87 TV Series You Must See In 2025
2025 may be nearly half way through, but in the world of TV the year is still young. As such, even though you may feel like the best TV you'll see this year is already behind us as we've headed down to the severed floor for Severance Season 2, stared at our reflection once again in Charlie Brooker's Netflix series Black Mirror, brought out the billy clubs for Disney+ must-see show Daredevil: Born Again, and had our collective socks knocked off by Philip Barantini's Adolescence, we assure you a veritable streaming smorgasbord still lies ahead of us in the coming months.
Yes, we may have just finished collecting our jaw from the flaw after that Andor Season 2 finale, and yes, the second seasons of both The Last Of Us and Doctor Who may have left our heads spinning, but there's still no shortage of returning favourites, fresh franchise offerings, original programming, weekly droppers and binge-ready shows in store for us before the year is through. So whether you’re chomping at the bit for Wonder Man, desperately yearning to head into the Upside Down one last time for Stranger Things Season 5, clamouring for Sally Wainwright’s Happy Valley follow-up, have a date to make with Adam Brody’s rabbi and Kristen Bell’s sex podcaster in Nobody Wants This S2, or are just counting down the days until we finally find out what exactly Vince Gilligan has been cooking since finishing Better Call Saul, your own friendly neighbourhood Empire has got you covered.
So pull up a pew, open a new Serializd list (or grab a pen and some paper), get ready to whack the brightness up to full and crank the speakers, and join us as we run through 87 shows you’re not going to want to miss in 2025. And with that being said, on we go with the list…
Mark S. (Adam Scott), Irving B. (John Turturro), Dylan B (Zach Cherry), and Helly R (Britt Lower) return to Lumon — and face the consequences of unlocking some of their outer lives’ secrets — in the second season of Dan Erickson’s gripping workplace sci-fi thriller.
Read Empire's review of Severance S2.
Motherland fan favourite Amanda (Lucy Punch) gets her own spin-off in a new sitcom from Sharon Horgan and writers Holly Walsh, Helen Serafinowicz, Barunka O'Shaughnessy, and Laurence Rickard. Joanna Lumley, Philippa Dunne, and Peter Serafinowicz co-star.
Best pals Nic (Daisy May Cooper) and Jen (Selen Hizli) are back on our screens as co-creators Cooper and Hizli’s twisty, twisted comedy thriller returns, picking up exactly where the first series’ massive cliffhanger left off. They’re joined by a remarkable guest line-up including Chelsea Peretti, Tom Davis, Denise Black, Jamali Maddix, and Kojey Radical.
Based on the noodle-twisting true story of how Australian influencer and wellness guru Belle Gibson duped millions online into believing she'd cured her (non-existent) terminal brain cancer through healthy living, Samantha Strauss' six-episode limited series sees Kaitlyn Dever take on — and disappear into — the role of the duplicitous social media star.
Read Empire's review of Apple Cider Vinegar.
The third season of Amazon’s ultraviolent adult animation, based on Robert Kirkman’s subversive superhero comics, ups the ante as Mark (Steven Yeun) — now in his black-and-blue Invincible era — continues to deal with his father Omni-Man (J.K. Simmons), his increasingly powerful half-brother Oliver (Christian Convery), and a new batch of superpowered villains bent on destruction.
Sinéad Keenan’s DCI Jessica James and Sanjeev Bhaskar’s DI Sunil ‘Sunny’ Khan are back on the case and investigating another murder when human remains rock up on Whitney Marsh as ITV’s crime drama crosses the taped lines for a sixth go around.
After the shocking events of Miyagi-Do’s trip to the Sekai Taikai, Netflix’s huge Miyagiverse finale reaches its crane kicking climax as Karate sensei Johnny Lawrence (William Zabka) and Daniel LaRusso (Ralph Macchio) — alongside their Miyagi-Do and Cobra Kai cohort — square off against Kreese, Silver, Sensei Wolf, and Master Kim Da-Eun one last time.
Read Empire's review of Cobra Kai S6 Part 3.
