List of Most Popular American TV Series in Since 2019 to 2020
Game of Thrones (2011 to 2019)
In the final two seasons, Game of Thrones remains the biggest TV event of our lifetime. This season will likely be the last time a television show is experienced in this specific way with viewers, all tuning in simultaneously for a can’t-miss broadcast.
BoJack Horseman (2014 to 2020)
A humanoid horse, BoJack Horseman lost in a sea of self-loathing and booze decides it's time for a comeback. Once the star of a '90s sitcom, in which he was the adoptive father of three orphaned kids (two girls and a boy).
The Good Place (2016 to 2020)
The Good Place remains the half-hour-sitcom-that-could. Ending Season Three on a high note at the beginning of the year, the Michael Schur show feels like it’s firmly figured out how to chart its end game.
When They See Us (2019 on Netflix)
When They See Us celebrates the righting of a grievous wrong while acknowledging that no vindication, or remuneration, could fully heal such deep wounds.
Russian Doll (Since 2019 on Netflix)
A story built like the titular nesting doll, Lyonne’s Nadia Vulvokov dies in a freak accident on the night of her 36th birthday. The twist is, instead of moving on to the afterlife or the grave, she finds herself back where she started the evening, at a party in her honor.
Orange Is the New Black (2013 to 2019)
The revolutionary drama about a women’s prison lost its way in its past couple seasons, taking big risks that either felt too farfetched or simply mundane. But with a final seventh season, the Jenji Kohan creation reminded everyone why OITNB is arguably the most revolutionary show of the streaming age.
Succession (Since 2018 on HBO)
A rational argument for all the goodwill around Succession might point out the crude poetry of its dialogue, the fearlessness of its cast (give Jeremy Strong an Emmy just for Kendall’s rap) and the knife-twisting accuracy of this season’s digital-media satire (R.I.P. Vaulter).
Unbelievable (2019 on Netflix)
Unbelievable opens with a gut-punch of a first episode that follows a girl named Marie (played to perfection by Kaitlyn Dever) through rape and the subsequent, impossible task of recounting the details of it over and over to authorities.
Mindhounter (Since 2017 on Netflix)
For playing into our current true-crime-obsessed culture, it’s a little bit of a surprise that Netflix’s Mindhunter became the hit it did.
Watchmen (2019 on HBO)
Who hasn’t enjoyed our culture’s never-ending superhero craze so much as endured it, the news that the most prestigious of all prestige cable outlets were adapting a DC Comics book sounded kind of like a betrayal?
Barry (Since 2018)
Barry Berkman is every bit as compelling as Breaking Bad’s Walter White or Mad Men’s Don Draper. But with Hader's trademark deadpan, Barry has a vibe all its own. With Barry, Hader consistently delivers something uniquely affecting, and it just keeps getting better.
The Big Bang Theory (2007 to 2019)
The Big Bang Theory is an American television sitcom comedy show created by Chuck Lorre and Bill Prady, both of whom served as executive producers on the series
This series has a total of 279 episodes, the first episode of the series was released on 24th September 2007 to 2019.
The Mandalorian (Since 2019)
This series for the whole internet loves Baby Yoda. Even if they haven't seen a single episode of Disney+'s The Mandalorian, they know about the little, green 50-year-old child. They've seen him drink his broth, they've seen him coo in his little crib.
What We Do in the Shadows (Since 2019)
From the start, What We Do in the Shadows captures the atmosphere and humor of Taika Waititi’s beloved mockumentary, and continues his world-building for a limitless half-hour comedy premise.
Euphoria (Since 2019 on HBO)
This series gave us these inventive, surreal moments like an ingenious spin on Rue’s manic-depressive episode as an old-school detective thriller, or the dick pic seminar to end all dick pic seminars.
The Umbrella Academy (Since 2019)
The umbrella academy, Series based on the story of one day in 1989, 43 infants are inexplicably born to random, unconnected women who showed no signs of pregnancy the day before. Seven are adopted by billionaire industrialist Sir Reginald Hargreeves,