Netflix, All4, Vimeo, YouTube... The best TV shows to binge-watch on the web

Summer is gone and the evenings are drawing in – fear not, there's a lot of great TV out there to get you through the coming months


In the old days we circled our favourite shows in newspaper television listings (ask your grandparents about these) and made ourselves available by appointment with John Logie Baird’s “televisor” or a Pathé newsreel.

Now we lock ourselves into our bedrooms for days on end with survivalist levels of confectionery, gorging on whole serials in one go. Okay, maybe I’m speaking for myself here.

If not, here are some of the best comedy and drama series on the internet for your binge-viewing pleasure. And we’ll see you in a few weeks.

On the Channel 4 player All4 channel4.com/programmes/boxsets (free, but there are ads):

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The Adam and Joe Show

In the 1990s, before the internet gathered us all together, pop-cultural ephemera and snark was amassed by lone obsessives in bedsits. Adam Buxton and Joe Cornish (co-writer of Ant-Man) recreated such a bedsit for us in The Adam and Joe Show, where mass culture was lampooned and blockbuster films were re-enacted with toys.

Nathan Barley

Chris Morris and Charlie Brooker’s 2005 sitcom about a networked, graffiti-loving “self-facilitating media node” (Nicholas Burns) – or, in Brooker’s words, “a meaningless, strutting cadaver-in-waiting” – is even funnier in the post-hipster era. Watching it now, doesn’t Barley’s tormentee, the hairy, ageing, world-weary, print journalist Dan Ashcroft (Julian Barratt), seem strangely noble and tragic? Just me, then.

Toast of London

Scripted by Arthur Matthews and Matt Berry, this follows the erratic and erotic adventures of jobbing actor Steven Toast (Berry) as he thwarts his enemy Ray Purchase, sleeps with Ray’s wife, Mrs Purchase, and generally fails gloriously at everything he does.

Fresh Meat

Peep Show writers Jesse Armstrong and Sam Bain mine their own college experiences for a surprisingly sweet comedy drama about a motley crew of flat-sharing college students. Despite all the laptops and smartphones it feels very like 1995 to me.

Peep Show

Also watch Peep Show, a slightly more embarrassing flatshare comedy about slightly older people (David Mitchell and Robert Webb) who make terrible decisions.

Brass Eye

Don’t watch the news! Watch the hysterical, graphically-enhanced, turbo news that Chris Morris created in the 1990s as a satire, and which the real news has seemingly taken as a template ever since.

Misfits

Five delinquents are hit by magic lightning, gaining superpowers (time-travel, invisibility, telepathy) much like what happens in real life. Unlike their Marvel Universe counterparts, their newfound power is not accompanied by a sense of responsibility, and over five series we see the very funny, sometimes disturbing and often sad consequences.

Skins

The often-maligned teen drama makes a strangely ethereal, adult-less fantasy world out of teenage existence. It's more Peter Pan with drugs in it than the gritty, realist drama some critics mistook it for.

Queer as Folk

Before he relaunched Doctor Who, Russell T Davies wrote about hapless Doctor Who fan Vince (Craig Kelly) and his sexually confident friend and crush Stuart (Aidan Gillen) in this groundbreaking drama about gay men in 1990s Manchester (this was remade with terrible results in America).

This is England 86 and This is England 88

Televised follow-ups to Shane Meadows’s bittersweet indie film about young skinheads, this semi-improvised series (that is Meadows’s way) follow the same characters through a series of youth movements, coming-of-age experiences and tragedies. Another instalment has recently finished shooting, so catch up now.

Utopia

Dennis Kelly’s witty, visually inventive sci-fi drama has an ensemble cast and a labyrinthine plot that thrives on internet conspiracy theories and comic-book coloured ultra-violence. It’s brilliant.

On Netflix, available from €7.99 a month:

Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt

Tina Fey and Robert Carlock's first post- 30 Rock production is an NBC rejected, Netflix-embraced sitcom about a former cult member Kimmy (Ellie Kemper) making her way, Mary Tyler Moore style, in New York City. It's delightfully cartoonish on the surface but has, at its core, an optimistic but traumatised former kidnap victim. The darkness makes us laugh harder.