Julianne Nicholson and Eliza Scanlen topline this six-part historical drama, based on Marek Kohn’s self-explanatorily titled Dope Girls: The Birth Of The British Drug Underground.
Hilary Swank and Joel McHale enter the fray in the third season of Ashley Lyle and Bart Nickerson’s chronologically tricksy Paramount+ survival thriller. Melanie Lynskey, Tawny Cypress, Christina Ricci, Warren Kole, Simone Kessell, Lauren Ambrose, Sophie Nélisse, Sophie Thatcher, and Elijah Wood are all among the new series' returning cast.
Read Empire's review of Yellowjackets S3.
Sun, sex, death, and, uhh, Walton Goggins come to Thailand in the third season of Mike White’s bougie murder mystery show, set within the confines of the world’s unluckiest luxury resort chain. Among the starry ensemble of prospective killers/victims this time out were Jason Isaacs, Parker Posey, Aimee Lou Wood, Carrie Coon, Michelle Monaghan, and Leslie Bibb.
Read Empire's review of The White Lotus S3.
Pixar’s first longform TV series follows a softball team in the run-up to a big championship game, with each episode centring a different character’s perspective — and finding new and increasingly fiendish ways to make us cry over kids playing a sport that’s basically just a squishier version of baseball.
Read Empire's review of Win Or Lose.
Alan Ritchson’s pan-handed man mountain is back in action as the jewel in Prime Video’s dad thriller crown continues to shine. And if you thought Reacher was big, just wait until you meet Olivier Richter’s 7’2” giant Paulie, who causes Ritchson's man of few words no shortage of problems as he tackles his most personal case yet.
Read Empire's review of Reacher S3.
Robert De Niro’s big TV debut sees the Goodfellas actor play George Mullen, a former POTUS tasked with hunting down the perpetrators of a massive cyber attack on American security. De Niro is supported by a mega ensemble including *deep breath* Angela Bassett, Dan Stevens, Jesse Plemons, Lizzy Caplan, Bill Camp, Connie Britton, Matthew Modine, and Clark Gregg.
Read Empire's review of Zero Day.
Gugu Mbatha-Raw’s suicide attempt surviving amnesiac Sophie continues to piece together her past — and field the dangers arising in her present — as Veronica West’s psychological thriller sends her to London in Season 2. Returning cast members Oliver Jackson-Cohen and Millie Brady are joined by new faces Phil Dunster, Gavin Drea, Rupert Graves, Tara Fitzgerald, Nina Sosanya, Joely Richardson and Freida Pinto.
Peaky Blinders creator Steven Knight takes us back in time to London, circa 1880s, for a true story inspired period boxing drama. A bulked-up Stephen Graham stars as brawler Sugar Goodson, a Big Smoke boxing world big-wig who finds himself squaring off, both in and outside the ring, with Erin Doherty's Mary Carr — the self-described Queen of all-female criminal gang the Forty Elephants — and her new prizefighter, charismatic Jamaican-born heavyweight Hezekiah Moscow (Malachi Kirby).
Read Empire's review of A Thousand Blows.
Harrison Ford as Jacob Dutton and Helen Mirren as Cara Dutton in season 2, episode 7 of 1923 streaming on Paramount+. Photo credit: Lo Smith/Paramount+.
Taylor Sheridan’s Prohibition era Yellowstone origin story continues as Jacob (Harrison Ford) and Cara Dutton (Helen Mirren) try to steel their Montana ranch home against a cruel winter and crueller adversaries. Brandon Sklenar, Julia Schlaepfer, Jerome Flynn, Michelle Randolph, Timothy Dalton, and Jennifer Carpenter are among the series’ recurring players.
Paddy Considine and Christina Hendricks lead Chris O’Dowd’s original comedy drama, which centres around a small Irish town whose decades-held secrets unspool when a major Hollywood production rolls in.
