The 30 best dramas, comedies and documentaries of 2026 so far
If you're looking for something new to watch, look no further - these shows are the best of the best from 2026.

From the moment 2026 kicked off with the release of Dennis Kelly's brilliant new series Waiting for the Out, we knew we were in for a good year of TV.
In the three months which have followed, we have already got some searing dramas, seriously fun thrillers, hilarious comedies and insightful documentaries.
We may only be in March, but it already felt like time to compile a list of the best shows of the year so far as we head into spring – featuring series such as Heated Rivalry, Lord of the Flies, the Scrubs reboot and A Woman of Substance.
So what are you waiting for? Read on for our full list of the best TV shows of 2026 so far, including where you can watch them in both the UK and the US.
Waiting for the Out
There is layer upon layer of satisfying dramatic sophistication in this new series by the playwright Dennis Kelly, whose eclectic TV CV consists of the Sharon Horgan sitcom Pulling, startling Channel 4 conspiracy thriller Utopia and the Jude Law-led folk horror The Third Day. This is much more what you’d expect from a writer known mostly for theatre, since it includes long, talky scenes set in the prison philosophy classes led by Dan (Josh Finan), a clever but nervous young man whose troubled background has left him with obsessive behaviours and a limited capacity to cope with adulthood.
As Dan’s class of prisoners challenge his attempts to school them on Locke, Descartes and the rest - either because they don’t have any knowledge of academic philosophy, or because they do - the conversations shape Dan as much as they do the inmates. Kelly’s deft, wise script is equalled by a lead performance from Finan - so good in The Responder and Say Nothing, and grabbing a bigger chance here - that delicately brings all of Dan’s vulnerability and strength to life. Waiting for the Out will tickle your brain in a way that few dramas can. Jack Seale
- Where to watch in the UK: BBC iPlayer
- Where to watch in the US: N/A
A Thousand Blows season 2
One of last year’s best dramas was already back in 2026 for a second season, but now with two of its three central characters beginning the new run in the doldrums. East London in the 1880s, one year on from where we left it, is a harsh environment for Jamaican immigrant Hezekiah (Malachi Kirby) and the former king of the bareknuckle boxing scene, Sugar (Stephen Graham). But as before, their existences are shaken up by Mary (an unstoppable performance by the brilliant Erin Doherty), the leader of all-female pickpocket gang the Forty Elephants. Her new plan of action pitches them all back into that familiar Thousand Blows world of street menace, cruel hard luck and a sense that this is a time where, for the ambitious, anything is possible. Jack Seale
- Where to watch in the UK: Disney+
- Where to watch in the US: Hulu
His & Hers
We're always on the lookout for a good twist on standard crime drama fare, and this US series has one: Jon Bernthal is a troubled cop investigating the murder of a woman in sultry Georgia, and Tessa Thompson is a fading TV news presenter who is revitalised by her own interest in the case, the catch being that... they're estranged spouses. As the two of them sift through a list of suspects and end up suspecting each other, the parallel dynamics of media and law enforcement mean the show has several sources of intrigue. Jack Seale
- Where to watch in the UK: Netflix
- Where to watch in the US: Netflix
Heated Rivalry

If you’re under the age of, say, 25, you’ll have heard plenty about this Canadian drama already - and perhaps seen videos on social media of people “reacting” to the instantly notorious “shower scene”. It’s the story, told across a number of years beginning in 2008, of young ice hockey stars Shane Hollander (Hudson Williams) and Ilya Rozanov (Connor Storrie), whose rivalry becomes the dominant narrative in press coverage of the Major League. What fans and reporters don’t know is that the Canadian and the Russian are embarking on a torrid, halting love affair behind the scenes.
Yes, there are a lot of sex scenes, but this is something much more than trash titillation: commentators have applauded the way the show deals with the affair itself – one participant is more at home with their sexuality than the other – and the different strains of homophobia in both Russia and the West. Jack Seale
- Where to watch in the UK: Sky and NOW
- Where to watch in the US: HBO Max
Industry season 4
When Industry started in 2020, you wouldn’t have put money on a drama about grift in high finance making it to a fourth season. It was great – and still is. But the dialogue is like a cryptic crossword, the characters rarely likeable and most episodes have at least one scene that smacks you in the face with a bedroom kink or humiliation.
