10. 24. A show like this is very unusual to watch and devilishly tricky to create. The "real-time" aspect of 24 is why it had such a popular start, and viewers were greeted with lots of action and drama. Think of how tired Jack Bauer has to be when each day is over! I'd probably go to sleep for months, and... oh yeah. That's sorta how the TV medium works. I haven't actually seen all of this show, to be perfectly honest, because I rent each season individually and watch the episodes pretty much back-to-back, like it's one long action movie. Which is the point. Yeah, there are cliches, and some of the characters are obviously there to get killed, but 24 packs in a lot of great moments too.
9. STAR WARS: The Clone Wars. I didn't expect to like this show. The movie was only so-so, and let's face it, George Lucas isn't exactly a shining example of great moviemaking. But he took a backseat here, allowing Dave Filoni to do most of the grunt work, and The Clone Wars benefits from it. The characters are fleshed out a ton more than in the movies, the action is creative and exciting, and there's some excellent foreshadowing. The show gets better and better as it goes, and it isn't afraid to shy away from some of the darker moments. Impressive, most impressive.
8. The Office. Here goes my comedy lineup. Three in a row. The Office is a treat, though. The characters are actually really interesting, and there's a lot of real life mixed in with Steve Carell and Rainn Wilson's antics. There's romance, unemployment, and a growing understanding of oneself addressed here. Scranton's crew of white-collar eccentrics have their ups and downs, but there's a great mix of comedy and heart. Plus, the recent Threat Level Midnight episode is a riot.
5. Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Ah, Joss Whedon. It's been too long. I had to get to you at some point, right? A misguidingly comic title covers a show that does just about everything. And it does it all well. There's overturning horror movie cliches, character development, comedy, action, romance, and some genuine scares too. The scripts are almost always snappy and fun, and Buffy is good at giving out shocks. No character is truly safe or stagnant, and no generic episode format will do. This show slays audiences (I'm sorry, it was just too easy) with all its memorable moments and characters. A show this good earns its seven seasons.
4. Kings. A show this good nowadays, however, gets pulled from the air before it gets much of its story told. Loosely based on the Biblical story of King David, this near-future show is consistently dazzling. The acting is top-notch, from Chris Egan as David to Ian McShane as King Silas. The writing is beautiful, the cinematography is beautiful, the themes are beautiful. It's heartbreaking that a show like this could only last 12 episodes, but not surprising. Kings is an emotional tour-de-force on a grand and intensely personal scale, unabashedly showing the gray areas in even the most spellbinding, courageous figures. Watch it now.3. Chuck. Hey, this one's still on TV! And it's even in the top 3! I've been watching this one since the beginning, and it's rare that I miss an episode. Chuck is an action-comedy-romance-spy thriller about a geeky guy who got kicked out of Stanford years ago... only to have his former roommate send him a file of encrypted government secrets called the Intersect. The characters are the real draw here. A more dynamic bunch it's hard to find. All the characters have arcs, and they change in believable and exciting ways. It's a wonderful treat to see them each week, and I really hope it doesn't get cancelled.
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