapsulation of this year’s trends on and off the screen! Not only does the narrative and thematics of Sinners come down to ownership, but so does much of the film’s production from Ryan Coogler working with long-time friends and collaborators, to his historic rights deal with Warner Bros.

    Another way of looking at ownership this year also came by way of accountability. Whether it was countries, collectives, or individuals, the patience for excuses ran short and our tolerance, much like that Jacob Elordi’s Creature in Frankenstein, wore thin. While our grievances fell short of inciting revolution, there was a palpable distaste both onscreen and off for false martyrs, shrines built on lies, corruption and evil, and fascistic sycophants. From the endings of The Long Walk and HIM to the blood-soaked slaughter of Neo-Nazis in Silent Night, Deadly Night, numerous filmmakers sent out a clear message: own up or get owned.

    As for surprises this year, Warner Bros. had an exceptionally great year for horror releases with the success of Sinners, Final Destination: Bloodlines, Weapons and The Conjuring: Last Rites. The fourth mainline Conjuring film, directed by Michael Chaves, and bringing Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga’s iconic turns as Ed and Lorraine Warren to a close, was the biggest horror hit at the global box office with $494.6 million. A Conjuring prequel focused on younger iterations of Ed and Lorraine is already in the works.

    Domestically, Sinners was the biggest horror release of the year with $279.6 million, making it a both a huge win for original horror and Black artists.

    Streaming service Shudder continued to highlight and distribute independent horror from new and fan-favorite directors with films like Grafted, The Rule of Jenny Pen, Night of the Reaper, Good Boy, and plenty more, some found on the list below. But not all surprises were success stories, such as Blumhouse’s M3GAN 2.0. It was oddly positioned as a summer blockbuster and bombed with $39.1 million globally, versus the original film’s $181.8 million globally. It was an ugly end to what seemed primed to be Blumhouse’s newest franchise, and has left the spin-off film Soulm8te in limbo. For what it’s worth, M3GAN 2.0 is fun on the whole, but it’s missing the horror element that made the first film resonate with younger audiences. Horror fans and industry heads will have their eyes on Blumhouse to make a comeback in 2026 after a rough 2025. I’m still of the opinion that they got off to a howling good start with Wolf Man back in January. There’s a thematic ownership link in that film too, but I digress.

    After some internal discussion there is a pair of films that didn’t make this list, for the sole reason of leaning further into the science fiction and action genres than horror but are deeply deserving of a shoutout: Dan Trachtenberg’s Predator: Killer of Killers and Predator: Badlands. Both of these films, one an animated Hulu exclusive, and the other, a live action theatrical release, push the Predator franchise in new directions. While the original two films, and Prey, which made this list in 2022, lean further into horror, Killer of Killers and Badlands showcase the versatility of the franchise in terms of genre, medium, and rating. I continue to be impressed by the scope Trachtenberg has brought to these films and the new character additions like Ursa, Kenji, Torres, Dek and Thia. Trachtenberg’s level of commitment and understanding of the lore is the kind of creator-driven director fans wish they could see applied to their favorite franchises.

    As always, this best horror films of the year list has been distributed between a wide release list and a limited and streaming release list to celebrate as many horror films as possible. Though truth be told, even with 20 total entries, it becomes a challenging task to cut these down to size, no matter how sharp I get my knives. After watching a total of 65 new horror releases this year, here’s what’s been brought to life.

    BEST WIDE RELEASES

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    Aaron Couch

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  • 8 of the Biggest (and Most Interesting) Deals of 2025

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    When it came to investments, mergers and acquisitions, 2025 was a particularly busy year. More importantly, perhaps, it was also a year with some very interesting deals.

    In the first nine months of 2025, global M&A activity was up 10 percent over what it was in the same period in 2024, despite the headwinds of geopolitical tensions and tariff policies that seemed to change every few weeks. The tech sector was especially busy with deal-making this year as companies looked to find a way to leverage the AI boom.

    But some activity stood out from the rest. Here’s a look at the deals that made this year so unique.

    Intel and the U.S. government

    The Trump Administration surprised both the tech world and Wall Street in August, announcing that the federal government was taking a 10 percent stake in the chipmaker. (That was especially astonishing, as Trump had, just weeks before, strongly criticized Intel’s CEO on social media, saying he was “highly CONFLICTED and must resign.”)

    The government picked up 433.3 million shares of non-voting stock priced at $20.47 apiece, making it one of the company’s largest shareholders. The deal has already paid off, with the government’s stake now worth nearly $9 billion more than it paid for the stock.

    Stargate

    OpenAI, SoftBank and Oracle, in January, jointly announced a massive AI data center project called “Stargate,” in which the companies plan to invest up to $500 billion over the coming years to develop AI infrastructure in the U.S. 

    Stargate, the companies said, will create 100,000 jobs. Plans were announced in September for five new AI data centers. Stargate will be set up as a separate company, which OpenAI said in a social media post “will not only support the re-industrialization of the United States but also provide a strategic capability to protect the national security of America and its allies.”

    OpenAI and Oracle

    In September, OpenAI signed a contract with Oracle to purchase $300 billion in computing power over the next five years, one of the largest cloud contracts ever. The contact will begin in 2027, but it did draw some concern from some analysts, who noted the value of the deal was much greater than OpenAI’s current revenue and Oracle will need to take on substantial debt to build out the hardware and infrastructure for the project. News of the agreement sent Oracle stock up 43 percent when it was announced. (It has since lost all of those gains.)

    Pepsi and Poppi

    Founded in 2020, Poppi started as an experiment in Allison Ellsworth’s kitchen, an attempt to make gut-healthy drinks that tasted good. The probiotic soda quickly grew into a popular, nationally recognized brand during the pandemic, landing Poppi at No. 148 on this year’s Inc. 5000 list, with a three-year growth rate of 2,638 percent. In May, Ellsworth and her husband Stephen, who is also a co-founder, sold the company to Pepsi for $1.95 billion.

    Prada and Versace

    The news in April that Prada would buy Versace for $1.51 billion was the ending to a very long story. Prada began chasing the luxury fashion house during the pandemic, but the parties couldn’t make the deal work. When Versace parent Capri’s sale to Tapestry was scuttled due to antitrust concerns, Prada tried again and was able to negotiate a price that was lower than the $2 billion Capri paid for the brand in 2018. The acquisition closed earlier this month.

