Daily Countdown: TV Shows #74

#74

Seinfeld

One of the most successful comedies on network TV, Seinfeld finds its way onto the list at number 74.

I may not have loved this show as much as many others, but I did watch it regularly. It was clever and funny, with a group of some of the most eccentric characters on TV.

To this day, I will use lines like “NO SOUP FOR YOU” or “Hell-oooo Newman” in my life. Seinfeld has a place in the zeitgeist of American culture, unlike few shows of its generation.

Jerry Seinfeld, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Jason Alexander and Michael Richards made one of the best foursomes in TV history. The show worked because of these four characters, as unlikable as they may be to the on show world, were beloved by the public.

Though the show reviled in the idea that it was a “show about nothing,” it was actually about life. Life with these four characters and their desperate needs to find something more than what they had.

Daily Countdown: TV Show #75

#75

American Horror Story

This is a very interesting spot on the list for this show.

American Horror Story has 12 seasons. It is an anthology show that changes characters every season. Ryan Murphy is the creator of the series that has a regular list of performers who play someone new every season.

The problem with AHS is that, while some of the seasons were so fantastic and should be higher up this list, but there are too many seasons that are average to downright bad that it limited the shows ranking on my list.

I absolutely LOVED Murder House (season 1), Asylum (season two), Freak Show (season 4), and Roanoke (season 6). I hated Delicate (season 12). The remainder of the seasons fall somewhere between these. Many of the others are fine to blah.

Some of the top repeated actors include Jessica Lange, Evan Peters, Denis O’Hare, Zachary Quinto, Sarah Paulson, Lily Rabe, Frances Conroy, Kathy Bates, Emma Roberts, and Angela Bassett.

I could have seen a world that if this list was made after season 4, AHS would be way up this list, probably top 20, maybe even higher. However, the rest of the seasons place it at #75.

Daily Countdown: TV Shows #76

#76

The Penguin

HBO Max had a mini-series last year featuring a character that was “intorduced” in the big screen movie, The Batman. That was Penguin.

However, unlike the Batman Forever Penguin, who was played by Danny Devito, this version of the Penguin is played by Colin Farrell. When you think about the Penguin physically, Colin Farrell does not come immediately to mind.

The make-up job on Colin Farrell to make him look like the Penguin is truly some of the best make up on TV. But the make up is far from all- his performance was more than just make up. Colin Farrell brought so much life to the character of Oswald “Oz” Cobb that he was deeper than the character has ever been.

Throw in an Emmy-winning performance from Cristin Milioti as Sofia Gigante. Milioti was absolutely sensation in this role and provided such a foil for Oz that you were almost rooting for her.

The finale of the show had one of the most shocking and upsetting events that, even though Penguin was the protagonist of the show and easy to root for, you found yourself completely switched to seeing him as the villain. It was truly an amazing moment.

Daily Countdown: TV Shows #77

#77

Shrinking

We go back to Apple TV + for the next show on our list. Shrinking is a comedy that buries a lot of real life drama into its storylines.

Starring Jason Segel and Harrison Ford, Shrinking is very poignant, funny as only real life can be, and filled with wonderfully characters.

Jason Segel is our main character. He is therapist Jimmy Laird, who gets way too close to his patients. However, the death of his wife rocked Jimmy’s world and had him questioning everything, including how effective he was at his job. He has a strong relationship with his daughter, Alice, though the loss affected them both.

The fact that Harrison Ford has not won an Emmy for his performance in this show is criminial. Ford gives such a human performance as Dr. Paul Rhoades, whose personal struggle with Parkinson’s disease is one more powerful storyline among some of the best around.

There is a wonderful comedic troop of actors on the show adding color and hilarity. Other cast members included Jessica Williams, Christa Miller, Michael Urie, Ted McGinley, Luke Tennie, Brett Goldstein, Wendie Malick, and Lily Rabe.

The show has had two seasons so far and is one of the best shows from Apple TV +.

Daily Countdown: TV Shows #78

#78

Watchmen

One of the all-time classic comic book mini-series came from DC Comics was entitled Watchmen written by Alan Moore. It was adapted as a big screen movie by Zack Snyder.

Years later, LOST’s Damon Lindelof created a new TV show for HBO based on the movie/comic.

Watchmen the TV series was very different, but it was a sensational series. Honestly, (and this is a little shameful) this was the first time I ever heard about the Tulsa race massacre, which plays a big role in this story. It was set 34 years after the movie.

Featuring Regina King, Don Johnson, Tim Blake Nelson, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, Louis Gossett Jr., Jeremy Irons, Jean Smart, and Tom Mison.

Daily Countdown: TV Shows #79

#79

Hawkeye

The first Marvel Studios to find its way onto the list is Hawkeye, starring Jeremy Renner, reprising his role as Clint Barton from the series of the MCU movies and Hailee Steinfeld, playing Kate Bishop.

