Welcome to the Sunday Special. I'm Gilbert Cruz. We're spending this last several episodes of the year looking back on some of the big cultural moments of 2025. And today, we are talking about TV. Here with me to consider some of the best shows of the year, as well as some of the most popular ones, are two of my colleagues who watch a ton of TV. Jim Ponawasik is our Chief Television Critic here at Times. Pleasure to have you back with us, Jim.
It's a pleasure to be back, so far.
Alexis Solosky is one of our culture reporters. Happy to have you also back here with us again, Alexis.
I could not be more delighted.
I can tell. Okay, so let's start out with a little fill-in-the-blank exercise, which I'm asking everyone to do. For TV, 2025 was a blank year. Fill-in-the-blank.
It was a year of mild improvement, I think. Beautiful. From my standpoint. Okay. When I put together my end of the year best list, most years, it is a wrestling match trying to eliminate the last few things to get the list down to 10 or some approximation of that. I would say last year, not to crap on 2024 too much, but was one of the few years where I basically had 10 and I was good, and one of them was the Olympics. This year, I think I'm not going to say that it was just a blow the doors off year for television, but it was a much more normal distribution of going down to the wire and cutting things off the list. That's a positive note for me.
I think it is. Alexis, you do not put together, or you don't publish, at least, a best of the year list. But I'm sure your own mind, you have a sense of how this year was. What would you say?
Fine.
Fine. How many ends in that?
Fine. I mean, the rising inflection is key. It was fine. It was fine. It was fine. When you are out and about socializing with people, and they say, What should I watch? I occasionally had some things to tell them, which is really all I want, as opposed to looking scared and cornered and forgetting my own name, which is a lot of how 2024 felt.
Both of you have been watching a lot of TV this year, and I know you've observed some trends, and I think we should start by talking about those. Jim, let's start with you. In your year-end list, you noted that there were a bunch of shows about conspiracies. What were they? Just rattle off some names here.
Where do I start? Common Side Effects, Severance, The Chair Company, The Lowdown, Pluribus.
I'd love for you to talk about one because it feels not only appropriate for TV, but maybe also appropriate for the world, the country this year.
I don't need to tell our listeners probably all the reasons that conspiracy theories have had great influence in the larger world, conspiracy theories and actual conspiracies. Conspiracy is a great engine for drama. There's somebody doing something, something is a miss, But a lot of the best shows that I watched this year, and the more interesting ones, in some way or another, involved often a lone or close to lone protagonist, trying to unravel something that went way, way beyond them. This was in animation, it was in science fiction, it was in mystery. There was a lot of it in the water.
One of the biggest shows of the year, and we just touch on this one because I feel like everyone has heard a lot about Severance, is conspiracy at its core in some way. This was a season that came three years after the first season, a very long time. And yet there seemed to be, at least at the beginning, a ton of excitement about this one.
Yeah, Severance is one of those streaming shows that comes around like Halley's Comet, and you need to a refresher course whenever it comes back around. I very much liked the second season. I liked it enough to put it on my top 10 list at the end of the year. I suppose you're Marques. I'm Mark W.
Who are you people?
Would you be open to using a different first name to avoid confusion?
Welcome back, Marques.
This truly is one of the series that's in the great TV tradition of shows like Lost, etc, where there is both a large conspiratorial element organization, in this case, Lumen Industries, and also just a big question of what is the conspiracy about and what is it for and why are they pushing these buttons on these computers all days? I I would say not as stellar as season one, but a welcome payoff that made me want more, hopefully in fewer than three years.
Yeah. Did this stick with you?
If I can be mildly contrarian and only mildly, because any show that makes such a place for goats is okay with me.
Okay, we see what stuck with you.
It was the goats. Yes. I tend to find the mystery box element, at least in the second season, the least compelling thing about it, which is where I often get to with mystery box shows. I'm so engaged initially, and then I just... Look, I'm a person when I read books, I often skip to the end and then go back. I just want to know. I'm no longer so interested in the dragging out of what is Lumen Industries. What are they making? What are they doing? I wish they would just solve that, and then we would go back to the tension, the relationships, the comedy, the melon parties, the goats, more goats. More goats.
Yeah. I mean, not to get all TV history 101 on this, but I will agree to the extent that going back to Lost, if you were watching TV around that time, you recall that what we saw after Lost were 5,000 shows that would involve some convoluted mystery and puzzles and weird random details, but forgot the fact that this show needs to make you laugh. It needs to have engaging characters. It needs to surprise and hit you emotionally. For me, Severance is one of the few shows since in that mold that has done that. It is about a mystery, but I enjoy watching it for the relationship between the characters. To me, at least, it did not lose that in the second season.
Jim, I'd love for you to talk a little bit about a show that I was less familiar with. It was a show called Common Side Effects.
This was an animated series on Adult Swim that came in part from one of the makers of an animated drama that I loved a couple of years ago called Scavenger's Rain. But this one is about a mushroom. There's a mushroom. Say more. There's a mushroom. I don't have you hooked on mushroom.
You have my attention.
There's a mushroom in the rainforest that is discovered by this kookey amateur scientist, holistic healer.