    Dick’s Sporting Goods and Foot Locker

    Dick’s Sporting Goods had a strong 2025, raising its full-year sales growth guidance last month to a range of 3.5 to 4 percent up from 2 to 3.5 percent previously. Its acquisition of struggling competitor Foot Locker in May for $2.4 billion gave it a competitive advantage in the Nike sneaker market as well as access to international markets and a wider customer base. Foot Locker will continue to operate as a standalone business, though Dick’s does plan to close an undisclosed number of stores to protect the company’s profits.

    Sycamore Partners and Walgreens Boots Alliance

    Private equity firm Sycamore’s $10 billion purchase of the pharmaceutical chain in March ended almost a century of Walgreens being a publicly traded company. Walgreens, at one point in time, boasted a market cap of nearly $100 billion, but changes to the healthcare industry, acquisitions of rivals and reduced margins on drug sales shrank that number precipitously. Sycamore has a history of buying distressed companies, with other holdings including Staples, Nine West and Talbots.

    Keurig Dr Pepper and JDE Peets

    Keurig Dr Pepper’s U.S. coffee business needed some help, so it made an $18 billion bet in August that the Dutch coffee and tea company could boost earnings. Keurig Dr Pepper owns Green Mountain Coffee (as well as Dr Pepper, 7Up and Snapple), which has seen sales decline in recent years. The deal is expected to close in the first half of 2026, after which Keurig Dr Pepper will split its coffee and other beverage units into two separate companies, both of which will remain listed on U.S. stock exchanges. 

    Go inside one interesting founder-led company each day to find out how its strategy works, and what risk factors it faces. Sign up for 1 Smart Business Story from Inc. on Beehiiv.

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    Chris Morris

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  • The Weepiest TV Moments of 2025

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    Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: HBO, Disney, Netflix, FX

    Come, weepers! Come, sobbers! Come, ugly-ass criers! You are all welcome here at our annual countdown of the scripted TV moments that undid us emotionally in 2025. Our tear ducts definitely got a workout this year, as television offered up a bounty of gut-wrenching, sob-inducing moments. There were major character deaths and thwarted happy endings and a devastating breakdown against a backdrop of cartoon forest animals. Are you ready to relive all these weepy moments and more? Ready to let television stir the deepest part of your soul? Ready to slide down a door while crying out that it’s all just too damn much? Cool, me too. Below, find the ten moments from the 2025 TV season that we’re still crying over.

    Forever, “Forever …”

    Photo: Netflix

    Justin and Keisha actually break up about halfway through Forever’s finale, and while it’s certainly upsetting, it’s both inevitable and refreshing to watch two 18-year-olds come to the wildly mature conclusion they need to let each other go so that both of them can figure out who they are and what they want. But this is by no means the most emotional moment of the episode. That gut-wrenching honor is saved for later when they meet up one more time at the end of the episode to say good-bye before Keisha leaves for Howard while Justin stays in L.A. to pursue music. There’s no awkwardness, just two people who love and care about each other, who are grateful for what the other gave them. Their final moment together is dripping with bittersweetness. As Frank Ocean’s cover of “Moon River” kicks in, there’s nothing more for these two to say, so instead they take each other in one last time; there’s sadness and longing in their expressions, and also an undeniable feeling of hope that they might find each other again someday. But until then, they have to walk away.

    9-1-1, “Lab Rats”

    Photo: ABC

    There we were, innocently thinking 9-1-1 is an insane procedural about bee tornadoes and cops in space, when along comes the surprise death of a main character to leave you drowning in a puddle of your own tears. When Angela Bassett cries, I cry, this is just a rule to live by. Part of that reaction comes down to shock — both that the show would actually kill off Peter Krause’s Bobby Nash, arguably the lead of the ensemble, and at the reveal that Bobby knew the whole time that he was infected with the virus they were called in to contain, but kept quiet so that Chimney, also infected, would get the only dose of the antidote. The other reason this hits so hard? Krause and Bassett are 9-1-1’s mom and dad, so from the moment Bobby says, “I want some time alone with my wife,” you know we are in for it. He tells Athena he loves her, that he would choose her if he could, and then proceeds to bleed out right in front of her. He wants her to go, but she refuses to leave his side until it’s over.

    Task, “A Still Small Voice”

    Photo: HBO

    There’s nothing like a catharsis cry, and that’s exactly what Task serves up in its final montage of what befalls both Tom Brandis and Maeve Prendergast once the Dark Hearts case is wrapped up for good (for now). In the end, Tom, who has taken in Sam, the young boy who accidentally stumbled into Robbie’s revenge tour on the Dark Hearts, must let his foster son go. It’s bittersweet to watch Tom “be unselfish” with his love, knowing that giving up Sam is ultimately the best thing for a boy who needs — deserves — stability that Tom can’t give at the moment. (That shot of Emily helping Sam button up his shirt before meeting his new family? Makes me sob every single time.) But forgiving his own son and letting Sam into his heart has offered Tom a fresh start. He seems somehow lighter at the end of all this — isn’t Mark Ruffalo so good at his job?

    But Tom is not the only one given this ending. Maeve, too, makes an unselfish act by taking her young cousins into her care and giving them a new life somewhere else. Moving out of that house is the only way forward, but Maeve also makes sure not to dismiss what happened there — she still wants to honor her late father and uncle. For a show as bleak and depressing as Task is for most of its seven episodes, having it end on such a note of overwhelming hopefulness is a welcome and moving surprise.

    Adolescence, “Episode 4”

    Photo: Netflix

    Honestly, when are you not crying while watching Adolescence? Its one-take formula is made to break you — there are no breathers, the intensity simply keeps building to its apex. This is especially true in the final episode, as we watch Jamie’s parents, Eddie and Manda, and his sister, Lisa, attempt and repeatedly fail to make Eddie’s birthday a celebratory one, even after they wake up to a slur spray-painted on the side of his van. It feels almost in reach until Jamie calls and informs his family that he’s changing his plea to guilty. The dam of emotion Eddie has been holding in bursts, and upstairs in their bedroom, Eddie and Manda have a teary, honest conversation about how they should’ve done better with their son. It feels like the first time they are admitting to the enormous guilt they’ve been internally grappling with. “We made him,” Manda says more than once. They made every part of him, and to have any shot at moving forward, they have to own it.

