Here’re the Top 10 TV
Shows of 2014 according to TIME.
10. Silicon Valley (HBO)
Why are there so many satires of politics and
showbiz when the true center of influence and power in our society is on your
smartphone? Mike Judge’s sitcom takes a loaded can of spray paint to software
culture–the hungry dreamers, the coddled zillionaires–but also appreciates the
adrenaline charge of creating something new. It helps that Thomas Middleditch
makes central geek Richard a beta-mogul with a conscience, and he’s surrounded
with one of TV’s finest comedy casts. (Including, sadly the late Christopher
Evan Welch.) All this, plus a finale involving very likely the most elaborate
and mathematically sophisticated dick joke in history, made this one of 2014’s
finest startups.
9. High Maintenance (Vimeo)
This online anthology is a comedy about
pot–specifically, a dealer known as The Guy (Ben Sinclair) and his clients–but
it’s not a pot comedy. Instead, it’s a collection of scintillating character
stories about why his customers want to buy, which is to say, why they seek
escape. Written, directed and edited by Sinclair and wife Katja Blichfeld in
artisanal batches–the series released only five episodes in 2014, but each was
jewel-crafted–it’s a slice of neurotic Brooklyn life that’s worth deeply
inhaling.
8. Louie (FX)
Past seasons of Louie have
been hilarious, risk-taking, philosophical. Season four was… challenging.
Sometimes it seemed to be fighting against itself: against the TV format (one
“episode” was 90 minutes long, another a feature-length six-parter); against
our identification with its protagonist (whose season-long search for love made
him at turns vulnerable and ugly); even against intelligibility (one story
involved two characters who literally did not speak each others’ language). But
it was also moving, provocative and hard to shake, a haunting study from
multiple angles of how the attempt to connect with another person is the banana
peel on which we must all slip, stumble, and get up to try again.
7. Broad City (Comedy Central)
This stoner-slacker-striver buddy comedy,
birthed from the viral videos of stars Ilana Glazer and Abbi Jacobson, didn’t
so much debut on the TV scene as crash it, leaving weed ash stains on the rugs
and hazy, hilarious memories in the morning. Starting from a simple premise–two
underemployed friends in a Manhattan built from bricks of cash–it was
addictively anarchic, powered by Glazer and Jacobson’s alchemic buzz and the
belief that life can never get so bad that it can’t suddenly turn into a rap
video.
6. Last Week Tonight with John Oliver(HBO)
Last Week Tonight could have been one fauxcast too far. There was already
plenty of fake-news comedy on TV and online. And on a weekly schedule–as the
title cheekily admitted–the news would be well digested by the British ex-Daily
Show correspondent’s teatime. But Oliver turned that into a strength;
instead of chasing the same news, he aimed his acid stare on news too wonky or
worldly for the media’s attention. He used the commercial-free format for long,
viral takes on topics from net neutrality to drone warfare, laced with genuine
outrage and actual reporting. How do you revive the fake-news format? By making
it real.
5. Fargo (FX)
The highest compliment I can pay Noah Hawley’s
miniseries is that it made me forget the Coen brothers’ movie. Not that it’s a
competition; rather, this oddball drama took the raw elements of the 1996
film–murder, accents, snow–and became its own thing. Its scale was both
intimate and Biblical, small town cops (Allison Tolman and Colin Hanks) chasing
a nebbish (Martin Freeman) abetted by a Mephistophelian hitman (Billy Bob
Thornton), in a glaring northern vista exposed to the eyes of God. In the end,
it was less an answer to the movies than to other dark TV dramas: this was not
one more dive into the mind of a fascinating antihero, but a story of how the
decency of a community can overcome the devilry of a few.
4. Orange Is the New Black (Netflix)
If the first season of Netflix’s lockup drama
surprised viewers by finding the dark comedy in jail, the second mined its
comic darkness. The season-long arc followed a power struggle within the
alliances of Litchfield prison, introducing Lorraine Toussaint as a charismatic
alpha inmate and forcing viewers to balance empathy for the cons with awareness
of the bad things they’ve done–or that they still do. No longer reliant on
jailhouse gentrifier Piper (Taylor Schilling) as the viewers’ guide to Litch,OITNB matured
into a diverse ensemble drama of state-run dysfunction that can tickle you or
punch you in the gut.
3. The Good Wife (CBS)
If degree of difficulty were the only measure, The
Good Wife would be TV’s best show hands down. It’s made under
broadcast content restrictions; it churns out 22 episodes a year; and it’s in
its sixth season, long after many dramas go on autopilot. But this drama keeps
finding excitement late in life, shaking itself up (using the death of Will
Gardner not just as a plot twist but ongoing source of emotional drive) and
finding new paths (now, a run for state’s attorney by Julianna Margulies’
Alicia Florrick). Morally complex and a hoot to watch, the seasoned Good
Wife keeps up with TV’s hot new things, backwards and in heels.
2. The Americans (FX)
Someone must have cracked a code and stolen a
top-secret propulsion system, because this ’80s drama about two Soviet spies
paired as a suburban-D.C. couple was positively turbocharged. The already sexy
and emotional drama gained greater emotional resonance as Philip and Elizabeth
Jennings (Matthew Rhys and Keri Russell) found it harder to isolate their
children from the repercussions and dangers of their work. The second season
was thrilling and deftly plotted, a moody, elegantly crafted Shostakovitch
fugue of a show.
1. Transparent (Amazon)
Jeffrey Tambor gives the performance of the
year as Maura Pfefferman, née Mort, a septuagenarian changing her identity from
male to female and the “trans parent” of the title. (Don’t worry, it took me a
while to get the pun too.) But this richly observed family story from Jill
Soloway is about much more than one transition; Maura’s announcement richochets
across the lives of her adult children, each facing their own identity crisis.
Gorgeous, melancholy and funny, Transparent reveals layer upon
rich layer like a noodle kugel at a fractious family dinner.
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