The 2009 Corby toxic waste case — which centred around the 300% increase in rates of upper-limb defects in babies born in Corby after decades of industrial waste dumping — is the subject of Jack Thorne’s four-part limited series, which follows three mothers as they fight for justice for their children. Jodie Whittaker, Aimee Lou Wood, Robert Carlyle, and Rory Kinnear spearhead the cast.
Charlie Cox’s Man With No Fear Matt Murdock — aka Daredevil – finds himself on a collision course with Vincent D’Onofrio’s Wilson ‘Kingpin’ Fisk in the MCU’s soft reboot of the fan-favourite Netflix series. Elden Henson’s Foggy Nelson, Deborah Ann Woll’s Karen Page, and Jon Bernthal’s Punisher Frank Castle are also all back for this one.
Read Empire's review of Daredevil Born Again.
Philip Barantini, Stephen Graham, and Jack Thorne joined forces for this harrowing four-part, one-shot drama that revolves around a family dealing with the aftermath of a 13-year-old boy being arrested for murdering his school mate. Graham stars alongside Christine Tremarco, Owen Cooper, Faye Marsay, and Ashley Walters in the series, an early frontrunner for Emmy and BAFTA glory next year.
Read Empire's review of Adolescence.
Having really found its feet with Season 2, Amazon’s ambitious adaptation of Robert Jordan’s fantasy epic returns just in time to see Rosamund Pike’s Moiraine reckoning with the realisation that neither she nor newly declared Dragon Reborn Rand (Josha Stradowski) can live while the other survives. Jordan’s fourth and fifth Wheel Of Time books, Shadow Rising and The Fires Of Heaven, provide the source material for the latest season.
Read Empire's review of The Wheel Of Time S3.
The Batman and Top Gun: Maverick co-writer Peter Craig’s riveting adaptation of Dennis Tafoya's novel stars Brian Tyree Henry and Wagner Moura as two friends from Philly who pose as DEA agents to rob a house, only to then realise they’ve accidentally uncovered a major narcotics operation.
Read Empire's review of Dope Thief.
The Residence. (L to R) Susan Kelechi Watson as Jasmine Haney, Uzo Aduba as Cordelia Cupp, Ken Marino as Harry Hollinger in episode 101 of The Residence. Cr. Jessica Brooks/Netflix © 2024
The latest Shondaland series is a screwball White House murder mystery, with Uzo Aduba’s quirky detective Cordelia Cupp on the case and tasked with catching a killer among 157 suspects. Giancarlo Esposito is the victim, and Susan Kelechi Watson, Randall Park, and Jason Lee are just four of the 157 to keep an eye on.
Formerly Mere Mortals, Ashly Burch, John Howell Harris, and Katie McElhenney’s four-episode Mythic Quest companion series follows players, fans, and employees involved with the fictional video game.
Another early contender for awards success next year (and a coveted slot on our TV Shows of the Year), Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg’s latest comic creation follows a legacy Hollywood studio and its newly appointed head (Rogen) as they try to survive in an increasingly hostile and volatile industry. Martin Scorsese, Zac Efron, Catherine O'Hara, Bryan Cranston, Kathryn Hahn, Paul Dano, and Charlize Theron are just some of the all-stars assembled to send up Hollywood here.
Read Empire's review of The Studio.
After 11 years spent playing everyone’s favourite anti-authority cop-turned-PI Harry Bosch, Titus Welliver bids farewell to his iconic role in the third and final season of Bosch: Legacy. The BTVU (Bosch TV Universe) will continue however, with several spin-offs already on the way.
Gareth Evans and Matt Flannery’s British crime series continues as a spiked shipment of cocaine lands Ṣọpẹ́ Dìrísù’s undercover cop turned gangster Elliot Carter and Joe Cole’s mob heir Sean Wallace in all kinds of trouble.
Read Empire's review of Gangs Of London S3.
Adult Swim’s latest mature animation follows two high school pals who discover a new cure-all drug — and a conspiracy between the US government and Big Pharma to suppress all knowledge of said drug.
