USA TODAY International Edition

15 best television shows that distracted from 2020

Despite depressing news, politics and reruns, these series made the year a little easier.

- Kelly Lawler

One of the only respites from the unending horrors of 2020 has been the ability to escape to the different worlds available with a touch of the remote. h The COVID- 19 pandemic changed everything in 2020, but much of our regularly scheduled programmin­g continued, as TV series that filmed before the pandemic began ( or those that resume production during it, under strict safety protocols) aired and streamed, even if later or more briefly than expected. And with movie theaters often shuttered, concerts canceled and everyday life upended, there was comfort in the sameness of TV.

The best TV shows of 2020 were made for kids and adults. The series’ protagonis­ts were fantastica­l vampires or real- life cheerleade­rs. They showed us potential futures and silly versions of the past. They included miniseries and beloved shows making their last hurrahs. What they had in common was the ability to transport us out of this tragic moment, if only for 30 minutes or an hour.

Amid the depressing news, frequent reruns and presidenti­al debates that most often dominated our TV screens this year, these were the 15 series that made 2020 a little better.

15. ‘ Your Honor’ Showtime

Bryan Cranston is back to breaking bad ( sort of) in this tense legal thriller. The Emmy- winning actor stars as a judge forced to go against his own morals when his son accidental­ly kills the son of a dangerous crime boss in a hit- and- run accident. Cranston continues to prove he’s one of the best actors alive, helping ease the series through traumatic scenes and depressing plot twists on the strength of his performanc­e alone, restrained most of the time and unleashed when necessary.

14. ‘ Cheer’ Netflix

Released in the ancient pre- pandemic times of January, “Cheer” takes the story of a small Texas junior college cheerleadi­ng team to epic ( and spinning) heights. From the filmmakers behind “Last Chance U,” the docuseries reveals the unique, thrilling and harrowing culture of college cheerleadi­ng, and the

student- athletes for whom the mat is their whole world. Intimate, entertaini­ng and emotional, “Cheer” is the best of both sports stories and documentar­ies in one. Subsequent allegation­s against and arrest of one of the students featured only slightly hampers enjoyment of the series.

13. ‘ Quiz’ AMC

This stranger- than- fiction miniseries, about a cheating scandal on the U. K. version of “Who Wants to Be a Millionair­e?,” is sharply written and even more sharply witted. Starring Sian Clifford (“Fleabag”) and Matthew Macfadyen (“Succession”), “Quiz” is true crime without the murder and tragedy, a scandalous mystery that invites you to revel in its glorious absurdity.

12. ‘ The Baby- Sitters Club’ Netflix

The rare kids’ show with just as much to entertain adults as preteens, “BabySitter­s” was a delightful surprise in a dreary summer. Effortlessly updating the 1990s classic middle- school novels for the modern era, the Netflix series balanced the serious with the silly, with plenty of jokes and a sparkling group of young stars.

11. ‘ The Good Fight’ CBS All Access

A season of “Fight” cut short is still a better season of TV than most of it peers. Although 2020 forced the legal drama to conclude after just seven episodes, Robert and Michelle King’s masterpiec­e delivered piercing satire and compelling drama. The series featured terrific guest stars ( from John Larroquett­e to “Good Wife” favorite Michael J. Fox) as its main cast ( especially Delroy Lindo as Adrian Boseman) continues to deliver strong performanc­es.

10. ‘ Never Have I Ever’ Netflix

What sets Mindy Kaling’s teen comedy, loosely based on her own adolescenc­e, apart from the many competitor­s in the genre is the authentici­ty that radiates from newcomer Maitreyi Ramakrishn­an as Devi. Devi is a big pile of contradict­ions, as most teens are, and the series lets her emotions, particular­ly a boiling anger that relates her to series narrator John McEnroe ( yes, the former tennis star), display without shame. Funny and sincere, “Never” enters the upper echelons of high school series in just one fabulous season.

9. ‘ Ramy’ Hulu

Creator and star Ramy Youssef improved on the great first season of “Ramy” with a poignant, darkly funny Sea

son 2. Going bigger, bolder and adding two- time Oscar- winner Mahershala Ali helped propel the new episodes to greater heights. Youssef proves himself an actor up to Ali’s gravitas, as Ali’s Sheikh Malik tries ( somewhat in vain) to help Ramy become a better Muslim. Youssef and his deft writers never fail to balance the series’ irreverent tone with deeper subject matter.

8. ‘ Ted Lasso’ Apple TV+

Apple’s goofy, heartwarmi­ng series about an American football coach who heads to London to lead a soccer team is one of the most surprising series of the year. Jason Sudeikis transforme­d a cringe character created for a commercial into one of the most endearing on TV. “Lasso” ostensibly is about soccer, but the comedy centers on the important, authentic relationsh­ips between Ted and his co- workers and what it really means to be a part of a team. There aren’t many series on TV brave enough to be so unabashedl­y sentimenta­l.

7. ‘ The Queen’s Gambit’ Netflix

Chess has never been so sexy as when Anya Taylor- Joy’s Beth Harmon moves her pieces across the board. The young actress offers one of her best performanc­es in this fantastic series about a female chess prodigy in the 1960s who

dominates the sport while privately battling addiction. The evocative show is wonderfull­y crafted, with engaging scripts, gorgeous costumes and sets, and a strong supporting cast.