An amateur mycologist?
Yes, an amateur mycologist. That's a 10 point for Gryffindor.
The dream, the goal. Great for Cudula. Great for Cudula.
It's amazing.
Thank you.
It can cure anything, which sounds fantastic, except, and here the conspiracy element comes in, except for pharmaceutical companies who see a tremendous threat to their business and decide to shut this down.
Okay, Francis, can I tell you a secret? Yeah, please. Okay, just go with me for a minute. What if there were a medicine that could heal almost anything?
Well, yeah, that would be great.
Sure.
Yeah, right. But what if they didn't want you to know about it? They?
Sorry, who's they?
They is big pharma. It's the insurance company. It's the government. Think about all the people who make tons of money just from keeping us sick by keeping us unwell.
That's the animating plot of the thriller. What gets me into it is it is simultaneously realistic and hallucinatory. It also has a quirky offbeat sense of humor, which I think series like this really need to avoid getting too stuffed up in their self-seriousness. Also, I think had a lot of relevant, seemingly timely ideas about how sick our society is and what the condition of modern life has done to us, and should we all in some way be getting back to the garden? It's really a show that started ahead a little bit for Luigi Mangione and a little bit for RFK K. Junior. There was this element of the sickness of society that I also thought made it intellectually interesting.
Alexis, what was a trend that came up for you this year?
A trend I noticed was a lot of shows trying to revive or complicate the idea of the romantic comedy. I think it's hard, I should say, initially, to make romantic comedy for television. There have been romantic comedies on television. Of course, there have been relationship comedies, but romantic comedies have been film it because there's an endpoint, and that endpoint is typically marriage, right? The couple get married, they live happily ever after. There's some great TV about what happens after the happily ever after, but it's hard to disrupt the perfection of that arc. It's always a challenge for romantic comedy. I think we're in a place where people are trying again, and I love to see it. Like, all I want... I love love. I want to I think it's possible, not for me, but for others.
I think it's possible you're saying too much. Yeah.
I don't want it, but I love to see it. I thought that this year there were some really good attempts. I enjoyed Too Much, which is Elina Denim Romantic Comedy, which was on Netflix. I love Megan Stalter, who some of us- The star of that show. The star of that show, who some of us will know from hacks, and some of us will know from her demented, and I mean that in the most positive way, comedy videos. She plays an American who moves to England with all kinds of crazy romantic ideas of what England is, most of which are unrealized, but falls in love. I met someone. Wow.
This is the only area where you waste no time.
What does he do? Why is the first question always, What does he do?
How about, How does he make you feel?
What does he value? Okay, Jessica, I'm your mother, not your friend. Keep that in mind. So he's unemployed?
He's not unemployed. He's an indie musician.
Where does he live? Well, he lives in an early indie neighborhood. You wouldn't know it. You don't know the London area, Mom. As with contemporary romantic comedies, there aren't problems of class or religion or other external exogenous things to keep people apart because it's fine. We're fine. Anyone can date anyone. It's the characters maybe dealing a little bit with the baggage that they bring into a relationship and trying to be better partners for each other. It's very sweet.
There were a couple of shows this year that actually did deal with faith in relationships. We're going to talk about one of them later because Jim is a big fan of it. It's an animated series. But we also had on Netflix the second season of Nobody Wants This.
Yeah, we did. What nice cameos, right? It's possible that Seth Rogen works too much, but I was very happy to see him and Kate Burlant show up as rabbis.
I love you, man. I love your work so much. Really? Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, I saw the sermon you gave at.
Sure.
It blew my mind. It completely changed I mourned. I was mourning all wrong. We got you on our vision board here. Oh, my goodness. This is a show about...
This is a show about a rabbi, played by Adam Brody, who some of us maybe fell in love with on the OC.
How could you not?
How could you not?
I think we all did.
Yeah. Then Kristen Bell plays his very much non-Jewish, cool blonde, goyasha podcaster, Girlfriend. The first season sees them deal with the complexities of that. The second season, for better and for worse, also sees them deal with the complexities of that in a way that doesn't really move a lot of things forward, where she has to decide if she is ready for a conversion or if they're just going to hang out in this no man's land, where it would be very, very, very difficult for him to be a rabbi with a wife who not convert. It's not a good look if your wife doesn't. It's like, Oh, man, how are you going to sell it to anyone else if you can't even sell it at home? It's not a great look if your wife doesn't convert to Judaism.
None of it matters. You are my soulmate. That's it. I don't care if you're Jewish. I don't care if you're not Jewish. I choose you every time.
I love the people in this show. I really like the vision of Los Angeles, where I am from. It makes me wonder why I left, but I wish that there had been some narrative progress. Also, I think this show, unlike the first season, eased up on its depiction of Jewish women. But I remember speaking to the creator and the showrunner for the first season, it now has different showrunners and explaining to her that slutty blonde Jews do exist. We are a manifold. We are manifold people. We're not all shrill brunettes.
No, representation is important.
I agree. Representation matters. Yeah.
There is a lot of freaky stuff going on in the Bible.
Good God. Jim, you put a show that was concerned with sex in a different way on your top 10 list.