Molly Kochan and Nikki Boyer’s candid podcast, which charted the former’s exploration of her sexuality after being diagnosed with Stage 4 metastatic breast cancer, is the subject of a new limited series starring Michelle Williams and Jenny Slate. Rob Delaney and Jay Duplass are among their co-stars.
Paul Giamatti, Emma Corrin, Peter Capaldi, Issa Rae, and Chris O'Dowd are among the actors assembled for the seventh instalment in Charlie Brooker’s dystopian anthology series. Fans of Star Trek riffing ep ‘USS Callister’ can also look forward to, in a Black Mirror first, a sequel catching up with Cristin Milioti, Billy Magnussen, and co. And for 'Bandersnatch' acolytes, Will Poulter makes a memorable return in series standout 'Plaything', too.
Read Empire's review of Black Mirror S7.
Jon Hamm is a hedge fund manager who turns to stealing from his rich elite neighbours after losing his job in Jonathan Tropper’s darkly comic drama. Amanda Peet, Olivia Munn, and Hoon Lee co-star.
Ncuti Gatwa’s second series as The Doctor in Russell T. Davies’ wibbly-wobbly, timey-wimey reboot marks the arrival of new companion Belinda Chandra (Varada Sethu) in the TARDIS. Millie Gibson returns as Ruby Sunday, while The Little Mermaid star Jonah Hauer-King has a recurring guest spot as Sunday’s 'boyfriend' Conrad. Plus! Mrs. Flood (Anita Dobson) returns...
Read Empire's review of Doctor Who Season 2.
In the second season of HBO’s post-apocalyptic survival drama, Joel (Pedro Pascal) and Ellie (Bella Ramsey) reckon with the choices that were made in Salt Lake City as they continue trying to survive in a country overrun with clickers, bloaters, and more. Catherine O’Hara, Kaitlyn Dever, and Isabela Merced are among the new additions to the cast.
Read Empire's review of The Last Of Us S2.
Paul Hunter and Aeysha Carr’s original comedy drama follows Hampton Chambers (David Oyelowo), a newly released convict whose past — and serendipitous moments of divine intervention — follow wherever he goes.
Tony Gilroy’s Rogue One prequel continues, taking the story of Cassian Andor (Diego Luna) forward a year at a time as the Rebel leader commits himself to the cause while the Empire — and, in particular, one Director Orson Krennic (Ben Mendelsohn) — tightens its fascistic grip on the galaxy, ramping up construction on the first Death Star.
Read Empire's review of Andor Season 2.
Penn Badgeley’s psychopathic stalker-cum-serial killer Joe Goldberg returns to New York in pursuit of a peaceful life as Netflix’s flagship binge-drama reaches its conclusion. Charlotte Ritchie, Madeline Brewer, and Anna Camp are all back for the big send-off, with Baby Reindeer’s Nava Mau joining as a guest star in the final season.
Alan Alda’s 1981 comedy classic about three holidaying suburban couples and their interpersonal dramas gets the TV remake treatment courtesy of Tina Fey, who co-created the show and stars alongside Colman Domingo, Steve Carell, Will Forte, Erika Henningsen, and Kerri Kenney-Silver in it.
Rian Johnson’s anthology murder mystery series, ostensibly a modern day Columbo (if Peter Falk was Natasha Lyonne and had a literal built-in bullshit detector), is back back back. Among the suspects, killers, and victims this time out are *deep breath* Giancarlo Esposito, Cynthia Erivo, Katie Holmes, Kumail Nanjiani, John Mulaney, Sam Richardson, Awkwafina, Corey Hawkins, and Simon Rex!
Read Empire's review of Poker Face Season 2.
Bruce Miller’s take on Margaret Atwood’s dystopian novel is back for a sixth and final season this year. Elissabeth Moss, O-T Fagbenle, Max Minghella, and Ann Dowd are among the cast returning for the show’s grand finale.
Amanda Seyfried is a Philly cop looking for her missing, drug-addicted sister in Nikki Toscano’s adaptation of the bestselling Liz Moore book.