    Severance, “Cold Harbor”

    Photo: AppleTV

    Severance has the most complicated and most heartbreaking love triangle on television. With four people and only three bodies, will anyone come out of this thing with even the tiniest bit of a happy ending? Sure, you can’t fault Innie Mark for choosing to stay with Helly and, you know, continue existing, but the implications of that choice are absolutely devastating for Outie Mark and Gemma. For two years, he’s been mourning her “death” and she’s had her brain severed 25 times. Mark’s plan to go rescue his wife is so risky and so insane and so fucking triumphant that it is impossible not to burst into tears the moment Gemma steps out of the Cold Harbor room and returns to her old self, recognizing her husband standing in front of her. Finally, Outie Mark and Gemma are reunited, and the mix of joy and relief and love on Adam Scott and Dichen Lachman’s faces as their characters take each other in wallops you. Mark and Gemma’s elevator ride might be the biggest emotional whiplash on television this year: One second you are crying tears of joy as Mark finally gets to kiss his wife again, and then you get punched in the gut in a whole new way when they reach the severed floor and return to Innie Mark and Miss Casey. It’s a real “Didn’t we almost have it all?” moment, and I would like it severed from my brain immediately.

    Andor, “Welcome to the Rebellion”

    Photo: Disney+

    Andor uses the fact that it’s a prequel to Rogue One to its advantage several times throughout its two-season run, but never does that fact deliver a more emotional blow than when Bix sacrifices her romance with Cassian for the good of the Rebellion. Cassian is ready to leave the war against the Empire behind for a quiet, happy life with Bix, but she refuses to let him choose her over that fight, so she secretly leaves the rebel base, and Cassian, in the middle of the night. When he finds her good-bye video the next morning, she’s already long gone, despite his desperate run out to the ships to see if he can catch her. (Diego Luna’s face here — kill me.) Now, this would all be heartbreaking on its own — especially when paired with Brandon Roberts’s gorgeous scoring of this scene — but the waterworks really start to flow when Bix promises Cassian that once they win this war, she will find him and they can live the life they want together. Her hope is devastating because we know that none of this will ever happen, that Cassian is destined to sacrifice his life for the rebellion. We know that they will never see each other again. Fuck you, Rogue One!

    The Last of Us, “Through the Valley”

    Photo: HBO

    Unless you stayed off the internet for the two years in between seasons one and two of The Last of Us, you likely already knew that Pedro Pascal’s Joel was living on borrowed time. Abby’s brutal, fatal revenge on Joel for murdering her father to save Ellie back in season one was hardly a surprise, and yet that doesn’t blunt the emotional impact. The entire sequence is hard to watch, not only because the sheer level of violence is a shock to the system, but also because of how devastating it is to see Ellie, who tries so hard to act older than she is, shed that veneer and become instantly childlike. She knows he’s dead, but this doesn’t stop her from crawling over to him in tears to hold his hand one last time, just a kid begging the only father she’s ever known to live. Bella Ramsey sells the hell out of this moment, and the scene only becomes more potent on rewatch since by the end of the season we learn that when Ellie told Jesse at the beginning of this episode that she and Joel will be just fine, she really meant it — they were on the precipice of healing what was broken between them. She left for that patrol feeling hopeful, she returned from it forever changed.

    Upload, “Mile End”

    Photo: Prime

    Upload has absolutely zero business going this hard. Yet this silly rom-com — about a dead guy named Nathan whose consciousness is uploaded to a swanky virtual afterlife where he falls in love with customer-service rep Nora — wraps up its final season with an episode that goes so hard I did, admittedly, ugly-cry just thinking about it hours after watching. Nathan and Nora have already had to fight for their happily-ever-after through developments including, but not limited to, getting downloaded into the clone body his clingy ex grew for him, and getting kidnapped by evil billionaires who upload him over 100 times while running evil billionaire experiments on him. And just when they’re finally reunited, they realize that Nathan’s brain will never recover and he’s dying — there’s nothing they can do to stop it. They’ll never get a lifetime of happiness together, but they do have a few hours. Nora gets Nathan home and they lie in bed, where she uses her VR goggles to take him to Montreal, the place they planned to run off to together. They watch the sunset while Nathan tells Nora happy birthday and good morning and asks what she wants for dinner — all the little conversations they’ll never get to have. And then he tells her how happy she made him, that she was the love of his life, “this one. And the next one and the one after that …” and then he’s gone. In the real world, she takes off their goggles and holds him just a little bit longer. And now I’m crying again. Like I said, Upload goes hard.

    The Pitt, “7:00 PM”

    Photo: HBO

    Half of this list could be filled with scenes from The Pitt even though the medical series generally prioritizes authenticity over sentimentality. Maybe that’s the reason its most emotional moments hit so hard — it all feels so real. This is especially true of Noah Wyle’s performance as Dr. Robby, our stalwart leader, the calming voice in the shitstorm that is this season-long shift. It’s honestly a miracle the guy goes 13 hours before breaking down. You know it’s coming, too, as Robby, already attempting to compartmentalize his PTSD, collects one loss after another in the wake of the Pitt Fest shooting. But it’s his inability to save Jake’s girlfriend that finally does him in. Robby holds back tears as he tries to explain himself to his ex’s son, he sobs as he rattles off a list of people we’ve watched die throughout the season, and finally he erupts, kicking Jake out so he can be alone, weeping on the floor of that pediatric room turned morgue. The desperation as Robby falls apart is agonizing to watch, and yet there is some sense of relief, too, that this guy who has been trying to hold it all together for his team and for his patients is finally allowing himself to feel the full devastation of the shift from hell.

    Dying for Sex, “It’s Not That Serious”

    Photo: Hulu

    Well, it’s right there in the title: This is a series about death. But Dying for Sex is much more than a solemn march as Molly’s terminal cancer takes her life, and two of its most magical elements, the ones that elevate it beyond some schmaltzy weepfest, really get to shine in the finale. First, there’s the pitch-perfect blend of comedy and tragedy. You will be crying for this entire episode — yes, even during the flying-penis bit — but you’ll be laughing, too. Laughing through tears, there’s really nothing like it. The second, of course, is the gorgeous friendship between Molly and Nikki, which anchors the show thanks to two fierce performances from Michelle Williams and Jenny Slate. When it gets to the end, Nikki and Molly, who has been in hospice and is in so much pain she asks to be sedated, go into it knowing this will be the last conversation they’ll ever have. As Molly drifts off, Nikki tells her that she’s grateful, that she’s proud of her, that she loves her. Molly takes one last look at her best friend and says good-bye with a simple yet deeply rooted truth: “You were my favorite person in the whole wide world.” Molly may finally be free of pain, but the rest of us are left as crumpled-up disaster zones on the couch, attempting to wipe away the seemingly never-ending snot and tears spewing from our faces before making a much-needed call to our best friends.