Yes, it's Dying for Sex, a limited series that was about and especially about dying. It was adapted from a story about a woman who has a terminal diagnosis of cancer, played by Michelle Williams in the mini-series, who has a terminal diagnosis of cancer and sets out basically to cross off a big item on her bucket list, which is to finally have an orgasm. It becomes both a story of the journey of the end of life, which I felt was open and frank about the dying process in a way that as much death as there can be on TV, I've rarely seen. When you are very close to death, your breathing goes into a cycle of deep, slow breaths and long pauses. And then eventually, there is a breath out that is not followed a breath in. And that's it. Hey. Yeah, yeah.
Can you make sure that my mouth isn't open when I die? Okay. Just don't bite me. Why would I bite you? I don't know why I need you to tell me this, but please say that you won't bite me.
The final episode. No spoilers, but you can guess what happens. No. The final episode was fantastic in this respect dealing with the hospice experience and so on. But also, and I realized that people are running from this description probably right now, an incredibly funny show in a way that was honest and cathartic and daring. Michelle Williams is fantastic in it. Jenny Slate is very good. It was an example of something that I think I always look for in television, which is the idea that funny is not the opposite of serious and that you often can, and frankly, often need to use humor in the service of deep and powerful ideas. Sex and death doesn't get much more deep and powerful than those.
We have talked about sex and death. I'd love to talk about sex and guns, Alexis.
Great. I think I know where this is going. Is it going to the hunting wives?
I think it is. Okay.
I am so excited to talk about the hunting wives because this pertains to what Jim is saying, that I think that there is a great problem in much, though by no means all, of prestige and really subprestige television this day, that it forgets that maybe it should be fun. Maybe we should have a nice time, which doesn't mean we can't deal with serious issues, but maybe entertainment should be entertaining rather than dour. There was a show on Netflix this year called The Hunting Wives. Would I describe this show as good? Oh, no. No. Would I describe this show as fun? Oh, yes. This show is about a woman played by Brittany Snow, who is a transplant to East Texas and has to understand the manners and mores of East Texas, many of which involve suburban, wealthy suburban women getting very drunk and shooting guns and sleeping with each other. What fun. Actually, I have to go pretty soon because I promised to be home for dinner. Oh, come on. You got it, don't you? Yeah, but it scares me a little bit. Oh, come on. Let me see it. Come on, don't be shy. Oh, look how cute.
Oh, girl, you haven't even loaded this thing. You think I know how to load a gun? I'll walk you through it. I don't really... Listen, I'll take you to target practice later. Just heal me, okay? It also stars Mellon Ackerman, a wonderful actress who was completely wasted on billions, and she is having a great time.
She was Terrific on Trophy Wife, by the way, an unfairly maligned show, I think.
I know. A one-season tragedy. What a show. What a show. And anytime she is on screen, you know that you are going to have a fantastic time because her rapaciousness, her sense of pleasure, her sense of fun, her sense of enjoyment is radical. I would love to see more of that. I mean, this was the best of the bunch in terms of a trend, which has been a trend for many years, which is rich people with secrets, often, though not always in coats.
I'm sorry, in coats?
Yeah. For a while, the coats were really big in these shows. Everyone, by which I mean, Nicole Kidman, would walk around in some really elegant outer wear.
Are you talking about that one she did with Hugh Grant? Yes.
But also- That was very coat heavy. The Coats on Big Little Lies, which is, again, a best-in-class example of the genre. The coats were also very good. It does get cold in California sometimes.
It was Northern California, right?
It He's foggy. You need a layer or two.
Can it get a bit damp otherwise?
Yeah, but this year we had the better sister. We had all her fault. We had the girlfriend. We had the beast in me, and they They were very dour. The perfect couple, I would say, was a little more fun.
The beast in me was not exactly a laugh riot.
No, no, no.
They didn't wear coats in the White Lotus.
They did not wear coats in the White Lotus. Too warm. Too warm. Too warm in Thailand.
They did wear them in the Gilded Age.
They did wear them in the Gilded Age, which are also rich people with secrets shows. I really enjoy the White Lotus. I don't think that I would argue, I don't think that any reasonable person who I love and trust would argue that this third season, which was set in Thailand, was the best of the series. It was not. It was not the best of the series. It was the worst of the series. But it's still enjoyable. It is nice to see attractive people in beautiful locations, behaving badly and being absolutely miserable.
I will say I love the first season of White Lotus, and I just I don't like its trend lines. I think the second was not as good, and then the third was less than that. But it does have this love boat aspect to it where there are multiple stories playing out in different guests, and there are likely to be elements within that that you can connect to even in a more subpar season.
And fantastic casting. Speaking of the Loveboat, we haven't talked about Dr. Odyssey, one of the most bananas shows Of this year. Jim, did you experience the- Was that even this year? The confusion and Wonder.
It's been such a long year.
Dr. Odecy was the love boat with grotesque medical procedures added on because, of course, this is a Ryan Murphy joint, and Ryan Murphy adores the grotesque, but it was so stupid. It made my brain so soft. When you look at the diagrams of the brain, the cauliflower, the nodules, I had none of those. My brain was a beaten bag chair as I watched Dr. Odyssey and let the parade of images go by.
