With 2011 coming to an end, its time to name my top ten shows of the year. With LOST going off the air, the number 1 spot was vacant. Without further ado i give to you my top 10 of 2011. In parenthesis you will find the ranking the show had last year. NR= Not Rated
Honorable Mention: I usually don't do an honorable mention category because it feels like such a cop out, but then i realized i was going to have a top 10 list without Chuck on it. Sure Chuck had a down season for its standards, but it still ended with a bang and they first few episodes of what is for certain the last season has given us hope for an epic finish to what has been a fantastic ride.
10. Modern Family (6) - While the ratings have not suffered for Modern Family, i do think the quality has just a bit. Back in season 1, almost every episode was a hit, but now it seems like the have an off episode every couple of weeks. The good episodes however are still among some of the best stuff on TV.
9. Its Always Sunny In Philadelphia (NR) It is really rare for a show to have one of its strongest seasons so far into its run, but the Sunny crew did just that. Every episode was a winner with the exception of "Franks Brother" and fat Mac really was the joke that kept on giving
8. Curb Your Enthusiasm (NR) Curb came back from an extremely long hiatus in a big way. "The Palestinian Chicken," "The Vow of Silence" and "Mister Softee" were 100% pure, concentrated "Curb" brilliance, and the rest of the episodes were strong to. The New York setting really gave the show some new life.
7. Sons Of Anarchy (NR) Last season, i disliked SOA until the season finale. This season was reversed as i thought it was a brilliant season that only suffered because of a lame, rushed finale. I do like where the show seems to be going next season and there was enough fantastic acting with the addition of Rockmond Dunbar to the ensemble to overcome a bad finale
6. Homeland (NR) The only rookie show to make it on my list. Homeland is such a great blend of tension plot and character development. Featuring to award caliber performances by its 2 leads (Claire Daines and Damien Lewis) This is a show i can only see moving up the ranks next year.
5. Community (4) When "Community" is at its very best (the D&D episode, the fake clip
show, the alternate timelines), almost nothing else on TV can touch it. The only down episodes they have tend to be when the show gets over ambitious, and there is no shame in that. NBC should feel very dumb about leaving this gem off there winter schedule in favor of crap like "Whitney"
4. Louie (10) This is a comedy that decided in a later season it would probably
rather be a drama - and got better as a result. Like "Community," here
was a series where you never knew exactly what kind of show you'd be
tuning into in any given week - and one that tended to have a higher
batting average on its experiments. What made "Louie" unlike everything else on television, was its powerful, unmistakable
authorial voice. It's not just that Louis CK writes, directs, edits and
helps score every episode, on top of being the only actor to appear
every week. It's that the show is so unapologetically shown through his
worldview, which is at once self-lacerating and yet surprisingly
openhearted.
3. Parks and Recreation (5) Its usually very hard for a straight up half hour comedy to crack my top 10. But as the months went along, the harder it became for me to ignore what an
absolutely transcendent year "Parks and Recreation" was having. The
spring episodes comprised the most flawless, satisfying comedy season
I'd witnessed in years, and while the fall episodes have had a few
stumbles], overall it's
been a very strong season, and one that quietly, brilliantly built
towards last week's fantastic Christmas episode, which summed up all the
reasons why this is my number one comedy show of the year.
2. Friday Night Lights (2) Holding steady at number 2 in its final year. Even if I'm only counting the six episodes that DirecTV aired from
January on, this was still an epic, moving farewell to the people of
Dillon, TX . Almost everyone got a happy ending, but with
enough bitter to keep the sweet from being overwhelming . We
were reminded again and again why Eric and Tami Taylor are among the
most realistic, compelling married couples in TV history, and in Michael
B. Jordan's Vince, we got a latter-day character who wound up as rich
and memorable as the kids we met in the first season. Thanks to the
DirecTV deal, we got five seasons of "Friday Night Lights" where it
otherwise might have ended after that unfortunate second one. And now we
have so many great memories from the show that I will remember. Always
and always and always.
1. Breaking Bad (3) With Lost going off the air, the number 1 spot was wide open, and boy did Breaking Bad grab that spot with authority. Season after season, the thing that impresses me most about "Breaking
Bad" - yes, more than Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul's acting, more than
the gorgeous cinematography, more than the moments that make me gasp and
the others that make me laugh - is simply the patience of it. Vince
Gilligan and company will take their time, thank you, and they will make
everything better for making you wait. Just think about the boxcutter
scene from the season premiere: what Gus (Giancarlo Esposito, brilliant
all season) does with the boxcutter itself is riveting, but what makes
the scene immortal is what happens before and after, when we watch him
dress and undress twice, just because that's how Gus rolls and
because Walt and Jesse have to sit there and watch him do it (twice). Or
think of how carefully the show doled out Gus's backstory, until a lot
of viewer sympathy swung wildly away from Walt and towards Gus. Think of
how perfectly three seasons of hearing Tio Salamca ring that bell paid
off in the season finale. This is a show that moves carefully, thinks
through all the angles and then smacks you upside the head and down with
its genius. If "Breaking Bad" season 3 put the show into consideration
for the all-time pantheon, season 4 confirmed that the show belongs
there. And if you don't believe me, ask The One Who Knocks
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