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    Maggie Fremont

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  • Vote Now for Your Favorite Albums and Songs of 2025

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    Right now, Pitchfork’s editors are furiously debating the ranking of our year-end best albums and songs lists, which we’ll be bringing to you soon. But first, we’d like to invite you to share your picks.

    Today, we’re opening the 2025 Readers’ Poll. Which albums and songs were your favorite? Tell us below. To make sure your vote is counted, please submit it by Sunday, November 30 at 11:59 p.m. Eastern. Check back for the results in the coming weeks. Thanks for participating—and thanks for reading.

    If you’re unable to see the survey below, you can also take it here.

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    Pitchfork

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  • The Best TV Shows of 2025 (So Far)

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    Clockwise from top left: Gilded Age, Sirens, The Bear, The Rehearsal, and King of the Hill.
    Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: HBO (Karolina Wojtasik, John P. Johnson), Netflix, Mike Judge/Disney, FX

    Great TV will not be confined or defined by genre. That’s true both for the medium generally and here at Vulture specifically, where we are proud to bestow the label on everything from grim-and-gritty prestige dramas to campy reality competitions to weirdo animation and all points in between. Even that dustiest of TV genres, the medical procedural, proved it can still deliver the goods in 2025. Each of this year’s early standout series are distinctive in their form, tone, and appeal and collectively showcase the breadth and depth of the best that television has to offer.

    All titles are listed by season premiere date with the most recent shows up top.

    Photo: Apple TV+

    Few settings are more soothing than the lives of white, upper-middle-class Angelenos, but that’s only one of Platonic’s many charms. Rose Byrne and Seth Rogen, reunited after playing a married couple at war with Greek Life in Neighbors and its sequel (both directed by Nicholas Stoller, who co-created this show with his wife, Francesca Delbanco), star as two estranged college friends who reconnect in the midst of their respective midlife crises. Zany yet surprisingly grounded, the first season offered plenty of delights, though it was weighed down somewhat by the conventional will-they-won’t-they expectations baked into its premise. The second season, freed from those constraints, takes a real leap, letting the show settle into being a splendid hangout comedy that gently layers in the quiet existential desperations of growing older. It also showcases some truly tremendous face acting by Byrne — among her generation’s most versatile performers — and equally tremendous choices by Rogen’s stylist, who dresses his character in outfits so comically loud it’s hard not to smirk at the sight of them. But even this feels like another expression of Platonic’s appeal: The show is assembled with such intentionality you can’t help but be pulled in.

     ➼ Read Nicholas Quah’s review of Platonic season two .

    Photo: Mike Judge/Disney

    This could have been a disaster, because a lot of revivals are. Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life, the fourth and fifth seasons of Arrested Development, And Just Like That … — none of them quite captured what made their originals so appealing. What a relief that King of the Hill is exactly what a revival should be, with one finger firmly on the pulse of the past (Hank being behind the times, his friends being a bit of a mess, Peggy having a mile-wide competitive streak) and another on the present day. These characters’ personalities are so hard-coded that King of the Hill has a blast updating them to the trends and phenomena of life in 2025, from a grown-up Bobby being a German-Japanese fusion chef struggling with claims of cultural appropriation to a retired Hank using his new free time to pick up odd jobs on a handyman app and realizing that what most of his employers really want is companionship. This ten-episode season has the same gentle openheartedness, Texan specificity, and satirical touches as the original run, and it’s nice to know that sometimes the more things change, the more they stay the same. — Roxana Hadadi 

     ➼  Read Nicholas Quah’s review of King of the Hill

    Photo: Apple TV+

    The easy way to sell you on Chief of War would be to emphasize that Jason Momoa runs around pantsless a lot. The thoughtful way would be to say that Chief of War is a bit like a Game of ThronesShōgun hybrid, in that it’s both an action-packed and fantastical epic and a reframe of Hawaiian history told by the descendants of people who lived through it. Whatever argument is more persuasive for you, go with it! Because Chief of War is a fascinating star vehicle for Momoa, who co-created it with his recurring collaborator Thomas Paʻa Sibbett and also writes and directs. Set in the late 18th century and loosely based on history, Chief of War follows feuding Hawaiian tribes as they attempt to unify against the threat of colonization; Momoa plays Kaʻiana, a general who ends up traveling outside of the Hawaiian islands and realizing that capitalism and international trade will eventually come for his home. The historical epic is bloody, brutal, and sentimental, with an absolutely bonkers final battle set against an exploding volcano. And although the dialogue can be a little corny and the series’ narrative threads a little too diffuse, it’s also an incredibly bold undertaking that challenges viewers’ assumptions about Hawaiian culture and asks challenging questions about whether outside influence on the islands ended up being beneficial. Plus, scene-stealer Cliff Curtis! My captain, my king! — R.H.

     ➼ Read Roxana Hadadi’s review of Chief of War.

    Photo: Kent Smith

    Although it won’t be a show for everyone, The Hunting Wives is the best possible version of this particular kind of show: soapy, violent, melodramatic, sexy, and just a touch deep, but only in ways you’re welcome to ignore if you prefer. It is also gay! These ladies are totally horny for each other, and while most shows of this genre coyly feint toward queer undertones, The Hunting Wives is full of sex scenes that are actually sexy while also being shaped by thoughtful, careful decisions about character development and mood and balances of power. Plus, Brittany Snow and Malin Akerman bring beautifully dialed-in performances — big and fun and messy, but always grounded enough that the stakes stay real. — Kathryn VanArendonk

     ➼ Read Roxana Hadadi’s take on The Hunting Wives’s double twist

    Photo: Patrick McElhenney/FX

    The longest-running live-action comedy on TV could have run out of gas — and to be fair, some of its prior seasons have felt like the gang was cycling through the same old beats and story lines. But in this season, It’s Always Sunny feels creatively rejuvenated by its longevity and by how that lifespan gives it the freedom to consider its own place in the TV landscape. The crossover episodes with Abbott Elementary were basically brand management for the gang’s awfulness, while spoofs of The Bear, Succession, Is It Cake?, and The Rehearsal show how adaptable Dennis, Dee, Mac, Charlie, and Frank are to different genres and formats. The indignities they’re put through during “The Gang Goes to a Dog Track” makes for the most upsetting episode of It’s Always Sunny in years, and the crossover with The Golden Bachelor is a wonderful showcase for Danny DeVito. The series got a season-18 order all the way back in 2020, and hopefully it can keep this playfulness going. (Although, on the record: Seeing the unnecessary “Rob Mac” name change in the series’ credits is a real vibe killer.) — R.H