I've never heard of the show Dr. Odyssey.
You've never heard of the show Dr. Odyssey?
It is possible there's too much TV.
Joshua Jackson, who, like Adam Brodie, is another former teen heartthrob. Yeah, I watched Dawson's Creek. Exactly. This one of Dawson's Creek extraction is a doctor on a cruise ship. And would you believe it? But every episode, there are several medical crises. The guest cast Kate Burlant, Amy Sedaris, Margaret Chou. I believe those ladies were all in the same episode. Character actress Margot Martindale shows up. It is a gift. It is a joy. If you think about it for more than... Don't think about it. Don't. Don't do that. Just let it wash over you.
Let's take a little break, and when we come back, we're going to talk about even more shows we love this year. We've talked about a bunch of shows. I think we should really get into the ones that we just absolutely adored. Jim, you put a bunch on your best of the air. You talked about a few already. I'd love to take turns between the three of us, but mostly between the two of you, talking about some of our favorites. Jim, tell us about Long Story Short.
Okay, so when I put together my best list at the end of the year, there's a top 10 list. It's always a little bit of a lie because really any given year, I have three or four shows that are my real favorites, and then I'm choosing from a grab bag of 20 or 30 other shows that could be on there. And generally, of those shows, there is one that is my absolute favorite. This year, that was long story short. An animated family drama, comic drama, comedy with dramatic elements from the creator of Bojack Horsemen. Everyone pick a territory.
I want goats.
Never get goats. Goats are not a territory.
This game makes no sense. It doesn't make sense because you're not listening. Mom, she's putting the pieces up his nose. I'm listening. I just don't understand. I don't understand any of this, and your father doesn't either. I think I'm understanding. He's being nice. He doesn't understand. He has the same glazed overlook as when we rented Fairwell, My Concubine. I did not understand Fairwell, My Concubine. I just said I preferred Mrs. Doubtfire. I want to be a concubine. For the record, I understand the game perfectly, and I think it's bad. This is why you don't play games with your family. Your family are not your friends.
It's about a family told over time, jumping back and forth in their history. You might say that sounds like this is us, and This was a bit of a this was a bit of a This is us approach, but with the difference of having less reliance on big twists and melodrama. Also, long story short, is just extremely Jewish. It's about a Jewish family. It is detailed and specific. This is so Jewish. Manishévitz could like, pickle it and sell it in a jar.
It is the gefilte fish. Of animated comedies.
I will say I am Jewish myself. My family is not super Jewish in the way that the family in this is. But that's not necessarily the appeal of it to me. The appeal is that I am really drawn to specificity, particularly in comedies like this, because I think that helps you develop a viewpoint. It helps you know the characters. It helps you create a world. I watch TV. I experience art in general to take me into somebody else's experience. It's similar to me to the way that I loved Reservation Dogs, the great comedy that was set on an Oklahoma Indian reservation a couple of years ago. Here, the family that the show depicts, you meet them as they're driving to a funeral when the kids are younger. You take second exit after exit.
Second exit after exit What could that possibly- That's a no. We're lost. I'm an orphan, and we're lost. Grief is perplexing, but I don't think one of the perplexing parts should be directions to the cemetery. He wouldn't need directions if you'd followed the hearse. He was weaving all over. Is he trying to get us killed?
You will later see the kids as middle-aged adults with their own children. You see people age and get younger and die. In the process, you start teasing out all the relationships that develop among just the web of this family and the sleights that emerge in somebody's youth that become part of their neuroses when they're older. To me, it was a beautiful, moving, often just absurdly funny way of just telling the story of how a group of people came to be who they are. I would recommend it to just absolutely anyone.
My family is Jewish in the way this family is Jewish. And so initially, I had a rough time with this show. I think I had to start the first episode, which is a little heavier than some of the others a few times before I got through it. But I agree with you. It is so lovely. And as it goes on, it gets funnier. I think it allows itself to be funnier. It gets weirder. Like This is Us, this is absolutely a show where someone would die in a crockpot fire. But on this show, that would be hilarious.
Yes. You're also not going to spend three years finding out.
No, they would be making brisket for Passover. Something would go terribly wrong. It would be amazing. I came around on this show. I'm all in.
Is that what happened in This is Us?
Someone died in a tragic crockpot fire.
A crockpot killed somebody, yes. Yeah.
Slow cookers.
It was devastating for the slow cooker.
Slow cookers, they're dangerous. Oh, my God. No.
I did not stick with that show. Alexis. Give us one from the year that you loved.
I am here to talk about butts, and I'm here to talk about a specific kinds of butts, and those are hockey butts. There is a show on HBO called Heated Rivalry, and its commitment to the male backside is sincere and unparalleled in recent television. It is about rival hockey players, one Russian, one Canadian, who fall not exactly in love, but definitely in lust.
I put your my chicken out. I'm not a chicken, but I think we should talk. Do you want to sit? Not really. This is such a bad idea.
It is the steamiest show. I was trying to think, what was the last show that felt truly sexy. I think it was normal people, but that sex was very Irish and sad. Irish, yeah. This is not... I mean, sure, they're anguished because they're closeted hockey players, but this sex is not sad. It's also extremely specific. I was like, wow, I know exactly who is doing what to whom, down to the millimeter.
