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    Best TV Shows of 2024

    “English Teacher,” “My Brilliant Friend,” “Shogun,” “Babylon Berlin” and “Somebody Somewhere” were among the series that stood out in a year when television felt more mid than ever.As you browse, keep track of how many shows you’ve seen or want to see. Find and share your personalized watch list at the bottom of the page.Best Shows of 2024 | Best International | Best Shows That EndedJames PoniewozikBest Shows of 2024We live in the Age of Like. You can click stars and hearts from one end of the internet to the other to express your contentment. Like is fine. Like is good. But like isn’t the same as love. Love is more challenging. It asks more of you and it risks more. Like can’t break your heart.The good news is, there was a ton of TV to like in 2024. But it was harder this year than most to find those special, challenging, distinctive shows to l-o-v-e, which is what I think year-end lists like this are all about.All this is an outgrowth of a phenomenon I wrote about earlier this year: “Mid TV,” the burgeoning category of well-cast, professionally produced shows that look like the groundbreaking TV of the past but don’t actually break ground of their own. This TV has its place — I watch a lot of it, happily — but that place is not on this list. (The shows that did make it are arranged alphabetically.)Farewell, 2024; here’s to a more-than-mid 2025!‘English Teacher’ (FX)There’s a popular “Simpsons” meme in which the school principal, Seymour Skinner, wonders to himself, “Am I so out of touch?,” and concludes, “No, it’s the children who are wrong.” What the rookie-of-the-year sitcom “English Teacher” posits is: Maybe the children are wrong, and so are the adults, but we’re all also sort of right, and all this is part of life. Less apocalyptic than “Euphoria,” more acerbic than “Abbott Elementary,” the series surveys the post-Covid educational culture wars with more curiosity than judgment. That, it turns out, is one of the best ways to learn. (Streaming on Hulu.) More

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    ‘English Teacher’ Gets TikTok Boost from Brian Jordan Alvarez

    Brian Jordan Alvarez’s career started on social media. His mastery of the form, and a ridiculous dance trend, have drawn viewers to his show, “English Teacher.”The start of a new TV show is a fraught time for its creators and stars. Years of work have gone into its debut, yet the window of time in which to attract viewers is brief. Add a splintered media environment and an oxygen-sucking presidential election, and the chances for cultural relevancy slip further.Most showrunners make the press rounds and hope for the best. Brian Jordan Alvarez unwittingly came up with another strategy: becoming a meme.In September, shortly after the debut of “English Teacher,” an FX show that Mr. Alvarez created and stars in, a TikTok user with the handle @clozvr posted a clip from an old “Gilmore Girls” episode mashed up with the song “Breathe” by Olly Alexander.In the “Gilmore” clip, Kirk Gleason, the awkward character played by Sean Gunn, has made a black-and-white art-house movie. In it, Kirk tells his girlfriend’s father, “I love your daughter.” When the father says, “What do you have to offer her?” Kirk replies, “Nothing. Only this,” before breaking into a goofy break dance.Mr. Alvarez saw another TikTok user dancing in an apartment to the clip and found it “weirdly captivating,” he said. He decided to film his own version in the Nashville airport, lip-syncing to the dialogue and the song and dancing as he rolled his suitcase.

    @brianjordanalvarez Wow ♬ afilmbykirk – ꫂ ၴႅၴ

    @brianjordanalvarez ♬ afilmbykirk – ꫂ ၴႅၴ We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.Already a subscriber? Log in.Want all of The Times? Subscribe. More

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    What’s on TV This Week: ‘English Teacher’ and ‘Wise Guy: David Chase and the Sopranos’

    FX airs a new comedy series and ‘The Sopranos’ creator talks about the show in a documentary series.For those who still enjoy a cable subscription, here is a selection of cable and network TV shows, movies and specials that broadcast this week, Sept. 2-8. Details and times are subject to change.MondayENGLISH TEACHER 10 p.m. on FX. Since “The Office” and “Parks and Recreation” are long off the air, maybe this brand-new series can fill the workplace sitcom hole in our collective hearts. It follows Evan Marquez (played by Brian Jordan Alvarez, who also created the show), a high school teacher in Austin, Texas, who tries to prioritize his conduct and is trying to figure out if he can be fully himself in his job. Things start to go awry when Evan is investigated over a previous incident where students caught him and his boyfriend, Malcolm, a former teacher at the high school, kissing.TuesdayFrom left, Devin Strader and Jenn Tran, on “The Bachelorette.”John Fleenor/DisneyTHE BACHELORETTE 8 p.m. on ABC. On last week’s episodes, Jenn Tran surprised viewers by telling Devin Strader she loved him and giving him a rose. The problem? She also told Marcus Shoberg the same thing — and he didn’t say it back. Despite this, she also gave him a rose, so now Marcus and Devin are the only two men left. The host, Jesse Palmer, keeps teasing that “no Bachelorette has ever ended her journey like this.” (Joey Graziadei’s finale did live up to that type of hype, so maybe Jenn’s will as well.) Don’t worry about postseason blues though, because we only have three weeks before the first season of “The Golden Bachelorette” begins. (And though I am excited, I really miss “Paradise.”)WednesdayN.F.L. KICKOFF EVENT 9 p.m. on NBC. Time to dust off your jerseys, perfect your Buffalo chicken dip and crack open a cold one because football season is back, baby! The season is starting off with its annual kickoff game and events — this time with the reigning champions, the Kansas City Chiefs, up against the Baltimore Ravens. NBC Sports’s Sunday Night Football team, Mike Tirico, Cris Collinsworth and Melissa Stark are back for their third year to give you their thoughts.ThursdayFrom left: Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton in “Twister.”Warner Bros.We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.Already a subscriber? Log in.Want all of The Times? Subscribe. More

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    Review: On ‘English Teacher,’ School Is a Battlefield

    A new FX sitcom handles the educational culture wars with a light touch.The culture war often doesn’t have a physical frontline; it’s fought in op-ed columns, through social-media memes and inside people’s heads.Public schools are an exception. There, the state infantry of teachers, enlisted to handle potentially explosive ideas, face wave after wave of challenging students, backed by air support from helicopter parents.“English Teacher,” which begins Monday on FX, is a deft, brutal trench comedy of this battle. Brian Jordan Alvarez, the creator and viral-video comic, stars as Evan Marquez, a high school teacher in suburban Austin, Texas, struggling to get through each day with his ideals intact and his shirts unstained.His students are wily shape-shifters, a tech-enabled alien species whose ways and attitudes keep their handlers off-balance. “The kids this year, I feel like they’re less woke,” Evan tells his best friend, the history teacher Gwen Sanders (Stephanie Koenig), who concurs. One student, she said, told her she needed to teach “both sides” of the Spanish Inquisition.Evan’s real troubles begin, however, when he learns that he’s under “investigation” after a rich, influential parent reported him for having kissed his ex-boyfriend (Jordan Firstman) in front of students.His principal, Grant Moretti — a walking anxiety attack played wonderfully by Enrico Colantoni — admits that Evan shouldn’t have to deal with this, but he’s too beaten and besieged to do anything but plead with Evan to help him make the problem go away. One of Evan’s students suggests he claim discrimination as a gay Hispanic, but another says, “Gay doesn’t count anymore, and he talks like a straight white guy.”We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.Already a subscriber? Log in.Want all of The Times? Subscribe. More