     ➼ Read the backstory of how the It’s Always Sunny and Abbott Elementary crossover came to be; Roxana Hadadi’s chat with star Glenn Howerton; and Rachel Simon’s list of essential episodes

    Photo: Karolina Wojtasik/HBO

    In its third season, HBO’s big sumptuous American version of Downton Abbey has figured out how to turn the dial on actual drama just far enough without sacrificing the frivolity that makes it so delightful. We got actual stakes in the industrialist Russell family’s marriage of their daughter (Taissa Farmiga, getting to finally flex her acting talent) off to a British duke, alongside everyone’s favorite clock subplot, a random act of carriage-related violence, and more guest appearances from leading lights of the American theater than you can count (Phylicia Rashad! Andrea Martin!). In these mind-melting months, The Gilded Age’s unique alchemy of nonsense and total actorly commitment — thank God for Carrie Coon — has made it the must-watch show of the summer. — Jackson McHenry

     ➼  Read Kathryn VanArendonk’s review of the season; Jackson McHenry’s behind-the-scenes set visit; Alice Burton’s recaps of the season; and the backstory of how the pivotal wedding episode was made.

    Photo: FX

    Though it still falls short of the cohesion (and heights) found in its first two seasons, The Bear’s fourth outing marks a clear improvement over last year’s batch of episodes. We rejoin the gang in the wake of a lukewarm Chicago Tribune review, which kicks off a ticking-clock scenario: Turn things around before Cicero runs out of money and pulls the plug. But before you start expecting a sports movie-style comeback tale — this is The Bear we’re talking about — what follows is a series of detours and departure episodes, as Carmy and company wrestle with questions of who they are and what they want. The season still indulges in the usual excesses (Faks, needle drops, more cameos), but it also has some truly standout set pieces, like a notably restrained episode, written by Ayo Edebiri and Lionel Boyce and directed by Janicza Bravo, that trails Sydney on an excursion to visit her cousin that turns into a babysitting gig where she gets the chance to work out her feelings about the restaurant. The Bear might have its rocky moments, but if you’ve grown attached to this world, there’s a lot to love here. —Nicholas Quah

     ➼ Read Kathryn VanArendonk’s review, Nicholas Quah on the finale, Marah Eakin’s recaps of the season, and Eakin’s ranking of every episode.

    Photo: Paramount+ with SHOWTIME

    At this point, calling out Couples Therapy as one of the best shows on TV has begun to feel a little bit rote, but the truth is still the truth: Few docuseries operate on its level, because almost no one else is even trying. Season four continues to lean on the show’s biggest and most apparent strengths, which are selecting interesting couples to follow and creating a platform for the show’s breakout star, Dr. Orna Guralnik. But the sneaky secret to the show is and has always been in the edit — it crafts remarkably clear narratives out of hundreds of hours of footage without ever feeling reductive. —Kathryn VanArendonk

    Photo: Rafy/FX

    Hangout comedies have almost no premise, and that reality is both a gift and a curse. They’re shows about people who spend time with one another, and they sink or swim entirely on whether there’s chemistry, an established tone, and a strong sense of why these people are good company. Like so many shows in this space, Adults is an occasionally uneven first season with plenty of room to grow, but it begins with strong performances, plenty of confidence, and sufficient joke density to make a convincing argument that it deserves time to get even better. There will always be new comedies about what young people are like these days; Adults is the best of the current crop. —K.V.A.

    Photo: Netflix

    There are too many shows in the Sirens model (wealthy people in mysterious enclave led by charismatic woman), and too many of them also star Meghann Fahy, but the upside of that situation is that when one of them is actually fun and bizarre and well acted, it’s easy for it to stand out from the bunch. That is the case with Sirens, which rarely makes sense and often collapses under its own weight, and yet is so full of strong chemistry between its leads (Fahy, Milly Alcock, and Julianne Moore in what is traditionally the Nicole Kidman role) that it surpasses all the usual expectations. Kevin Bacon is occasionally there, too. —K.V.A.

    Roxana Hadadi’s review of Sirens and Caroline Framke’s recaps of the series.

    Photo: Philippe Antonello/Amazon MGM Studios

    Hot on the heels of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, Amy Sherman-Palladino found an excuse to go en pointe. The Gilmore Girls creator cashed in her clout with Amazon to fund a deliriously niche and indulgent project: a transatlantic comedy about New York– and Paris-based ballet companies trading their star talent, led by Luke Kirby and Charlotte Gainsbourg, both excellent. The show’s both a satire of the world of ballet and a loving tribute to the art form, with extended sequences where you just get to watch dancers at work, all colored by Sherman-Palladino’s specific aesthetic, fondness for warp-speed dialogue, and the charming undercurrent of “Can you believe they actually let us make this?” —Jackson McHenry

     ➼ Read Jackson McHenry’s full review of Étoile and Oliver Sava’s recaps of the season

    Photo: Star Wars via YouTube

    The most creative Star Wars project since the original trilogy (and those films owed a significant debt to Frank Herbert’s Dune), Andor has somehow gotten even better in its second season — more thrilling, more complicated, more talky. While the first season of Tony Gilroy’s prequel to Rogue One: A Star Wars Story was about the arc of radicalization, the second is about the challenge of consensus-building and how to organize a rebellion when its myriad factions disagree on methodologies and means. That approach gives each of the four three-episode chapters an organizing construct, so that Cassian’s (Diego Luna) missions around the galaxy, Luthen’s (Stellan Skarsgård) lies and betrayals, and Mon Mothma’s (Genevieve O’Reilly) political maneuverings all feel like spokes on the wheel of Andor’s “What is freedom worth?” questioning. The answer, of course, is everything, and Andor never lets its viewers forget the weight of that sacrifice. Also, Luna’s cheekbones! —Roxana Hadadi 

    ➼ Read Nicholas Quah’s review of the season, Roxana Hadadi’s interview with star Diego Luna, Jesse Hassenger’s recaps, our debate on the show’s Emmy chances, and James Grebey’s interview with star Genevieve O’Reilly

    Photo: HBO

    Nathan Fielder returns with his singular social experiment meets radical public therapy session meets performance-art piece meets comedy series. The second season is structured around Fielder’s (deeply researched) theory as to why a good number of plane crashes happen: communicative fissures between flight captains and their co-pilots owing to uneasy social dynamics. Naturally, he uses the extravagant means at his disposal, courtesy of HBO’s finance department, to construct Synecdoche, New York–style large-scale simulations meant to help him get closer to understanding human and pilot interactions. An array of Fielderean gags ensue — including constructing a simulacra of the Houston airport, staging a Canadian Idol–esque music competition, and a Captain Sully–related bit for the ages — that, ultimately and unexpectedly, builds up to an emotional payoff that’s quite beautiful. —N.Q.