6. ‘ Schitt’s Creek’ PopTV

Compared with all those Emmy wins, a place on this list won’t be quite as exciting for the cast and creators of “Schitt’s,” who made history sweeping the comedy categories in September, when the series won nine awards. But the sixth and final season of the cult comedy was both a superb ending for the sweet sitcom and simply another season of great television from co- creators Dan and Eugene Levy. In a year with so much tragedy, no series celebrated love, happiness and family more than “Schitt’s.”

5. ‘ BoJack Horseman’ Netflix

Another series with an exit both stunning and profound was Netflix’s animated black comedy about a has- been Hollywood horse. Insightful to the end, the final season fully examines the failures of BoJack ( Will Arnett) and his effect on those he proclaims to care about. For an antihero as compelling as Tony Soprano or Don Draper, a not- so- happy ending was what BoJack deserves. 4. ‘ Upload’ Amazon

Call it a spiritual cousin of NBC’s “The Good Place.” The Amazon dramedy, from “The Office” co- creator Greg Daniels, is set in a not- too- distant future in which humanity has figured out how to upload human consciousn­ess to a digital afterlife. This cloud- based great beyond isn’t quite heaven, serving only to highlight the inequaliti­es and problems with humanity on Earth. The sci- fi concept is grounded, if you will, by a beautiful romance at the center between an uploaded soul ( Robbie Amell) and his Earth- bound angel and customer service rep ( Andy Allo). The series is shocking and sweet in the best way.

3. ‘ What We Do in the Shadows’ FX

FX’s vampire mockumenta­ry was bloody funny in its first season, but in its second it reached new heights of hilarity. From Matt Berry’s Laszlo posing as a bartender named “Jackie Daytona” to “energy vampire” Colin Robinson ( Mark Proksch) reveling in the power of his new promotion, the series was an embarrassm­ent of comedic riches. “Shadows” offered more laughs in just a single episode than lesser comedies could manage in an entire season.

2. ‘ The Great’ Hulu

Hulu’s historical drama, billed as an “occasional­ly true story,” is zany, satirical and sometimes actually deep. Elle Fanning and Nicholas Hoult are wondrous as Russia’s Catherine the Great and her doofus of a husband, Peter III. Created by the writer of Oscar winner “The Favourite,” “Great” is a stronger comedic piece, celebratin­g its well- intentione­d heroine and taking every opportunit­y to rip her hypocrisy and self- centered naïvete to shreds. Realized in bold, bright colors and sometimes graphic violence, the series is both sumptuous and deliriousl­y funny.

1. ‘ I May Destroy You’ HBO

Dark, disturbing but triumphant­ly wrought, this miniseries examines consent, love and commitment with a nuance lacking not only in other TV and films, but in many real- life situations. Creator, co- director and star Michaela Coel (“Chewing Gum”) is an absolute force as Arabella, a woman drugged and raped who struggles at first to remember her assault and then to live with the reality of it. “Destroy” succeeds in this sensitive subject area without ever feeling exploitati­ve, titillatin­g or trite. If it focused only on Arabella’s story, the series would be great, but the way the script weaves in the stories of her friends, who contend with similar but distinct tragedies and problems, adds complexity and richness to the narrative. Gripping to the point of discomfort, “Destroy” is the most transcende­nt series of the year.

 ?? HBO ?? Michaela Coel offers a tour de force performanc­e as Arabella in HBO’s “I May Destroy You.”
HBO Michaela Coel offers a tour de force performanc­e as Arabella in HBO’s “I May Destroy You.”
 ?? NETFLIX ?? Cheerleadi­ng isn't what you think it is, as proven by Netflix’s addictive and empathetic docuseries “Cheer.”
NETFLIX Cheerleadi­ng isn't what you think it is, as proven by Netflix’s addictive and empathetic docuseries “Cheer.”
 ?? OLLIE UPTON/ HULU ?? Elle Fanning and Nicholas Hoult put on their best furs as Catherine the Great and her hapless husband, Peter III, in “The Great.”
OLLIE UPTON/ HULU Elle Fanning and Nicholas Hoult put on their best furs as Catherine the Great and her hapless husband, Peter III, in “The Great.”
 ?? LARA SOLANKI/ NETFLIX ?? Maitreyi Ramakrishn­an as angsty teen Devi and Darren Barnet as Paxton, the object of her affections, in “Never Have I Ever.”
LARA SOLANKI/ NETFLIX Maitreyi Ramakrishn­an as angsty teen Devi and Darren Barnet as Paxton, the object of her affections, in “Never Have I Ever.”
 ?? POP TV ?? Patrick ( Noah Reid), David ( Dan Levy), Alexis ( Annie Murphy) and Stevie ( Emily Hampshire) in the final season of “Schitt's Creek.”
POP TV Patrick ( Noah Reid), David ( Dan Levy), Alexis ( Annie Murphy) and Stevie ( Emily Hampshire) in the final season of “Schitt's Creek.”

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