in , ,

12 HBO Shows That Never Get Enough Love

by Sabienna Bowman

It’s not TV, it’s HBO. The channel’s iconic tagline has long suggested than when you settle in for an evening of comedies, dramas, or miniseries with the HBO brand attached, you’re in for something special. However, for every Game of Thrones, there’s a Luck that just never got the love it deserved. When you think HBO, your mind likely goes to the heavy-hitters — The Sopranos, The Wire, Curb Your Enthusiasm — but the premium channel has so many hidden gems just waiting to be discovered.

Whether you subscribe to HBO or HBO Now, you have an impressive back catalogue of shows at your disposal. It’s time to stop rewatching Veep, and sample one of the gone too soon (or simply flying under the radar) series that everyone zips past on their way to the next new episode of Silicon Valley. The shows on this list range from one and done seasons of brilliance to criminally underrated newcomers. The one thing they all have in common is the HBO stamp of approval. Add them to your streaming queue now, and prepare to bask in some serious television goodness.

1. Carnivàle

The Dust Bowl provides an appropriately eerie setting for this series that melded a traveling carnival show with an impending apocalypse. Strange and provocative, if you like your American history tangled up with religion and folklore, this two-season curiosity is for you.

2. The №1 Ladies’ Detective Agency

Come for the luscious Botswana scenery, stay for the tremendous character work done by Jill Scott and Anika Noni Rose. The slow bloom of their friendship as they confidently open up a detective agency everyone believes is doomed to fail is a joy to watch.

3. Doll & Em

Technically, Doll & Em is a British import, but it’s also an exquisite examination of female friendships and the struggle to maintain them even as people begin to grow in different directions. HBO knew what it was doing when it acquired this Sky series, it’s just too bad that most people missed out on seeing it.

4. Animals

Weird and profane, Animals is an animated series that finds humor in the quirks of city life as seen through the eyes of pigeons, rats, and the various other non-human creatures who exist in the margins. This comedy is still airing, so catch up now, and prepare to fall hard for this strange, but addictive series.

5. Enlightened

Enlightened was critically-acclaimed, but little seen. And that’s a shame because Laura Dern as a self-destructive executive trying to turn her life around by exposing corruption is darkly funny, and unlike anything else on TV (or HBO). It lasted for two glorious seasons, and by the time you watch them both, you’ll join those in the know in wishing there was more.

6. Tell Me You Love Me

An honest exploration of sex and relationships in modern America isn’t going to be for everyone, but if you enjoy a show that delves deep into its characters’ interior lives, Tell Me You Love Me is a classic. (The star-studded cast that includes Ian Somerhalder, Adam Scott, and Sonya Walger is a definite perk, as well.)

7. Treme

New Orleans gets The Wire treatment in David Simon’s post-Katrina masterpiece. Sit back and watch as culture and bureaucracy collide in one of the most fascinating cities in the world.

8. Hello Ladies

Sometimes, the jokes will make you cringe, but it’s almost impossible not to love Stephan Merchant. Even when he’s fumbling his way through awkward first dates, there’s something undeniably charming about this British star.

9. Looking

Far too many people dubbed LookingGirls for gay men.” The melancholy comedy wasn’t a knock-off, it was an intimate look at the loves and friendships of a group of gay men living and working in San Francisco. Full of heartbreaks, sly humor, and the natural ebbs and flows of adult friendships, this show was a half-hour feast.

10. Divorce

Sarah Jessica Parker and Thomas Haden Church’s new comedy was lost in the shuffle of buzzier 2016 fall shows. That’s all the more reason to catch up. Penned by Catastrophe’s Sharon Horgan, this examination of a marriage gone sour is far funnier than it has any right to be.

11. Luck

An ironic name for a show plagued by controversy. Luck was perhaps David Milch’s most personal series to date, and while the race-track drama failed to secure a second season, its first stands as a reminder of just how gifted the Deadwood creator is.

12. Togetherness

The mundanity of day-to-day suburban life as imagined by the Duplass brothers is something everyone should see. Wry, and full of clever, squirm-inducing jokes, Togetherness never fully got its due.

It’s time to put that HBO subscription to good use, and watch these 12 series that deserve way more fans.

SaveSave

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings

The Best Sports Movies on Netflix

Remember Tom Petty With These Movies, Shows, & Documentaries