    ➼ Read Scott Tobias’s recaps of the season, Jeff Wise’s interview with star and creator Nathan Fielder, and Wise on what real aviation experts think about the series.

    Photo: Ingvar Kenne/Curio/Sony Pictures Television

    Director Justin Kurzel’s cinematic filmography is like a kaleidoscope for various forms of masculinity. His interests run toward outlaws, mass murderers, doomed men like Macbeth, and white separatists trying to overthrow the American government. But instead of providing these figures with hagiographic portraits, Kurzel and his collaborator, writer Shaun Grant, prefer to interrogate what weaknesses and traumas lie at the heart of men and push them into aggression. Their ability to emphasize vulnerability without excusing monstrosity allows their films an always-impressive amount of depth. The pair bring all of that finesse to their first TV project, the miniseries The Narrow Road to the Deep North, an adaptation of Richard Flanagan’s Booker Prize–winning 2013 novel. Jacob Elordi and Ciarán Hinds star as the older and younger versions of surgeon Dorrigo Evans, whose time as a Japanese POW during World War II — forced to tend to his fellow soldiers as they toiled on the Burma Railway while starved, overworked, and tortured — transformed his entire life. The miniseries is brutal, gory, and bleak; there’s no romanticism here about the gratuitous cruelty of war, and the five episodes absolutely can’t be binged if you care about your emotional equilibrium. But what works so well in The Narrow Road to the Deep North is its elemental feeling, its suggestion that all these characters are motivated less by logic and more by primal instinct: the need to love, the need to ascend, the need to survive. The series refuses to overdo dialogue as narrative connective tissue, preferring to let its actors’ depictions of their characters’ lush internal lives drive the action. With a final devastatingly astute (and ominous) observation about how war annihilates us from the inside out, The Narrow Road to the Deep North is no less humane than any of Kurzel and Grant’s other works, but it might be the most heartbreaking. —R.H.

    Photo: Prime

    This animated series from Ramy Youssef and Pam Brady follows the Husseins, an Egyptian and Muslim family living in New Jersey, and how their conceptions of themselves change after September 11, 2001, thanks to increasingly racist neighbors, media, and politicians. It’s a dark subject, but one that #1 Happy Family USA lightens up with original songs (including a quite catchy one about “Spies in the Mosque”), absurd voice performances (including Youssef performing both the family patriarch Hussein Hussein and teen son Rumi Hussein), and a thrilling through-line of anger at how easily America slid into its current atmosphere of paranoia and bloodthirstiness. Maybe the season is too frenetically paced and too overstuffed with ideas. But there’s a devil-may-care quality to #1 Happy Family USA, like no one involved can believe they’re getting away with creating a series in which former president George W. Bush is portrayed as a lizardlike kidnapper, the FBI like a bunch of maladjusted adrenaline junkies, and a hijab-wearing male dentist as possessing beaverlike teeth that can gnaw through trees. (The level of absurdity, it varies.) The elasticity of the medium allows for the series to stretch to accommodate all its most provocative and insightful ideas, until it ends on a cliffhanger that will forever change the way you think about the term “spy kids.” Another season is already on the way, which means you have no excuse not to watch. —R.H.

     ➼ Read Roxana Hadadi’s review of #1 Happy Family USA.

    Photo: Jasper Savage/Netflix

    The equivalent of a warm bowl of soup on a cold day, North of North reminds you what a comedy can provide — laughs, obviously, but comfort, too. With Iqaluit, Canada’s northernmost city, standing in for the fictional Indigenous community of Ice Cove, North of North’s eight-episode first season focuses on 20-something Siaja (an extremely winning Anna Lambe). She’s outgoing, cheery, and determined to make something of herself after separating from her overbearing and emotionally abusive husband, Ting (Kelly William). There’s just one problem with her plan: Ting is beloved by the town for his athleticism and his hunting skills, and they all immediately turn on Siaja for leaving him. The plot pushes Siaja toward ambition both professional (can she hold down a new job at the community center; can she serve as a resource for a visiting polar research team?) and personal (can she take a chance on herself; can she avoid being pulled back under Ting’s sway?), and Lambe handles it with all relatable charm. The cast surrounding her has great comedic timing, and the subplot involving Siaja’s mother Neevee (Maika Harper) and a returning flame from her past (Jay Ryan) is one of the season’s most moving. An episode about a baseball-game rivalry between Ice Cove and its nemesis town that’s packed with Indigenous in-jokes suggests that North of North could have Parks and Recreation–style legs, too, if Netflix were to go ahead and renew it already. —R.H.

    Read Roxana Hadadi’s review of North of North.

    Photo: Sarah Shatz/FX

    It feels incredibly reductive to call Dying for Sex a limited series about a woman with cancer, even though that is technically accurate. That’s because it’s about so much more than just cancer, including reclaiming one’s sexuality in midlife, facing childhood trauma, experiencing deep bonds of female friendship, and, yeah, staring down the barrel of mortality. Anchored by a gorgeously understated yet deeply felt performance by Michelle Williams, Dying for Sex is also darkly and consistently funny, flipping the bird at every trope in every maudlin cancer story we’ve seen before. This isn’t a show about dying at all; it’s a celebration of all the things that make life so worth living that we fight to keep doing that as long as we can. —Jen Chaney

     ➼ Read Rachel Handler’s talk with Michelle Williams about the making of the series, Handler’s interview with star Jenny Slate, and Erin Qualey’s recaps. 