The show was set at Christmas as Clint has to leave his family in order to try and retrieve his old Ronin costume he wore during the period when his family had been blipped. He comes across fangirl Kate Bishop, who was inspired by Hawkeye during the battle of New York. She had taken up archery and was intent on joining Clint on his rounds.

The show was wonderfully written and had a nice tone to it. It is a great Christmas time show as it deals very much with family.

One of the issue a lot of people had was the return of Vincent D’Onofrio as Kingpin. Some people hated his return here because he was not playing Kingpin the way he did in the Daredevil Netflix series. That did not bother me at all. I expected some differences.

The show also introduced Echo, though the use of Echo is probably the weakest area of the season.

Yelena, portrayed by Florence Pugh, guest starred starting in episode 4, in her attempt to kill Clint for his part in the death of her sister Black Widow. Pugh and Steinfeld had remarkable chemistry and their shared scenes were some of the best of the series.

Jeremy Renner and Hailee Steinfeld worked extremely well together, in a mentor-mentee/father-daughter style.

I really enjoyed the six episode series and I would love to see another season at some point.

Daily Countdown: TV Shows #80

#80

The Daily Show with Jon Stewart

While this would also include the time when the show was hosted by Trevor Noah and others, my favorite stretch of The Daily Show was when Jon Stewart was the host.

The Daily Show appeared Monday-Thursday on Comedy Central. It is a parody of a news program, hosted by Jon Stewart. He has had a lot of correspondents that have become huge stars including Steve Carell, Stephen Colbert, Samantha Bee, John Oliver, Ed Helms, Rob Corddry, Jessica Williams, Larry Widmore, Olivia Munn, Roy Wood Jr., Hasan Minhaj, Jordan Klepper, Ronny Chieng, Lewis Black, Wyatt Cenac, Michael Che, Josh Gad, Jason Jones, Al Madrigal, Aasif Mandvi, Rob Riggle, and Kristen Schaal.

The writing and humor of this show is as high of a level as you are going to find. There have been people in the world that gets their news from the Daily Show.

Jon Stewart is truly one of the best interviewers you are going to see. He is so intelligent and well-read, I would hate to try and debate Stewart. Just ask Bill O’Reilly.

Jon Stewart left the show and spent several years away, as comedian Trevor Noah took over the desk. Noah was a solid host too. Stewart has returned to The Daily Show for once a week.

Here is your moment of Zen…

Daily Countdown: TV Show #81

#81

Murderbot

I had heard some positive things about this Apple TV + show, but it turned out to be one of my favorite new shows of this year.

Murderbot is a futuristic sci-fi show where a personal security unit robot winds up getting a mind of his own and that mind has some potential violent tendencies.

Sec Unit was played by Alexander Skarsgård and he goes rogue. He is assigned to a team of researchers who were on a dangerous mission to another planet. Sec Unit does the voice over for the show and he is both fascinated and repulsed by the humans and their decisions.

Sec Unit is obsessed with an in-universe TV show called The Rise and Fall of Sanctuary Moon. As viewers, we see some of the scenes of this show making it quite meta.

I did not expect to love this show as much as I did, but it was gripping, extremely funny and full of great action.

Daily Countdown: TV Show #82

#82

Paradise

The next show in the countdown is one of the better shows from the last year on Hulu. Starring Courtney B. Vance and James Marsden, Paradise is a dystopian/sci-fi/mystery show that saw Marsden as the President of the United States who had to lead during an extinction level event,

Vance played his main secret service agent who discovered the president’s dead body. He was murdered!

Did I mention that the surviving humanity retreated to a hidden city inside a mountain?

Shenanigans ensued. The mystery was amazing and the flashback episode that showed what happened was epic.

Paradise was a surprise hit and earned its place on this list.

Daily Countdown: TV Shows #83

#83

Sherlock

The British mystery crime drama reimagined Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s legendary detective Sherlock Holmes and placed him in the present day.

This show helped introduce me to Benedict Cumberbatch, who led the show as the autistic-like Sherlock, and Martin Freeman, who was his sidekick Dr. John Watson.

The series ran for four seasons, but each season only had three episodes. However, each episode was more like a movie length, running around and hour and a half.

These were all great episodes. Perhaps my favorite was “Sign of Three,” which details Watson and Mary Morstan get married.

Daily Countdown: TV Shows #84

#84

Sliders

One of the cooler sci-fi concepts came in the 1990s with this show where four unlikely people wound up “sliding” through parallel universes, trying to find their way back home.

Much like Quantum Leap, each week Quinn Mallory, Professor Maximillian Arturo, Rembrandt “Cryin’ Man” Brown and Wade Welles found themselves in a new situation where they had to survive until their hand held timer device counted down so they could open up a vortex wormhole so they could depart.