It turns out there’s a market for that. Industry has grown and grown. The tone is as spiky as ever, but with our ensemble of City traders now scattered. Harper is running a short fund but (as in every previous job) hamstrung by people who aren’t as smart as her. Her former boss, Eric, is playing golf on a course where “47” (ie President Trump) is blocking his path. And heiress Yasmin is now installed as Lady Yasmin Muck. (The series likes Dickensian names.) The opening episode introduces new characters tussling over a payment app called Tender, whose CEO at one point orders a cocktail “bone dry and cold as space”. It could be the motto of the series. David Butcher
- Where to watch in the UK: BBC iPlayer
- Where to watch in the US: HBO Max
Agatha Christie’s Seven Dials
This is Agatha Christie on high-spirited form, her 1920s-set story of Bright Young Things dicing with danger more similar in tone to Why Didn’t They Ask Evans? than to any of the traditional mysteries featuring Miss Marple or Poirot for which she’s best remembered.
Light on clue-finding but strong on a sense of youthful adventure, it takes its wilful aristocratic heroine Lady Eileen “Bundle” Brent (a well-cast Mia McKenna Bruce) on a caper from a country estate to a shady London nightclub as she pursues a murderer with possible links to the worlds of espionage and secret societies.
If all this sounds too far-fetched to be credible, then the same thought must have struck screenwriter Chris Chibnall (Broadchurch, Doctor Who) who, following a slightly sedate opening hour, leans increasingly into the romping, light-heartedness of the plot. In this endeavour, he has able assistance from Helena Bonham Carter (as Bundle’s sardonic mother Lady Caterham) and Martin Freeman (playing dry, wry Superintendent Battle) – both actors pitching their performances just the right side of parody. David Brown
- Where to watch in the UK: Netflix
- Where to watch in the US: Netflix
Hijack season 2
To find yourself embroiled in one high-stakes hostage situation would be considered ill fortune. But for it to happen a second time…well, that sounds like a huge contrivance. But lightning-strikes-twice syndrome never did Die Hard or Under Siege any real harm. And to be fair to Idris Elba, this fresh outing for Hijack does find a credible and surprising reason for immersing his business negotiator turned action man Sam Nelson in more mayhem.
The setting the last time around was a flight from Dubai to London, whereas here Sam is trapped on the Berlin underground rail network with increasingly nervy commuters and tourists. With trips on planes having already proven dangerous and trains now appearing equally perilous, Sam would surely be wise to also stay away from automobiles in any future third season. David Brown
- Where to watch in the UK: Apple TV
- Where to watch in the US: Apple TV
A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms
Nearly seven years after Game of Thrones ended, we’re back in Westeros for our second spin-off (following prequel House of the Dragon, which returns for series three later this year). But this tale, adapted from short stories written by Thrones author George RR Martin is a less grand affair than its predecessors. Leaving the noble Targaryens and Baratheons in the background, the series instead focuses on Dunk, a working-class lad who’s become a Knight – albeit a very poor one – known as ‘Ser Duncan the Tall’. When his master dies, Dunk decides to risk his remaining horses and money at a local tournament. He’s so down-at-heel he doesn’t even have a squire, so when a mysterious bald lad named Egg offers to help out, he’s not too choosy.
Westeros is still a bleak, violent medieval world, but Dunk and Egg are more optimistic heroes than we’ve come to expect from Thrones, brought to life winningly by two newcomers, former rugby player Peter Claffey and 11-year-old Dexter Sol Ansell. Huw Fullerton
- Where to watch in the UK: Sky and NOW
- Where to watch in the US: HBO Max
Under Salt Marsh

Were it not swimming dangerously close to the title of an ITV1 drama, this moody whodunnit could have been called Before the Flood, as the small Welsh town in which it’s set is bracing itself for a once-in-a-generation storm that threatens livelihoods and maybe lives themselves.
The advancing sea serves also to highlight the fragility of this close-knit but secretive community, something that’s intensified by ex-police detective-turned-teacher Jackie Ellis (Kelly Reilly) discovering the seemingly drowned body of one of her young pupils. It’s a blow that brings to the surface silty memories of a distressing cold case, one that has especial resonance for Jackie. And the reappearance of her former partner from the force, Eric Bull (Rafe Spall), adds to the feeling of the past breaching the present in strange, unsettling ways. David Brown
- Where to watch in the UK: Sky and NOW
- Where to watch in the US: N/A
Bridgerton season 4
The queen of modern period dramas returns, in typically mischievous mood: a masked ball allows numerous members of the "ton" to play around with their established public personae or break the rules entirely. Acting up more than anyone is tricky second Bridgerton son Benedict (Luke Thompson), who begins the season in a messy boudoir with two women of dubious standing, to the horror of his mother, Lady Violet (Ruth Gemmell) - put under pressure to marry properly, Benedict falls in love at the ball, the two slight snags being that he doesn't know who his new paramour is, and that when he does find out, she's a maid named Sophie (Yerin Ha).
