-->

Xin chào đã ghé thăm blog giamgia.review! Bạn có cần giúp đỡ gì không?

Facebook Messenger ×

4. Broad City (Comedy Central)

The 4 Best TV Shows of 2015
 Broad City has had to bear a lot of weight as a culturally significant show, but amid that (justified) scrutiny it's easy to forget the best thing about the show: it's hilarious. The second season found best friends Abbi and Ilana increasingly liberated to do whatever they hell they wanted, and the results were dynamite. In a single episode, a perfectly cast Susie Essman and Bob Balaban stole the show as Ilana's parents while Abbi floundered in a delightfully sex-positive, pitch-perfect plot about pegging. More like that, please


See Also:
Top 4 Women’s Magazines
Top 4 TV Shows
Top 4 Entertainment

3. iZombie (The CW)

The 4 Best TV Shows of 2015
There's been a lot of talk about great second seasons on TV this year, but iZombie has taken maybe the biggest leap of all. Throwing nearly every cliche genre on the air (zombies, cops, forensic medical drama, zippy dialogue) into a blender has somehow produced an effortless blend of engaging procedural stories, long-term plotting, and some of the most interesting, layered characters on TV. Also, zombie puns. Lots of zombie puns.


2. Inside Amy Schumer (Comedy Central) 


The 4 Best TV Shows of 2015
Amy Schumer was ubiquitous this year: on movie screens in Trainwreck, at awards ceremonies, on Twitter. But the core of her appeal continues to be her eponymous sketch show, and that's where she shone brightest. Take the episode-length, dildo-filled 12 Angry Men parody, in which a jury of men debated whether the largely-unseen Schumer was hot enough to be on TV. It's a question that no one should have to answer—but just asking it, and interrogating the assumptions men bring to their media consumption in the process, was—no matter your feelings on Schumer's comedy—undeniably powerful.

1. Jessica Jones (Netflix)

The 4 Best TV Shows of 2015
Finally, a superhero show that feels like it's actually about something. Jessica Jones isn't perfect—the pacing is a little sluggish at times—but it's a compelling, brutal treatment of the consequences of superpowers. The conflict between Krysten Ritter's Jessica Jones and David Tennant's Kilgrave is mesmerizing. Best of all, the show is fiercely confident in its assumption of womanhood (and subsequent hilarious lack of respect for men).

http://www.wired.com/2015/12/15-best-tv-shows-2015/

Chia sẻ bài viết:

Bài viết liên quan: