1. The Man in the High Castle

This series, clearly, continues from Dick’s original novel and depicts protagonists not only discovering that they are on the alternative Universe, but that it may potentially be possible to return to the timeline where the US and its allies won the Second World War. All four seasons are now available for viewing.

2. Goliath

Goliath is an old-school legal thriller by an old-school tv novelist, David E. Kelley (The Profession, Boston Legal), who is still the reigning king of legal drama. It’s a meat-and-potato film, one powered by an engaging plot and convincing, flawed characters lead by Billy McBride (Billy Bob Thornton, who won the Golden Globe for the role). McBride is an alcoholic has-been a prosecutor who, in classic John Grisham fashion, has a lawsuit against a major tech company to fall into his lap. On the other hand, McBride’s former firm, his ex-wife (Maria Bello), and his former law associate (William Hurt) have become a nemesis.

3. The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

4. Undone

Alma’s younger sister Becca (Angelique Cabral), her mother Camila (Constance Marie), and her boyfriend Sam (Siddharth Dhananjay) all believe she’s losing it while secretly playing with bending time and space under her dad’s supervision. Every 20-minute episode is stuffed with an emotional experience that’s exhausting, but Undone is so fantastic that it’s impossible to avoid watching until the very end.

5. Upload

Upload is a show made by Greg Daniels who is known for his works on The Office and Parks and Recreation. It is a show that brings the best parts of rom-com, science-fiction, social commentary, and a murder mystery into a mix knowing full well that the end product would be thought-provoking and funny. The series introduces a not-so-distant future where a scientific revolution has made accessible a number of interactive afterlife possibilities to prolong one ‘s life for centuries — which might sound familiar in the era of Black Mirror — but no afterlife technology is as heart-warming, humorous, and unpredictable as Daniel’s. Navigating the wired world with Robbie Amell’s Nathan, a tech pioneer who dies suddenly and struggles for his soul, “Angel” Nora (Andy Allo) customer service, is an oddball experience with celestial outcomes.

6. The Boys

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=06rueu_fh30

7. Fleabag

8. Hunters

Hunters is out to get blood. Newcomer David Weil’s series, co-produced by Jordan Peele, is an unbridled film of Nazi-hunting that shocks in more ways than one, from its wit, camp, and Blaxploitation inspiration nodes, to the very violent violence that occurs as a group of underdogs chasing down Nazis lurking in the Americas of the 1970s. The series drew Al Pacino on TV as Meyer Offerman, a man who sees it as God’s will to mobilize his Nazi Hunters and take his new recruit, 19-year-old Jonah (Logan Lerman), under his wing to help him pursue revenge after a tragedy unfolds in his own life. Though the show might not be what you expect, it has its power — which embodies the disenfranchised — and the feeling of catharsis follows.