Teen tech whizz Riri Williams (Dominique Thorne) — aka Ironheart — returns in her own series after having been introduced in Black Panther: Wakanda Forever. Anthony Ramos and Alden Ehrenreich co-star.
Following Season 3’s ‘to be continued…’ finale, Jeremy Allen White’s under pressure Chef Carmy Berzatto is set to head back into the kitchen when everyone’s favourite “comedy” cooking drama returns. Will Sydney (Ayo Edebiri) stay at The Bear? What consequences will that Chicago Tribune review reap? Will Ritchie go to his ex’s wedding and open the door to more Josh Hartnett? We shall see…
Hwang Dong-hyuk’s win-or-die satire comes to an end as Player 456’s (Lee Jung-jae) rebellion against The Front Man and his deadly games reaches its bloody conclusion.
The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon writing duo Ben Kronengold and Rebecca Shaw strike out on their own path with an ensemble comedy about a group of twenty-something housemates navigating adulthood together. Lucy Freyer, Owen Thiele, Gabi Samels, and Jack Innanen star.
Uma Thurman, Peter Dinklage, and Matthew Lillard are set to join Michael C. Hall’s Dexter Morgan and his dark passenger in the chronological follow-up to Dexter: New Blood, which may or may not look likely to see everybody’s favourite psycho killer cheat death once again.
What do you mean, you need another hard sci-fi hit to return to Apple TV+ in 2025? Pfft. Fine! Have Season 3 of David S. Goyer and Josh Friedman’s Foundation, a multiple millennia spanning Isaac Asimov adaptation starring Jared Harris, Lee Pace, and Lou Llobell.
The adventures of Captain Christopher Pike (Anson Mount) and the crew of the Starship Enterprise in the decade before Star Trek: The Original Series continue as Strange New Worlds returns for another set of monster/alien/world-of-the-week shenanigans.
Marvel Animation’s Black Panther spin-off series chronicles the exploits of the Hatut Zaraze, Wakandan warriors who, like a sort-of reverse Indiana Jones, carry out dangerous missions around the world to retrieve historical artifacts — namely, precious vibranium pieces.
Netflix’s creepy, kooky, mysterious, and spooky Addams Family spin-off is back this year, promising more hijinks at Nevermore Academy as Jenna Ortega’s unblinking Wednesday continues her deadly education. Lady Gaga is among the most eye-catching names attached for S2.
Sydney Chandler, Alex Lawther, Essie Davis, and Timothy Olyphant lead the line-up of Noah Hawley's terra firma based xenomorph chiller. This one, intriguingly, is set 27 years post-Prometheusand two years prior to the events of Alien, giving Ridley Scott’s iconic sci-fi franchise some compelling new connective tissue.
Star Wars’ animated anthology series returns for a third instalment, boasting nine new one-shot anime offerings. Studios involved this time out include 'The Duel' creators Kamikaze Douga, 'The Twins' and 'The Elder''s Studio Trigger, 'The Village Bride''s Kinema Citrus, and 'The Ninth Jedi' outfit Production I.G., David Production (JoJo's Bizarre Adventure), Anima (SAND LAND), Polygon Pictures (Your Friendly Neighbourhood Spider-Man), Project Studio Q (Evangelion), and WIT Studio (Vinland Saga).
Reginald D. Moore’s acclaimed sci-fi series, set in an alternate history in which the Soviets won the Space Race, is set to move its timeline’s needle forwards another decade in its fifth season, with the action now taking place in 2012.
Escape Plan and Le Mans ‘66writer Jason Keller is back with a sports comedy starring Owen Wilson as a washed up golfer looking to give life another, er, swing when he takes on a young protégé. Marc Maron, Timothy Olyphant, and Judy Greer also feature. Wow!
The Slough House spooks, headed up by Gary Oldman’s flatulent MI5 boss Jackson Lamb, return for another round of spycraft, drama, and Mick Herronian everyday espionage.
Vince Gilligan reteams with his Better Call Saul muse Rhea Seehorn on this, an Albuquerque set series whose plot remains entirely under wraps at present. Rumours suggest aliens may be afoot, but we will simply have to wait and see for now.