The first half of season four sees Bridgerton follow, as always, an on/off romance, this time with an upstairs/downstairs dynamic that gives the show a different feel; but while the staff of the various houses do play a more central role in the complex interpersonal shenanigans, we still get plenty of high-society sass. And the normally fussy Lady Violet herself might be about to loosen her corset… Jack Seale
- Where to watch in the UK: Netflix
- Where to watch in the US: Netflix
Shrinking season 3
One of the warmest, sharpest comedy dramas on telly slips straight back into the old groove as season 3 begins, reuniting us with a gang of Los Angeles friends who love each other dearly and tease each other remorselessly. Paul (Harrison Ford) faces the worsening of his Parkinson's disease, although a meeting with another patient, Jerry - a lovely cameo by Michael J Fox - helps him focus. As a special occasion looms, Paul is part of several storylines where characters come to a realisation about their own emotions, with a little help from their friends: the classic Shrinking set-up, in other words, and all of them are resolved with the usual deft bittersweetness, from teenager Alice (Lukita Maxwell) potentially leaving home to self-absorbed lawyer Brian (Michael Urie) facing the sacrifices and compromises of parenthood. The closing scene will, very gently and affectionately of course, knock you sideways. Jack Seale
- Where to watch in the UK: Apple TV
- Where to watch in the US: Apple TV
The Lincoln Lawyer season 4
A smoothly entertaining legal drama with a strong pedigree - it's the creation of David E Kelley (LA Law, Big Little Lies), based on books by Michael Connelly (Bosch) - has its fans on tenterhooks after an explosive third season. The fourth run begins with Mickey (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo), the criminal defence attorney who works out of his car, on trial himself on account of the corpse that had turned up in the boot of said vehicle the last time we saw him. Constance Zimmer and Cobie Smulders join the cast for these new episodes. Jack Seale
- Where to watch in the UK: Netflix
- Where to watch in the US: Netflix
Lord of the Flies
William Golding’s multi-award-winning novel about a group of schoolboys stranded on a desert island powerfully demonstrates how, without the restraints of society’s rules, humans can easily sink into moral decay.
It starts post-plane crash with Piggy (David McKenna), the asthmatic intellectual of the group, and elected leader Ralph (Winston Sawyers) sensibly suggesting plans for survival. However, without any grown-ups around most of the other youngsters are more interested in play fighting, teasing each other, showing off and having fun than building a shelter. Power-hungry Jack (Lox Pratt), despite his initially angelic appearance, preys on this, quickly learning that the more savage he becomes, the more he can control them.
There have been two, very different, cinematic versions of this 1954 classic (Peter Brook’s 1963 black and white film and Harry Hook’s contemporary version in 1990) but Adolescence writer Jack Thorne’s nuanced adaptation remains faithful to the original. Director Marc Munden gives the production a confident, cinematic quality and its young cast, most of whom are making their professional acting debuts, are astonishingly good. Jane Rackham
- Where to watch in the UK: BBC iPlayer
- Where to watch in the US: N/A
Small Prophets

Middle-aged Michael Sleep (Pearce Quigley) shows signs of giving up. His garden, like his beard, is overgrown, he eats unhealthily and he drives a clapped-out Ford Capri to work, where he’s just going through the motions. We learn that his partner Clea disappeared seven years previously, and life has been on hold ever since. There is magic to be found in the mundane, however, as you’d expect from the same fertile mind that gave us Detectorists.
Michael and DIY store colleague Kacey (Lauren Patel) bond over their dislike of boss Gordon, a joyless jobsworth played by show writer Mackenzie Crook. And, despite the fact that his father Brian (Michael Palin) is in a care home, theirs is a close relationship (going sweetly against the grain of spiky father-son pairings on TV). Brian even thinks he can help Michael get answers about Clea. By mysterious, alchemical means...
Although a portrait of loss and loneliness, Small Prophets is also about hope and friendship. It goes somewhere courageously different, but underlying its fantastical furniture is a deeply human story. It’s another winner from Crook. Mark Braxton
- Where to watch in the UK: BBC iPlayer
- Where to watch in the US: N/A
How to Get to Heaven from Belfast
At first glance, Derry Girls creator Lisa McGee’s new series – which sees a group of schoolfriends from Northern Ireland reuniting decades after their glory days – feels like familiar ground. In fact, you could almost map each of the three leads onto a grown-up Derry Girl. Screenwriter Saoirse (Roisin Gallagher) has more than a hint of the try-hard Erin, bolshy Robyn (Sinéad Keenan) recalls the ruthless Michelle, and even quiet Dara (Caoilfhionn Dunne) has some of the eccentricity of strange cousin Orla. There’s even a slightly useless English fella in the mix.