I think that is the sign of good action filmmaking. You just know where everything is located at any point. Yes. Why do you like this?
I often see shows where the sex feels incredibly gratuitous. I would say this is a sexy, sexy show with so much sex. The sex does not feel gratuitous because the sex is text. It is about sex. It is about their desire for each other. It is about how they have sex, how they want each other, how they don't want each other. And sasufi. Or as we Jews say, daienu. It's enough. It's enough to tell a hot, steamy story about sex.
I would love to talk about a show that has zero sex and zero butts. There might be some droid butts, but I can't recall precisely.
These are not the butts you're looking for.
I would love to talk about Season 2 of Andor, which is my favorite show of the year. This is Season 2 of the Disney plus Star Wars TV show. It is an odd thing to describe. It's a prequel to a prequel. It is a prequel to the film Rogue One, which itself is a prequel to the very first Star movie. It is essentially a spy show, an espionage show set in the world of Star Wars that is concerned with the rise of the Galactic Rebellion that we come to see in all these movies.
When do we start fighting back? We have. By walking away. We fight to win. That means we lose. And lose, and lose, and lose until we're ready. All you know now is how much you hate. You bank that, you hide that. You keep it alive until you know what to do with it. And when I tell you to move, you move.
It was the pinnacle of something that has dominated the culture for, I don't know, two plus decades at this point, which is IP storytelling, which is franchise storytelling. As someone who grew up a Star Wars fan, sorry, this is extremely nerdy. I was obsessed with it when I was a teenager, and I thought that when I got older, Star Wars would age with me, would grow up with me, and it never did. I felt like this was an actual moment when, for one brief, shining moment, Star Wars was a grown-up thing. It was a grown-up story. This is a show about rebellion and autocracy, and sacrifice, and death, and all. It's not about sex, but it's about a lot of adult things, and that, to me, was rare there. I doubt we'll ever see something like it again. I loved it so much. I know you did, too.
Yeah, I'm a thousand % on the And/or train. I consider just the reliance on IP to be the curse of television. We saw it in the movies, and then it's jumped to TV. This was a rare case of an IP-based product that was just a great work in its own with its own ideas. One thing I loved about it, it's Star Wars. There's a lot of adventure, there's a lot of daring due. Well, beyond the politics, and obviously, it's just it's concerned with how rebellion works just politically on a nuts and bolts level and fighting against autocracy, It feels very current, but it also just has this beautiful tragedy to it, which is something it borrows from Rogue One to an extent. These are the stories of the people who do not end up getting a metal draped around them at some point later on once the rebellion has succeeded. It's about sacrifice and tragedy and the people who will toil in anonymity and never see the fruits of their labor achieved. There's something beautiful about that that didn't necessarily get that in the mandalorian. No offense to Baby Yoda. Yeah.
This This conversation about Andor is making me so happy. I could talk about it for another hour, but I think we should move on to another show that also made me very happy, and that's The Lowdown. This was a show that was a little late catching up to, but as soon as I watched 20 minutes of it, I fell in love. It's so funny, and Ethan Hawke is so great in it. Tell us about this one.
The low down is, how would I describe it? A political journalistic historical noir about Ethan Hawke's character, Lee Raybon, who is a self-styled, he calls himself a truth storyan. Sorry, say again. I am a Tulsa true story. A truth storyan What exactly is a true story? I'm glad you asked. I read stuff, I research stuff, I drive around, and I find stuff.
Then I write about stuff.
Some people care, some people don't.
I'm chronically unemployed, always broke.
But let's just say that I am obsessed with the truth. It involves an investigation that he makes into a powerful political family whose sion, played by Kyle McLauchlin, is running for governor of Oklahoma. It is a thriller and a conspiracy thriller in all the ways that pay off on a dramatic level. What's really appealing about it is that it just has this great... It's like It's a caper. It's this picaresque story about this wild-eye guy with a cause who does not always make wise decisions and often gets out over his skis, but about him and the characters around him who make up this community, trying to make sense of what's going on and what snakes are under the carpet.
It's slightly shaggy, but in the most wonderful way. It's peaker-esque is a great word to use because it also has all these little characters that pop in and out that are immediately memorable. The lawyer next door to the bookstore that he owns that he keeps going to in order to store stuff in his safe. The one-eye editor of a supermarket played by the hip hop artist, Killer Mike, who has his own... Every character in this show, I feel like I'm going to remember for a while.
Pete Dinklage shows up for one absolutely perfect, completely bananas episode as Lee's former partner, and it is indelible. This is a show that is so textured. You feel like you can taste it, you can smell it, you know what the air would feel like on your skin, which is something that the creator, Sterlin Harjo, is so good at that specificity.
It's so specific also because it's Tulsa-based.
Yes, and it doesn't feel like somebody in New York's idea of Tulsa. It feels lived in. It feels like somebody has met versions of these people and captured down. Everybody has a voice. Everybody has individuality. That is a big part of the key to its appeal.