    Photo: Apple TV+

    Pity the … studio chief? Seth Rogen anchors this Apple TV+ comedy that follows a newly elevated head of the fictional film studio as he tries (and fails) to realize his dream of making great movies in a modern showbiz era that sees an IP-fixated Hollywood in uneasy decline. Rogen does impressive work performing multiple duties: In addition to starring in the lead role, he writes, produces, and directs all episodes with frequent collaborator Evan Goldberg. The resulting series is both an electrifying farce about the insipidity of the movie business and a loving testament to its enduring magic. It also looks incredible and features an absurdly extensive list of high-wattage cameos from the likes of Martin Scorsese, Charlize Theron, Ron Howard, Olivia Wilde, Anthony Mackie, and, shockingly, Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos. —Nicholas Quah

     ➼ Read Nicholas Quah’s review of The Studio and Keith Phipp’s recaps of the season.

    Photo: Ben Blackall/Netflix

    If all that this British series did was technically succeed at pulling off four episodes that were each shot in a single take, that would have been impressive enough. But what makes Adolescence such vital television is the way it uses that continuous, unedited visual flow to underline the themes and character beats in this intense exploration of a preteen’s arrest on charges of murdering a fellow classmate. Director Philip Barantini, working alongside creators Jack Thorne and Stephen Graham, often shoots tight close-ups that make it difficult for the viewer to see, quite literally, what’s coming around the next corner. That approach mirrors the shock and uncertainty now embedded in every second for the accused, Jamie, and his family as they confront the possibility that Jamie could be a killer. The camera’s unflinching point of view also allows for the actors to unleash some remarkable performances, particularly Owen Cooper as an untethered, sometimes aggressive Jamie and Graham as his distraught dad Eddie. In the final episode, when Eddie and his wife, Manda (Christine Tremarco, also excellent), contemplate their role in enabling their son to become an incel, Adolescence does the most difficult and powerful thing it can do. It refuses to let us look away. — Jen Chaney

     ➼ Read Marah Eakin’s Adolescence recaps, Shannon Keating’s essay on how the series fails to bring Katie’s perspective to the story, Nicholas Quah’s close read of the ending, Fran Hoepfner on the show’s one-shot takes, and Roxana Hadadi’s interview with star and co-creator Stephen Graham

    Photo: Jake Giles Netter/HBO

    For four seasons, HBO let Danny McBride and his creative team cook with The Righteous Gemstones, and in the parlance of the God-obsessed titular family, bless the channel for doing so. McBride has a specific flair for honing in on American subcultures and unfurling the oddness at their cores, and as he chronicled the infighting and exploits of the famous Gemstones family, he charted a path to understanding what it is about American’s specifically abundance-based branch of Christianity that holds so many in its thrall. No matter what absurd things the Gemstones family did, from fighting ninja-trained orphans to building megasize time-shares, the series always offered them second chances — and opportunities for fantastic actors like Edi Patterson, Walton Goggins, and McBride himself to go absolutely berserk. Gemstones was never again as cutting and caustic as its excellent first season, but in every subsequent outing — especially the backward-looking, romance-focused fourth — it was reliably stupid as all get out and hilarious as hell. We’ll miss them misbehaving, and we’ll keep our fingers crossed for a Teenjus spinoff. —R.H.

     ➼ Read Scott Tobias’s recaps of the season; Brian Grubb’s Edi Patterson performance review; Roxana Hadadi’s essay on the series finale and Hadadi’s exit interview with stars Danny McBride, Edi Patterson, and Adam DeVine.

    Photo: Robert Viglasky/Disney

    Because sometimes you just want to watch someone get punched in the face. Those longing for Steven Knight’s Peaky Blinders movie will be well sated by this series, which has the same roiling energy, propulsive scoring, and heavily accented gangsters as the British filmmaker’s most popular work. Set in London’s East End in the 1880s, A Thousand Blows triangulates on three figures in the city’s shady underworld. There’s Mary Carr (Erin Doherty), queen of the female gang the Forty Elephants, who’s sick of stealing from the poor and starts hatching a scheme to yoink valuables from the Queen of England. Coveting her is bareknuckle-boxing legend Henry “Sugar” Goodson (the insanely ripped Stephen Graham, who enlisted Doherty to join him in his series Adolescence), a man who only knows how to use violence to solve his problems and whose natural state is “teetering on the edge of an emotional cliff.” And getting between Mary and Sugar is immigrant Hezekiah Moscow (Malachi Kirby), who fled a massacre in his Jamaican homeland for a job in London, only to learn that the zookeeper wanted to put him in a cage and advertise him as a “wild man of Africa.” Hezekiah pivots to boxing, and his strength in the ring and romantic chemistry with Mary get him the wrong kind of attention from Sugar — who’s just itching to swan-dive off that cliff into self-destruction. A Thousand Blows pulls off a casting hat trick with this trio, whose magnetism elevates some of the first season’s cornier dialogue and sells the characters’ rapidly developed feelings. The fights are brutal, the schemes are clever, the six-episode drop is concise, and the “to be continued” ending promises more drama down the line. If you felt particularly burnt by The Nevers, give A Thousand Blows a try. — Roxana Hadadi 

    Photo: Adult Swim

    In this Adult Swim cartoon created by Joseph Bennett and Steve Hely, a kindhearted and noble naturalist discovers a rare mushroom that can miraculously heal any ailment … even death, under some circumstances. The discovery shoves him into the center of a conspiracy involving the American government and a big-pharma corporation, which both attempt to stop his efforts to produce the mushroom at scale in order to free the world of illness. King of the Hill’s Mike Judge and Greg Daniels feature as executive producers (with Judge turning in a reliably doofy performance as a pharma CEO), and the result is a wry, delightful, and poignant series that simultaneously feels like a Gen-X throwback and deeply modern satirical take on a broken world. Bonus points for the show’s psychedelic sequences, typically populated by strange miniature humanoids who look like twisted, western versions of Hayao Miyazaki’s weird little guys. —N.Q.

    Read Roxana Hadadi’s close read of the season finale and Hadadi’s interview with co-creators Steve Hely and Joe Bennett.

    Photo: Apple TV+

    The first season of Severance ended on a cliffhanger so intense it temporarily halted the flow of oxygen to most viewers’ brains. Then the show did the cruelest thing possible: It did not come back for three years. When season two of this dense and deeply weird workplace thriller finally dropped on Apple TV+, expectations were understandably high. These ten new episodes meet and often exceed them.