Glen Powell’s co-written, co-created, and self-starring college football comedy, based on the eponymous sketch character from ESPN+ docuseries Eli's Place, sees the Hit Man star play a quarterback who goes to extreme, figuratively and literally transformational lengths to get his career back on track.
Shang-Chi director Destin Daniel Cretton’s latest MCU offering sees Yahya Abdul-Mateen II take on the role of Simon Williams, a Hollywood actor and stuntman who becomes superhero Wonder Man after gaining superpowers. Keep an eye out for Sir Ben Kingsley, who’s back as the riotous thesp Trevor Slattery in this one.
After landing as one of the best TV shows of 2024, Marvel Animation’s revival of X-Men: The Animated Series is set to continue this year as our mutant heroes find themselves thousands of years apart and, based on that cliffhanger S1 finale, about to face an apocalyptic (or rather Apocalypse-tic) conflict.
An all-star line-up including Florence Pugh, Hailee Steinfeld, David Harbour, Simu Liu, Elizabeth Olsen, and Awkwafina lead a Marvel Animation series that reimagines the Marvel universe as a world overrun by zombies.
The Duffer Brothers’ nostalgic sci-fi phenomenon returns for one last trip to the Upside Down this year as Eleven (Millie Bobby Brown), Hopper (David Harbour), Mike (Finn Wolfhard), Steve (Joe Keery), Robin (Maya Hawke), and the gang face Vecna — and, after nine long years, finally say goodbye.
Henry Cavill’s White Wolf is gone — Liam Hemsworth’s Geralt of Rivia is here. Following the Cavillrine’s departure from the show, everybody’s favourite monster hunting fantasy series continues with Geralt, Ciri (Freya Allen), and Yennefer (Anya Chalotra) traversing the war-torn Continent apart. Laurence Fishburne, Sharlto Copley, and Danny Woodburn join the cast alongside Hemworth this season.
Jason Bateman is the owner of a New York nightspot whose empire threatens to crumble when he allows his chaotic brother (Jude Law) back into his life in this prestige sibling drama. Bateman also serves as exec producer and director on the show, which also features episodes helmed by Laura Linney and Justin Kurzel.
Peaky Blinders maestro Steven Knight’s second new show due out in 2025 is a sort of boozy, Irish Succession. Focused on the adult children of stout company founder Benjamin Guinness and the consequences his death brings upon them, the series stars Louis Partridge, Anthony Boyle, James Norton, Niamh McCormack, Jack Gleeson, Emily Fairn, and Fionn O’Shea.
Ted Danson’s amateur silver fox PI Charles is back on the case in the upcoming second season of The Good Place creator Michael Schur’s heartwarming comedy mystery show.
BoJack Horseman creator Raphael Bob-Waksberg returns with an original adult animation that explores a dysfunctional family and their tangled history over several years.
Morpheus’ (Tom Sturridge) phantasmagorical journeys to Hell and back are set to continue with the return of dark fantasy epic The Sandman. Ruairi O'Connor, Clive Russell, Jack Gleeson, Freddie Fox, Laurence O’Fuarain, Indya Moore, Douglas Booth, and Steve Coogan are among those voyaging in the dream world for what will be the show's final series.
Adam Brody and Kristen Bell’s unorthodox rabbi and sex podcaster love story continues with the return of Erin Foster’s romantic comedy series.
Set over the course of one long weekend, Molly Smith Metzler’s adaptation of her own darkly comic play centres around Meghann Fahy’s Devon, a woman who’s concerned about her sister Simone's (Milly Alcock) unhealthy relationship with her new boss (Julianne Moore) and decides to stage an intervention when all involved parties gather at a luxury beach house getaway.
Lena Dunham’s latest series is a rom-com in which workaholic New Yorker Jessica (Morgan Stalter) moves to London to start afresh and alone. The arrival of Will Sharpe’s Felix on the scene however suggests she’ll soon be reconsidering.