Most of the time, the group encountered plenty of trouble, including variants of themselves. The show’s first few seasons were so great, while on FOX, but after FOX canceled it and it ended up on the Sci-Fi Channel (eventually Syfy), the episodes got much weaker. There were cast members replaced and Sliders, which was really the connection between the characters, became less engaging.

Jerry O’Connell, Cleavant Derricks, John Rhys-Davies, and Sabrina Lloyd were the original cast. Kari Wuhrer joined the cast as Captain Maggie Beckett.

Sliders is one of those underrated gems of the sci-fi genre. It sadly seemed to go too long and weakened its overall memory.

Daily Countdown: TV Show #85

#85

Orange is the New Black

One of the earliest Netflix series was Orange is the New Black, a comedy/drama set inside a women’s penitentiary.

The cast included Taylor Schilling, Laura Prepon, Uzo Aduba, Danielle Brooks, Natasha Lyonne, Kate Mulgrew, Samira Wiley, Taryn Manning, Jason Biggs, Jackie Cruz, Laverne Cox, Diane Guerrero, Lori Petty, Ruby Rose, Adrienne C. Moore, Selenis Leyva, Dascha Polanco, Lea DeLaria, Michael Healy, Michelle Hurst, and Pablo Schreiber.

I enjoyed the series, but the last few seasons did not match some of the first few.

Daily Countdown: TV Show #86

#86

Hano

This show is most likely not as well known as some of the others on this list so far. Yet this Netflix series, which went 2 seasons for a total of 16 episodes, was sensational, and remarkably funny.

American Vandal was a mockumentary series that spoofed true crime shows such as Making a Murderer and Serial. The show followed friends Peter Maldonado (Tyler Alvarez) and Sam Ecklund (Griffin Gluck) who created an internet show where they investigated a couple of cases at their high school, Hanover.

In season one, the pair investigated the prank that saw 27 faculty cars vandalized by someone who drew phallic images on them. Season two the investigation was at a Catholic private high school that had someone spiked the school’s lemonade with a laxative. They called this perp the “Turd Burglar.”

Yes, there were a lot of dick and poop jokes. There were plenty of sex jokes. These are usually the types of humor that I do not find entertaining. This was the total opposite. American Vandal was one of the funniest series I have ever seen. It was not only incredibly smart and funny, it was a great mystery.

Netflix canceled the series after the second season, but these first two definitely found a place on my top 100.

Daily Countdown: TV Shows #87

#87

Fargo

One of the best anthology series around. A few of the seasons of Fargo, based of course on the classic movie of the same name, are as good as you get. There were a couple of seasons that were not as good, but the first two and season five were so awesome.

The casts change each season and have included some gigantic stars such as Billy Bob Thornton, Martin Freeman, Chris Rock, Bob Odenkirk, Jon Hamm, Kirsten Dunst, Jean Smart, Ewan McGregor, David Thewlis, Ted Danson, Juno Temple, Carrie Coon, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Nick Offerman, Kieran Culkin, Brad Garrett, Ben Whishaw, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Patrick Wilson, Jesse Plemons, Joe Keery, Colin Hanks, and Adam Goldberg.

The FX show is always creative and funny with the greatest characters around.

Daily Countdown: TV Shows #88

#88

Quantum Leap

Theorising that one could time travel within his own lifetime, Doctor Sam Beckett stepped into the Quantum Leap accelerator and vanished… He woke to find himself trapped in the past, facing mirror images that were not his own, and driven by an unknown force to change history for the better. His only guide on this journey is Al, an observer from his own time, who appears in the form of a hologram that only Sam can see and hear. And so Doctor Beckett finds himself leaping from life to life, striving to put right what once went wrong, and hoping each time that his next leap will be the leap home…

“Oh boy….”

Quantum Leap is a great sci-fi show that aired on NBC in the late 80’s, early 90’s. It starred Scott Bakula as Dr. Samuel Beckett and Dean Stockwell as Al.

Sam Beckett would jump around time, into the body of someone else, and then have to try to fix the history of this person’s life. Some were smaller, more personal stories while others were big and bombastic, featuring famous people’s stories.

Al was a hologram of a man from Beckett’s actual timeline who was there to aid Sam through his missions. Al could only be seen by Sam.

The show had some really exciting moments, some humor, and plenty of sci-fi goodness. The show did not shy away from the deeper subjects either such as racism, sexism and hatred.

Every episode ended with the tie in to the next episode, as we see Sam arrive in the body of someone new. Sam continued to hope that the next leap would be the leap home.

I did not watch the revival of Quantum Leap that aired on CBS for a couple of years. This is completely the original show that is at #88 on my list.