It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia

Five dysfunctional dirtbags run a bar and make terrible decisions. Whereas Seinfeld featured sociopathic characters trying to navigate societal conventions, the Always Sunny "gang" are "fringe class" and entirely untethered from any societal conventions or, indeed, reason. Watch them sink further and further into hilarious depravity.

Community

Dan Harmon's sitcom about misfit community college students manages to engage in absurdist postmodern riffs on TV tropes and internet fan culture without losing any sitcom warmth. Skip the fourth season ("the gas-leak year" as it's referred to within the show), when the show's troubled creator was put on an enforced sabbatical (he returned for season five) and instead watch Harmontown, a documentary that follows him on a tour of the country. Series six, frustratingly, is only on Yahoo! Screen, which, like Amazon Prime, isn't available in Ireland.

Bojack Horseman

A self-hating cartoon horse (Will Arnett) in a world of anthropomorphic animals and humans who was formerly the star of a sitcom called Horsin' Around now struggles to find meaning and purpose in his dissolute life. Just roll with it. It's very funny and unexpectedly moving and there are now two whole series to watch.

Adventure Time

A cartoon about a superpowered dog called Jake and a human called Finn who rush around the excitingly strange Studio Ghibli/ Ren and Stimpy-influenced Land of Ooo. Okay, this is technically for children, but a melancholy, post-apocalyptic backstory regularly intrudes on Jake and Finn's grotesquely odd, relentlessly upbeat adventures. Adventure Time is very funny and there's a batch of episodes on Netflix.

Orphan Black

A BBC America drama about a punky huckster who observes the suicide of her exact double, adopts her identity and discovers a world of conspiracy and clones. The amazing Canadian actress Tatiana Maslany plays many, many recurring roles. The great Irish actress Maria Doyle Kennedy plays just one role, but does so very well.

Better Call Saul

Vince Gilligan and Peter Gould explore the backstory of Breaking Bad's Saul Goodman (Bob Odenkirk). Breaking Bad was the story of a respectable chemistry teacher becoming an evil druglord. Better Call Saul tells a seemingly less dramatic tale of how a conscience-stricken crook, Jimmy McGill, becomes a conscience-free lawyer, Saul Goodman. With a heartbreakingly sweet performance from Bob Odenkirk, it's more impressionistically plotted and less predictable than Breaking Bad. This might be heresy, but I think I prefer it.

Breaking Bad

Also watch the aforedescribed Breaking Bad. You're the only person who hasn't seen it.

Daredevil

A masochistic, blind lawyer wears a mask and gets beaten up a lot. That’s his thing. Forget those otherworldy heroes fighting extra-terrestrials, Matt Murdock (Charlie Cox) assaults muggers in alleyways and thwarts lovelorn crime boss Wilson Fisk, (Vincent D’Onofrio). Poor Wilson. Beneath the murdering and mayhem, he just wants to gentrify Hell’s Kitchen. He’s an entrepreneur, goddammit!

Orange is the New Black

Piper Kerman’s memoir about a middle-class white girl going to jail frames a deceptively diverse set of stories about race, class, gender and the industrial prison complex. Or, if that sounds boring, this is a funny, moving boarding-school story set in a prison.

Other corners of the internet:

High Maintenance

Vimeo’s first original series tells comic, tragi-comic and sweet short stories about a diverse array of New York citizens connected only by a recurring marijuana-dealing bit-player called “the guy” (co-writer Ben Sinclair). It’s not quite like anything else on television or the internet. Much like the drug-dealers of myth, Vimeo offers the first batch of episodes for free, but then you have to pay.

Broad City 

Abbi Jackson and Ilana Glazer’s very funny, charmingly depraved sitcom about clueless youngsters in a heightened, slightly absurd New York started as an internet phenomenon, and all those early “webisodes” are still available to watch on YouTube

Last Week Tonight with John Oliver

John Oliver’s US-focused comedy news show is uploaded every Monday to YouTube so you can bingewatch the collected work and be ridiculously, entertainingly well-informed about US politics, while being slightly more clueless about what’s going on closer to home.

Too Many Cooks

It's not quite like bingeing on a whole series, but Casper Kelly's one-off Adult Swim video Too Many Cooks, an 11-minute descent into credit-sequence-themed madness, will make you feel like you've binged on something, possibly paint thinner or mescaline. I still can't tell if it's good or not. Nonetheless, I watch it once a day. youtube.com/watch?v=QrGrOK8oZG8