    Series creator Dan Erickson, director Ben Stiller (he handles half of the season’s episodes), and their colleagues have delivered a surreal, meticulously rendered odyssey that delves more deeply into the cultlike environment at Lumon, the shadowy biotech company that has a team of severed employees whose work and personal lives are fully divorced from each other. As the members of that team, Mark S. (Adam Scott, in a career-best performance), Helly R. (Britt Lower), Irving B. (John Turturro), and Dylan G. (Zach Cherry) continue to investigate what’s really going on at this freakishly controlling corporate enterprise. The craftsmanship on this show, from the idiosyncratic production design to the carefully composed cinematography, is sterling on every level. And while it may feel right to describe Severance as a drama, it’s got a really terrific, twisted sense of humor that feels especially suited to these dark times. If you didn’t guffaw during the office memorial service where employees were told to “each take nine seconds” to remember a former colleague, I’m sorry, but you may not be Lumon material. —J.C.

    Read Kathryn VanArendonk’s review of Severance, Erin Qualey’s recaps of the season, VanArendonk’s close read of the conversation between Mark’s innie and outie; Devon Ivie’s interview with star Britt Lower, and Roxana Hadadi’s interview with star Tramell Tillman .

    Photo: Matt Kennedy/Neflix

    No, Peter Berg and Mark L. Smith’s gritty-grimy-ugly depiction of the American West in American Primeval isn’t perfect. There are maybe too many moments that feel derivative of The Revenant, and Betty Gilpin could have had more to do. But there’s a pureness to how committed American Primeval is to its thesis of “American history bad, actually.” Our pop culture has been so stuck in a mode of romanticizing pioneers and settlers that American Primeval, with its insistence on diving into Mormon history and rejecting the idea that violence in the name of gaining power is justified, feels like a balancing of the scales. Taylor Kitsch gives one of the most textured performances of his career, Shea Whigham is having a ball going head-to-head with Kim Coates, and the series actually takes the time to depict the Shoshone with depth and context. All the beautiful shots of the sprawling American landscape are nice, but American Primeval never lets us forget that these lands are soaked in blood. —R.H.

    Read Roxana Hadadi’s full review of American Primeval and Keith Phipps’s recaps of the series.

    Photo: Netflix

    Once again, Netflix has unceremoniously dumped a miniseries from the wonderfully empathetic Japanese filmmaker Hirokazu Kore-eda on its streaming service with no fanfare, and once again, it’s phenomenal. In 2023, it was The Makanai: Cooking for the Maiko House, an adaptation of a manga series; in 2025, it’s Asura, an adaptation of a 1979 TV series and its preceding novel. One of Kore-eda’s many superpowers is finding the core of friendship, family, and community in these sources and blowing them up into immersive proportions, and Asura is riddled with these kinds of connections. The seven-episode miniseries follows four sisters who suspect that their father might be having an affair — and might also have fathered a child with the other woman. The daughters range in their reactions to the possibility, which in turn alters their relationships between each other and their partners. But their varying responses aren’t finite. The women change their minds throughout the course of the series as they gather for meals to gossip, reveal their own hidden secrets to each other, and wonder whether the men they love could also be cheating on them. Does anyone really know anyone at all? The cast and Kore-eda address that question with humor and nuance, a lot of meal scenes (for all The Makanai nostalgists), and a finale that suggests love is a choice to be made every day rather than a certainty to take for granted. It’s a cheeky ending to one of the most thoughtfully rendered series of the year. — R.H.

    Photo: Warrick Page/Max

    Some elements of The Pitt feel surprising and refreshing because they’re a return to a kind of TV that streaming has been uniquely bad at making: a long season, a strong sense of individual episodes, and a straightforward and unfussy drama premise. Those features alone are so well executed that The Pitt would be worth notice. But The Pitt is astonishing beyond that baseline. Executed with a real-time logic and a bare minimum of emotion-juicing musical score, two things can stand out: the immediacy of the medical crises and the show’s stellar performances, especially from Noah Wyle, Katherine LaNasa, and Taylor Dearden. The Pitt would be a standout at any point in TV history. After years of streaming bloat, it seems nearly miraculous. —Kathryn VanArendonk

    Read Kathryn VanArendonk’s full review of The Pitt, Maggie Fremont’s recaps of the series, and Roxana Hadadi’s profile of star Noah Wyle.

    Photo: Euan Cherry/Peacock

    Honestly, Lala’s outfits are enough to get this show in our best of the year. Those little tutus! But even setting aside the continued sartorial magnificence of Alan Cumming and his stylish sidekick, The Traitors’s entertainment value as a social experiment keeps on rising. Since the series has fully reoriented itself around reality-TV celebs, it’s become a fascinating analysis of how this genre’s stars perform themselves, lean into their infamy, and align based on the networks that gave them fame in the first place; The Traitors now has a layer of meta-tension that makes all of the bickering between factions feel weighted by how these people define themselves, too. Reality-TV competitions like this are all about assumptions, how we size up strangers and decide to align ourselves, and that tribalism has an even sharper edge now that we think we know these people from their appearances on other series. That’s fun! And it’s only a bonus that this season has had so much mess, from bickering Traitors who spend most of their time backstabbing each other to Tom Sandoval somehow winning us over with his transformation into a walking banana peel. —R.H.

    Read Tom Smyth’s recaps of the season.

    Photo: Gilles Mingasson/Disney

    After a third season dominated by the will-they-or-won’t-they relationship between Janine and Gregory and a flurry of high-profile guest stars, Quinta Brunson’s public-school sitcom put its head down and got back to basics for its fourth season. With Janine (Brunson) and Gregory (Tyler James Williams) openly together and the cameos kept to a minimum (well, okay, there was the Always Sunny crossover), Abbott did what it does best: explore real issues (gentrification, low teacher pay) through the prism of relatable comedy. Abbott is still the most consistently funny show on broadcast television, with a cast that understands their characters so deeply they’ve made them feel like old, dear friends. Even the kids on Abbott raised the bar this season. Please, somebody give an Emmy to the little girl who played Margaret, the student who dressed up as Barbara to celebrate the 100th day of school because she assumed Mrs. Howard was 100 years old. (“You’re even older than Ms. Teagues, and she’s, like, 50.”) — J.C.

    Read Ile-Ife Okantah’s recaps of the season, Roxana Hadadi on the backstory behind the Always Sunny in Philadelphia crossover episode, and Devon Ivie’s interview with star Janelle James.

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