Holly Hunter, Tatiana Maslany, Paul Giamatti, Tig Notaro, and Oded Fehr are among the constellation of stars leading the latest Alex Kurtzman Star Trek show. This one centres around Starfleet cadets as they navigate their personal lives, officer training, and a shadowy new threat to the Federation.
Lucia Aniello, Paul W. Downs, and Jen Statsky’s Emmy winning comedy about the unlikely bond struck up between a legendary Las Vegas comedian (Jean Smart) and a twentysomething, up-and-coming comedy writer (Rose Abdoo) has finally secured a Sky distribution deal, meaning both Season 3 and 4 will hit UK screens this year.
Despite being somewhat canon-adjacent to the new DCU, James Gunn’s The Suicide Squad spin-off continues apace as John Cena’s titular jingoistic merc returns to our screens in a new season that’s reportedly set in the aftermath of Gunn’s own upcoming Superman movie.
Joe Barton and Julian Farino’s five-episode limited series chronicles the fierce rivalry between Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Will Sharpe) and Antonio Salieri (Paul Bettany).
Sam Reid’s undead hemophile Lestat de Lioncourt is set to take centre stage — and control of the narrative — in the third season of Rolin Jones’ Anne Rice adaptation, which has been excitingly described as a mockumentary that recasts Lestat as a rock god. Bring. It. On!
The events leading up the The Battle Of Hastings in 1066 are dramatised in Michael Robert Johnson’s ambitious historical epic, starring James Norton as Harold of Wessex and Nikolaj Koster-Waldau as William The Conqueror.
Happy Valley creator Sally Wainwright’s latest is a Lorraine Ashbourne, Joanna Scanlan, Tamsin Greig, Rosalie Craig, and Amelia Bullmore fronted drama about a group of middle-aged women who start a punk rock band to enter a talent contest, only to find they have more on their mind than they’d ever previously had platform to voice.
In a new six-part series, Alan Partridge conducts a survey of the mental health of the nation as he tries to reintegrate into British life following a year-long spell in Saudi Arabia.
Andy Muschietti, Barbara Muschietti, and Jason Fuchs’ It prequel series is set to take us back to 1962, then 1935, then 1908 to further explore cosmic, fear-eating child killer Pennywise the Clown’s reign of terror. Bill Skarsgård will once again play the horrifying harlequin in the planned three-season show.
Dan Stevens leads the third season of AMC’s supernatural anthology horror series, which takes its inspiration from Victor LaValle’s novel. He plays a working class man who finds himself wrongfully committed to a psych ward and confronted with insane patients, dodgy docs, and the literal Devil himself.
ER alum R. Scott Gemmill’s new medical drama, set at the fictitious Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Hospital, takes a 24 approach to the emergency room, with each episode covering a single hour from a fifteen-hour-long shift on the unit.
AMC’s Immortal Universe of Anne Rice adaptations — which elsewhere comprises Interview With The Vampire and The Mayfair Witches — expands with a new show focused on the Talamasca, a secret society concerned with researching and investigating the paranormal. Nicholas Denton, William Fichtner, and Elizabeth McGovern lead the cast.
J.J. Abrams and LaToya Morgan’s high-octane crime caper follows the first Black female FBI agent (Rachel Hilson) as she enlists a getaway driver’s (Josh Holloway) help to take down a crime syndicate in the American Southwest circa the early 70s.
SOOM SOOM -- "Pilot" Episode -- Pictured: (l-r) -- (Photo by: Aaron Epstein/PEACOCK)
Greg Daniels’ Office-verse expands with a new workplace mockumentary starring Domhnall Gleeson and The White Lotus’ Sabrina Impacciatore. This one leaves behind Dunder Mifflin and the world of stationery to focus on a struggling Midwestern newspaper trying to save itself from going under.
I May Destroy You’s Michaela Coel is back with another sure-to-be-incendiary drama. The series follows a British novelist who returns to her parents’ Ghanaian homeland seeking reconnection and reconciliation. Instead, she is greeted with revelations that challenge her entire sense of self and identity.
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