I do feel you use the word caper. I use the word shaggy. There is a bit of a hangout feel to this. You're just following Ethan Hawke's character around Tulsa. He's getting beat up in the classic style of many a movie, Private Investigator. Alexis, I know you watched a ton of stuff this year that also had a hangout feel to it.
I love a hangout show. I love a show where you just want to spend time with the characters. There has been a desire to crack the friendship comedy since Friends, since Girls. I don't think a show has emerged that people feel about as strongly. This year, we had a few contenders. We had I Love LA, and we had Adults. These are both shows, one set in New York, one set in Los Angeles, that are about young adults learning to move through the world. They have different flavors. I Love LA is sexier, it's slicker, Adults is goofier, it's squirmier. I have a feeling both of these will be great second-season shows as the writers learn to write for these particular performers. But I'm happy spend time with these people. Another show, which is not new, which is returning Platonic, starring Roseburn, who is fantastic, and Seth Rogen, who I think we can all agree works too much, but I love it, as old friends who reunite in middle age and go on some really lame adventures throughout Los Angeles. I love it.
I don't even know- It's Seth Rogen's It's the actual best comedy on Apple TV.
I know. The studio wins all the awards, but I really think it is.
Rose Byrne is freaking fantastic. I mean, absolutely. I've seen Bridesmaids. I originally knew her, I think, at first from damages. I think it really hits me watching this show how fantastic, in terms of delivery, in terms often of physical comedy, comedic actress she is. It's honestly one of my favorite performances on TV right As a woman, I can tell you, she is still bugged about it.
Don't go and explain to me. I'm a woman, explain to you? All right. You shouldn't be explaining nothing to nobody.
Listen to me. If you don't let Jenna and I hang out, you know what's going to happen? She's going to think you're hiding something.
She's going to hate me, and then you and I are not going to be friends again.
Okay, don't you think you're being a little dramatic about it? No, I don't think so.
You're about to be married. She is so funny. As a type A adjacent lady, I'm here for all the tightly wound ladies, and I'm here for all the tightly wound ladies when they unwind often in spectacular fashion.
Have either of you seen her movie, If I had legs, I'd kick you.
I have not. No, I have not either. It's on my list.
Sick Kid Movies. I can't do it. I can't do it.
I feel like I'm compiling a list in my mind of things you cannot do.
You're not going to double feature that in Hamlet.
Yeah, Cancer, sick and dead kids. Yeah.
Okay, let's talk about one more. Pluribus. I was a little late to Pluribus, but after only two episodes, I think I'm hooked. I think I have see it through.
Okay, well, let me ask you a question before I start talking about it. You came to it a little late. Did you go into Pluribus spoiled or did you manage to be unspoiled?
Managed to avoid it. Every time I saw the word pluribus, I averted my eyes. I could not look at a dollar bill for months. So I did not know what was going on in this show.
God bless you that you managed that. I suppose I should say up front, I'm going to need to talk about what the show is about. So plug your ears If you're somebody who's... I'm very much of the camp that a good story is unspoilable. It cannot be ruined by spoilers. If you feel otherwise, just tune me out for a second. But Pluribus was a show that arrived with a great deal of mystery about it because its premise is so wild. Essentially, an alien RNA virus arrives on Earth by means of an intergalactic radio signal that infects most of humanity and causes them to become united in a joyous collective mind. A handful of people are left out of it. One of them is our heroine, Carol Sterka, played by the great Ria Seahorn, who you might recall from Better Call Saul. She is an author of romantasy fiction and a misanthroppe by nature, who ends up being the perfect foil for this new collective of alien juiced Beatific humanity.
Are you reading my mind?
No, absolutely not. We couldn't do that if we wanted to.
Who is we?
Why is everybody suddenly we? The through line is Carroll dealing with this new world, Carol trying to figure out if there is a way to reverse this virus and restore humanity to where it was before.
We could continue this after you've had a good night's sleep.
Who is we?
We us, just us.
Part of the thing that I think is interesting is that it's a little bit playing around with the idea of, is what we've witnessed an Apocalypse? There is suddenly no war on Earth. There's no conflict. There's a lot of things that we say we aspire to in humanity have been achieved by our brains being taken over. And underneath this highly entertaining, very funny, extremely well-acted, it's often like Ria Seahorn giving a solo performance, is a very interesting idea about collectivism versus individualism, about what happiness means, about whether it is better to be blissful and have no free will or to be discontented but an intact individual. Fascinating. Like Severance, I think, just a knock your socks off first season. I hope it doesn't take as long coming Jack.
I really enjoyed it, this whole premise that the whole world is in the, I'd like to give the world a Coke commercial, and you are somehow on the sidelines with a Pepsi, you can't open. The way that Ria Seahorn plays discomfort, disg, contempt, just the range of faces that she has to convey displeasure is really extraordinary. Perhaps because it's only season one, I'm really invested in the mystery. I'm here for it.
I'd love to go to a quick lightning round. There are so many shows that came out this year. I don't think we're at peak TV anymore, but that doesn't mean that there still aren't hundreds of TV shows that came out in 2025. We should just very, very briefly talk about The Pit, which is a show that earlier in the year, a few of us discussed on the Emmies episode. It's coming back very soon. I'm very excited for The Pit. Its first season was one of the bigger TV shows of the year.
