Must watch television shows!

1. The Walking Dead (2010-2022)

The Walking Dead is the first television series within The Walking Dead franchisedeveloped by Frank Darabont, was a comic book series by Robert Kirkman, Charlie Adlard, and Tony Moore, now an zombie post-apocalyptic horror drama television series adaptation. Both, the comic book series and the show mold the heart The Walking Dead franchise's heart. This series contains a large group cast as survivors in zombie apocalypse while attempting to survive under near death attacks and threats constantly of from walkers also known as zombies. Modern civilization collapses, the survivors must confront other survivors, humans who have established their own laws within newly formed communities and groups sometimes leading to tensions between each other. The protagonist Rick Grimes a Sheriff Deputy wakes up from a coma learning about civilization's collapse, must now lead a band of survivors trying to stay alive in the world that is now in ruins.


2. Supernatural (2005-2020)

Supernatural created by Eric Kripke is an television series, on September 13, 2005 it first broadcasted on The WB, subsequently becoming a part of it's successor network "The CW's" lineup. The series stars two Winchester brothers Dean Winchester played by Jensen Ackles and Sam Winchester by Jared Padalecki and they hunt demons, ghosts, monsters and other supernatural beings. The series' executive producers include Adam Glass,Ben Edlund, Jeremy Carver, John Shiban, McG, Phil Sgriccia, Robert Singer, and Sera Gamble. The series was produced by Warner Bros. Television, Vision, Wonderland Sound, and Kripke Enterprises. The two Winchesters follow their father's footsteps as hunters, which includes fights against (evil) supernatural beings of many kinds, including demons, gods that roam the earth, oh and monsters.

3. The Boys (2019-Present)

If you haven't enjoyed yourself watching the world of The Boy a satirical superhero show, that has to change that. The fourth season of this series is officially set to be released sometime this year, and you will want to be caught up by the time it drops. The Boys is about the lives of a group of regular denizens, who have taken up justice into their own hands after witnessing the selfish and corrupt Vought Corporation and it's impulsive quote, unquote superheroes as they continue to get away with abusing the system time after time. This critically acclaimed series sure might not be for those who get squirmish around blood, its strong writing, character development and storylines make it a must binge for everybody else.

4. Squid Game (2021–2025)

Currently on this list, Squid Game is the newest show and is not in English. Symbolically shows how the way the streaming era has broke down content barriers, so that your new fixation can just as easily be an Turkish soap opera drama about an Sultan who falls in love with one of his concubine (not wife) as it can be the newest Marvel Disney+ slop. But besides what it represents for the TV business, Squid Game which showcases great actors as Emmy winner Lee Jung Jae is a ruthless socioeconomic satire and gripping thriller about a group of financially insolvent and destitute Koreans which partake in deadly series of contests with a huge victor takes all (cash) prize all taking place in children's playground.

5. Breaking Bad (2008-2013)

Walter's famous line to Jesse you know business, I know chemistry starts an unholy on and of screen team up and, for some people's money worth, in the history of television shows the greatest in the media. Walter White is achemistry teacher terminally ill from cancer played by Bryan Cranston and junkie deadbeat Jesse Pinkman played by Aaron Paul are creator's Vince Gilligan insecure, sketchy yang with cold and calculating yin while they build up slowly a empire of meth. Their path leads only one way, however the New Mexico's parched desert background which fills up slowly with shallow graves, is an phenomenal ride, balancing darkness and light with enough dexterity and dark humour to provide escapism from the current moral plight (election). While yes Breaking Bad is, indeed, a tale about morality its political edge is sharp enough to injure yourself with. Walter did everything by the books how he was supposed to do: worked two jobs, payed his bills and taught bored teens with his knowledge chemistry many years, until a cancer diagnosis left him needing to pick between his losing morals or the financial ruin of his family or that of his soul. He of course, picks both, in conclusion, 10 out of 10 television series.