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With the end of any year comes time to reflect, rest, mark the passage of time â and, for those of us who cover television, a rare respite from the constant onslaught that is âPeak TV.â The release of new streaming titles has slowed. Broadcast series are on hiatus. Holiday programming reigns.
That means the span between Christmas Eve and New Yearâs Day is the perfect time to get caught up on the acclaimed TV shows you might have missed in the last 12 months. And The Times TV team has a recommendation for every taste, from idiosyncratic comedies to a key entry in the âStar Warsâ canon (not the one you think).
Los Angeles Times television critic Lorraine Ali chooses the best TV shows of 2020.
âBetter Things,â which would have won several Emmys by now were it made by a man, contains a higher ratio of astounding sequences to total running time than perhaps any other series on television: In creator-writer-director-star-all-around savant Pamela Adlonâs capable hands, a chaotic morning, a faux funeral, a modern dance and a musical number alike become flights of artistic fancy far beyond the bounds of the half-hour family comedy. The seriesâ fourth season, which premiered in March, continues in that vein, committing ever more deeply to its animating spirit â gratitude â and culminating in a highly concentrated, hyperbolic love letter to my former hometown, New Orleans, that counts as my favorite TV episode of the year. (Available on: FX, Hulu)
âMatt Brennan
From filmmaker Steven James (âHoop Dreams,â âAmerica to Meâ), this five-episode docuseries is an illuminating and prescient portrait of his home city, Chicago, as its people grapple with the 2019 mayoral race with the city in crisis. After the projectâs pre-pandemic festival run, James went back to chronicle how the city is coping as the events of this year â the unrest following the murder of George Floyd and the COVID-19 pandemic â came into focus. (Available on: Hulu) âYvonne Villarreal
I continue to be haunted by how âHomelandâ concluded after eight seasons. Unless youâre psychic, it was impossible to predict where the series, starring Claire Danes as bipolar CIA operative Carrie Mathison, wound up â which made its ending so perfect. Though the series stumbled after its Emmy-winning first season, it eventually regained its footing and included so many nerve-racking twists and turns along the way it became hard to keep track. Danes was totally committed in the role, and her scenes with Mandy Patinkin, who played her superior Saul Berenson, were electric. All in all, a masterful series and worth the time to catch up on. (Available on: Showtime) âGreg Braxton
âHow to With John Wilsonâ is a late-breaking contender for my favorite show of the year. In this unpredictable, empathetic and strangely heartbreaking docucomedy, filmmaker John Wilson combines video shot on the streets of New York City (and elsewhere) with deadpan voice-over to create darkly humorous, surprisingly poignant video essays about subjects such as talking to strangers, improving your memory and scaffolding. Wilson is a gifted people-watcher with a knack for capturing the eccentric characters and everyday drama of urban life, from a couple fighting on the street to Kyle MacLachlan â yes, the actor â fumbling with his Metrocard. With just six half-hour episodes that can be viewed in any order, thereâs no reason not to catch up. (But save the moving âHow to Make Risotto,â filmed as the COVID-19 pandemic hit New York City in March, for last.)
âMeredith Blake
Los Angeles Times television critic Robert Lloyd chooses the best TV shows of 2020.
Of all the shows you are less likely to have seen in 2020, this animated collaboration between âAdventure Timeâ creator Pendleton Ward and comedian Duncan Trussell, is among the least likeliest. Between them, working in a kind of counterpoint and taking interviews from Trussellâs âThe Duncan Trussell Family Hourâ podcast as its basic soundtrack-text, they have produced what might be called a violent meditation on the messiness of life and a deep, brave dive into the bottomless questions of the cosmos, as multiple worlds break down and transfigure. Many questions and open-ended answers. (Available on: Netflix)
âRobert Lloyd
A mummy, desert ghouls and a child ghost all populate this clever, darkly comic horror anthology, Netflixâs first Egyptian series and one of the first series of its kind to come out of the Middle East. Set in late-1960s Cairo, the six episodes follow hematology professor Refaat Ismail (Ahmed Amin), a chain-smoking cynic who believes only in what science can prove. He does, however, believe heâs the unluckiest man on Earth, partly because heâs haunted by a parade of otherworldly entities. âParanormalâsâ tales are largely based in regional lore, lending a unique perspective to this Arabic-language series. But itâs Refaatâs hilariously dry narration and fatalistic internal monologue that bring this creep show to life, no matter what language you speak. (Available on: Netflix)
âLorraine Ali
This year was objectively rough. Treat yourself to the stellar storytelling of Starzâs âP-Valley,â Katori Hallâs hourlong drama set inside a fictional Mississippi strip club called the Pynk. Its eight episodes not only showcase the athleticism and artistry of performers at Black Southern strip clubs but also introduce these characters as fascinating, funny women who are a delight to spend a day getting to know â and ultimately root for. In a time when we canât exactly be partying with friends at clubs, youâll finish the finale feeling like youâve just come home from a great night out. (Available on: Starz)
âAshley Lee
Some of the best âStar Warsâ storytelling has happened on TV â and I donât (just) mean âThe Mandalorian.â Set between the events of âStar Wars: Episode II â Attack of the Clonesâ and âStar Wars: Episode III â Revenge of the Sith,â the animated âStar Wars: The Clone Warsâ follows familiar characters such as Anakin Skywalker and Obi-Wan Kenobi during the war that led to the rise of the Empire, expanding the universe we know from the movies. The series also introduced plenty of new characters, such as Ahsoka Tano, a young Jedi padawan apprenticed to Anakin who grew into one of the most fascinating Force users in all âStar Warsâ canon. With the announcement of the upcoming live-action âAhsokaâ series, itâs the perfect time to check out how her journey began. (Available on: Disney+)
âTracy Brown
The complete guide to home viewing
Get Screen Gab for everything about the TV shows and streaming movies everyoneâs talking about.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.