I love The Pit. I think it's impeccable television. I think that the jury is still out, almost literally, as to whether or not it is an ER spinoff. But I think that it, if anything, improves on ER in its speed, in its economy, in the ease with which it communicates its characters through action.
I I will say I love experimentation. I love a wild idea, but there is still pleasure in just a hospital show done well.
So well.
We did not touch on the Netflix series Adolescence, which was one of this summer, if I'm recalling correctly, as big phenomena. I have to admit, I did not watch it because it seemed like the premise would totally stress me out as the parent of a young male You're not wrong.
My take on it was that for parents of kids, particularly male kids of a certain age, this was like the day after people just watched them discussing these hush traumatized terms. It's essentially a four-part miniseries about an adolescent who is arrested on suspicion of murder in a case that that turns out to be the result or the consequence of online bullying and social media pressures, and just becomes this investigation of what are the little screens in our pockets doing to all of our kids. I will say, critically, as a whole, it's quite an achievement. I think we even mentioned that, I believe, every episode was shot in a single take, which is an interesting technical experiment that lends it vitality. There's a bit of like an after-school special vibe to it for me. There's also a fantastic episode 3 that is just a two-hander dialog entirely between the accused young child and a social worker, basically, in custody that was just like watching a great, well-produced explosive piece of theater in front of you.
To Do you watch this one?
Yeah, Cancer and sick and dead kids are my no-go area. I also have not watched this, but I can tell you my kids are never getting phones. They're like, When can I have a phone? I say, When you are 30.
I totally support that. We are going to take another break, and when we come back, we're going to end this episode as we always do with a little game.
Oh, yay.
Oh, yay. Okay, Jim, Alexis, we're going to wrap up this episode as we wrap up every episode with a little game.
I'm so nervous. My adrenaline is pumping.
I have three rounds of TV-related delights here for you. You're going to buzz in when you know the answer. I don't think I need to remind you that this is as important as it gets. The stakes could not be higher Okay, so are you ready?
No.
Are you ready?
No.
Great.
But will I ever be?
Round one, Must Sing TV, the television theme song, A fixture of TV for decades, went out of fashion for a time, but it has come roaring back in recent years. In this round, I'm going to play a theme song, Buzz In, with the name of the show.
I'm tone deaf. This is going to go great.
Ears open, please.
Is this a good time to tell you I'm song blind, Gilbert?
Like TV news theme-like. I'm sure this is something that I've watched.
It's extremely dramatic. The Pit? I don't know. No. No.
Okay. The answer is The Gilded Age. It's composed by Harry and Rupert Gregson-Williams.
I apologize.
These guys have to be British. They're also brothers. Okay, next one.
Oh, I watched this, but I have no idea. Alexis. What We Do With The Shadows, but that's off the air, so no.
It's called What We Do In The Shadows. Oh my God. What We Do With The Shadows?
What Do We Do With The Shadows? Another sex show, yeah.
What Do We Do With The Shadows? That is the theme song to Wednesday, composed by Danny Elfman. All right. The two of you are doing great.
I need lyrics.
Yeah. I'm a word person. It's all right, Brain. The Rites of the Lord, His Righteousness at Hand.
Alexis.
Is it Righteous Gemstones?
It is The Righteous Gemstones. Oh my God! Finally. Composed by Joseph Stevens.
I got there It's just context clues.
All right, next one.
Alexis. Hunting Wives.
This is from The Hunting Wives. This is from The Hunting Wives. It's a little too late to be on time. Alexis. Hunting Wives. This is from The Hunting Wives. This is from The hunting Wives. It's Possibilities by Goldie Boutier. I think she's from French-speaking Canada. All right, next one.
Clearly, I've been doing a lot of skip credits this year.
Okay. Jim, you know this.
Jim, we're getting fired. You know this. It's been a great run at the times. I'm sorry it had to end this way.
This is Nicholas Bertel's theme to the series Andor. Oh, fuck.
It's no succession theme.
It isn't. It's from a different show.
It's Andor. It's Andor. It's from a different show. It's Andor.
Yeah. Round which we call the Gaslight Zone.
No, no, no, no, no, no. Round one was clearly the Gaslight Zone.
We talked about how TV this year has felt a little paranoid, a little conspiratorial. Well, that's not just on the screen. The conversation around TV shows can also get a little conspiracy-minded from time to time. I'm going to give you a real, actual fan theory about a popular show from TV history, and then you try to guess the show. Put your tinfoil hats on, both of you. First clue. The entire show is from the perspective of one of the bar's regulars. He's always drunk when he's there, which is why everyone seems so funny. Jim. Cheers. Cheers. That is correct. Next clue. Despite being bad at his meaningless job, the main character is able to pay for his family's various misadventures because he still gets royalties from the hit Barbershop album that he was involved with.
Jim. The Simpson, Homer Simpson.
This is correct. Homer Simpson in The Simpson, the B-Sharps. The main character is the airplane hijacker D. B. Cooper. Jim. Mad Men. Mad Men.
I'm also here.
