Home Movies Movie Lists

The Best TV Shows of 2026 So Far

We’re celebrating returning greats, banger farewells, and some surprising and original newbies — here’s hoping it’s a sign of even better things to come on the small screen this year

Best TV shows of 2026 so far

DISNEY+; ALLYSON RIGGS/APPLETV; SIMON RIDGWAY/HBO; WARRICK PAGE/MAX

If there’s a theme that unites all the series on this best-so-far list, it’s anxiety. Anxiety about money, about class, about fame, about legitimacy. About the Blackfyre Rebellion. The creators of the best TV of the year so far took a hard look at the world around them and chose not to counterprogram. The shows that are sticking with us feature few warm-and-fuzzies and only rare uplifting family moments. In fact, almost every entry revolves around the workplace, or at least, work (or lack thereof). Schitt’s Creek is firmly in the rearview mirror.

And yet, this list also includes some of the funniest programs assembled in a long time. Many of these series refuse to stay in their lane, mixing genres and expectations, smashing up superheroes, horror tropes, and OnlyFans with genuine, gut-busting laughs. Deploying razor-sharp precision, they examine work’s slow creep into identity and self-worth at every level, skewering the gig economy, public service, global finance, Hollywood, and Westeros.

This is just the first six months of 2026 — who knows, kindness could make a comeback. But the worthwhile watches in the television landscape right now are packed with uncertainty. And if anxiety is the diagnosis, looks like the cure demands insightful, idiosyncratic, original humor. Along with some good dumb jokes from Tracy Morgan.

‘The Pitt’ Season 2 (HBO Max)

We came to R. Scott Gemmill’s hospital drama for the ER nostalgia and Noah Wyle’s big, soulful Basset Hound eyes. But we stayed for the propulsive pacing, brilliant ensemble, and hyper-realistic depiction of just how intense life in the ED can be. If the first season was a thriller, the second was a study of the psychological cost of years spent helping people through the worst day of their life. It also grappled with hot-button topics like sexual assault, insulin rationing, and suicidal ideation without ever coming off as didactic. But the show’s appeal ultimately comes down to following the characters we’ve come to know so intimately — not just how they hurt each other, but how they care for each other, whether through wisecracks or tough love. And that karaoke credits scene? Icing on the cake. —J. Scherer

‘Wonder Man’ (Disney+)

Aside from sweetly enjoyable, it’s a little tough to figure out what, exactly, Wonder Man is. This genre-defying series starts with the familiar Marvel montage and some superhero business but soon switches to the very unheroic life of a struggling actor, Simon Williams (a mesmerizing Yayha Abdul-Mateen II), a guy so dedicated to his process he loses a three-line part for overthinking his barely-there character’s backstory. Simon soon meets a minor Marvel character, Trevor Slattery (a loose, joyous Ben Kingsley) and together the two live out a sort of Once Upon a Time in…MCU Hollywood. It’s a funny, unexpected, poignant study of art, friendship and loneliness, with barely a supernatural set piece in sight. Wonder Man purposely evokes the two-handers of the 1970s (count the references to Midnight Cowboy), with Abdul-Mateen II and Kingsley’s easy banter giving Newman and Redford a run for their money. —J. Silverman