You have to butt. You have to press this space button.
I did. You did?
I did.
Okay.
Next clue. The young cast of this long-running show changes so frequently because they are prey upon by the vampire who lives in their neighborhood. Sesame Street.
Oh.
Fun. That's a great one. I will never watch that. That's the same way again.
Okay, next clue. The Meek HR guy is actually the local serial killer.
Jim. That's The Office.
That is The Office. Correct. These two animated shows actually take place at the same time in a society where the rich live in technologically advanced cities in the sky, while the poor live in a primitive post-apocalyptic wasteland on the ground. Jim.
That's the Flintstones and the Jetsons. That is correct. That is canon. That is now canon.
I believe that's actually H. G. Wells' The Time Machine.
Yeah, the Flintstones are Morlacks. Okay, last clue.
Oh, good. This is when I take all the way. This is what I take it home.
You're definitely going to get this one. Okay. Freya is Cassian's sister, or maybe Deirdre Miro is Cassian's sister.
Jim. Okay, that's the Andor question that I know.
That is from Andor. That is correct.
Round three. Good news. Round three is theme songs. Oh, good.
No, great news. Round three, The Greatest Show 2025, is about the series Andor. This is my show, and I get to pick what we do. This entire category is about the series Andor.
It was so great to be on this show. Thank you. I have to go now.
Audiences first met Cassian Andor in the film Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, which ends with Andor stealing the plans to what space station?
Jim. I feel like I should just get all these creatively wrong for fairness, but the Death Star.
The Death Star. That would be weird if you got that one wrong. Next clue. Cassian Andor's native language, Canari, is based on Spanish, Portuguese, and what other language? The native tongue of composer, Bella Bartók, and actor, Bella Lagosi.
Hungarian? Oh, sorry.
Hungarian. That is correct. And/or showrunner, Tony Gilroy, was nominated for Academy Awards for both writing and directing what 2007 George Clooney drama. Alexus.
Michael Quidon.
Michael Clayton. Michael Clayton. Oh, thank God. One of the best movies of the 21st century. Okay, next clue. Before he portrayed Cassian And/or, Diego Luna had roles in films including Y Tu Mama Tambien, Frida, and What 2004 Dance Musical, a sequel to a classic film?
Dirty dancing, Havana Nights.
Dirty dancing, Havana Nights. That is correct.
I do so well on the questions that are not actually You thought you were not going to be competitive here.
Okay, next clue. Diego Luna was nominated for Golden Glove for his performance in Andor Season 2. Who was the last actor to be nominated for Golden Glove for his performance in a Star Wars property? Security, specifically for his role in 1977, Star Wars: Episode IV: A New Hope, which is the first Star Wars, but actually is now titled Episode IV, because they did the prequels, which are Star Wars episodes one through three. Those canonically are the three movies in the Star Wars saga, which now extend over nine films.
I'm so glad you had an adolescence that involved being liked and dating girls. I had no girlfriends.
There was a question in there somewhere.
Hold on.
It's Zubaca. It's C3p.
Basically, who was the last person in a Star Wars to be nominated for a Golden Play?
But I'm still saying Harrison Ford because it's for Shrinking.
No, specifically for his role in a Star Wars movie. The answer is Alec Guinness.
Of course.
Okay. That is our game. Let us see what the score is. The winner is Jim Ponawazi. Hooray. Hooray. I'm going to open this black bag, which usually holds a mic.
It's so sad we've been on this show before, so I know what I'm losing.
Jim, you have won a cheap plastic trophy with my face on it. It's called the Gilby.
I feel like I've won the Second grade spelling bee all over again. Thank you, Gilbert.
That makes me feel real good. Jim Ponawasik, thank you so much for coming on to talk about Best TV of the Year.
Thank you.
Alexis, you did wonderfully.
I wish I'd been here.
This episode was produced by Tina Antalini with help from Alex Baron, who is also our quiz master, and Kate Lepreste. It was edited by Wendy Daur. We had production assistance from Dahlia Haddad. The Sunday special was engineered by Sophia Landman, original music by Dan Powell, Marion Lozano, Alisha Ba-Etup, and Diane Wong. Thanks for listening, everyone. See you next week for one final episode.
In these final weeks of 2025, The Sunday Special is looking back at the year in culture.Today, we’re talking about the TV we watched this year — the best shows, the most popular ones and the ones that allowed us to just enjoyably veg out. Gilbert Cruz talks with the TV critic James Poniewozik and the culture reporter Alexis Soloski about the year in television.TV shows discussed in this episode:“Severance”“Common Side Effects”“Too Much”“Nobody Wants This”“Dying for Sex”“The Hunting Wives”“The White Lotus”“Dr. Odyssey”“Long Story Short”“Heated Rivalry”“Andor”“The Lowdown”“Platonic”“Pluribus”“The Pitt”“Adolescence”On Today’s Episode:James Poniewozik is the chief TV critic for The New York Times.Alexis Soloski is a culture reporter for The Times.Background Reading:Best TV Shows of 2025The Best TV Episodes of 2025Photo Credit: Apple TV+; Netflix; Lucasfilm/Disney+; HBO
Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app.