Similar (excellent) jokes and familiar faces (Keenan, Ardal O’Hanlon and Peter Campion) add to the sense of déjà vu. Still, there is one big difference – this is more mystery thriller than sitcom. Saoirse, Robyn and Dara are brought back together by a death, specifically the passing of their long-estranged fourth friend Greta (Natasha O’Keefe). They suspect foul play from her weird in-laws, but regular flashbacks of burning houses, strange symbols and acts of violence suggest this group might have some other old enemies looking for payback. It adds a touch of Bad Sisters-esque intrigue to McGee’s signature razor-sharp dialogue and gags. Huw Fullerton
- Where to watch in the UK: Netflix
- Where to watch in the US: Netflix
The Night Agent season 3
A word-of-mouth hit for Netflix when it first launched, The Night Agent is still using the same sturdy thriller template in its third season. Once again, Peter Sutherland (Gabriel Basso) is the super-capable, unusually kind intelligence operative - think Jason Bourne, but with a much softer bedside manner - whose off-books investigations lead him to evidence of a conspiracy that goes right to the top. We know the Oval Office is likely to be the centre of the illicit network Peter has to smash because storylines are carrying over from last year, but there's a new cast of villains and plucky, reckless heroes to get to know, as a breathless chase through the streets of Istanbul heralds another grand cover-up where men with guns lurk around every corner and even the most trustworthy people might be compromised, but we are sure that steadfast, humble Peter will prevail in the end - in satisfying, if not particularly groundbreaking, fashion. Jack Seale
- Where to watch in the UK: Netflix
- Where to watch in the US: Netflix
Cecil: The Lion and the Dentist
We all remember the story. When a dentist from Minnesota shot a celebrated African lion in 2015, it sparked a global outcry about trophy hunting. Amid the online fury, some suggested they’d rather see the dentist’s head on a wall. Cecil’s image, meanwhile, was projected on the Empire State Building.
This thoughtful and moving documentary revisits what seemed like a cut-and-dried case of first-world privilege, but keeps adding layers of nuance. You’re left with the feeling that our connection to nature – whether we hunt animals or merely take pictures – is equally shot to pieces.
Dr. Walter Palmer reportedly paid $50,000 for the chance to kill Cecil, who was lured outside the bounds of Zimbabwe’s Hwange nature reserve by an elephant carcass. Palmer used a bow and arrow to shoot from a hide in a nearby tree. “Cecil was delivered to him like a pizza,” says a local conservationist.
It’s a sad tale, but the film keeps expanding the focus to show the hunters’ perspective, how local people live – and die – alongside lions, and the romantic illusions we have about a “wilderness” that is carefully staged. David Butcher
- Where to watch in the UK: Channel 4
- Where to watch in the US: N/A
The Tony Blair Story
Right now, Sir Tony Blair’s reputation is at a low ebb. For many, he is still the slippery centrist who got us into the Iraq War, shifted Labour to the right, laid the ground for our current malaise, and has recently signed up to Donald Trump’s “Board of Peace”. His defenders are thin on the ground.
All of which makes it a good time for an in-depth look at the Blair backstory — his real achievements, and how history will judge him. Step forward Michael Waldman, who has previously brought a mischievous eye for detail to documentaries on Karl Lagerfeld and Boris Johnson’s time in the Foreign Office.
He includes great nuggets here, like the fact Blair’s grandparents were travelling performers, and he has never once bought Cherie flowers. But the core of the programme is its vivid sketch of the young Blair, the seeds of greatness germinating behind that giant grin. David Butcher
- Where to watch in the UK: Channel 4
- Where to watch in the US: N/A
Dirty Business

“It helps when people lie,” says David Thewlis’s character, Ash, in this impactful three-parter. “It’s how you know they’ve got something to hide.” From Toxic Town to Mr Bates vs The Post Office, factual TV dramas have become one of our most potent tools for highlighting corporate malfeasance and giving voice to victims. Based on a decade-long investigation into England’s water companies, this latest one tells the stories of real people who believe their lives have been destroyed by sewage pollution.
Thewlis and Jason Watkins play the unlikely Oxfordshire duo - a former police detective and a biology professor - who notice that fish are dying in their local river and courageously launch their own campaign. What ensues is a belief-beggaring of failure, negligence and human tragedy - including an eight-year-old girl who died after contracting E coli from what her parents believe was illegally dumped human waste on a Devon beach.
The righteously angry narrative skilfully flits between timeframes and cases, between fictionalised scenes, newsreel and graphics. A shocking story powerfully told. Michael Hogan
- Where to watch in the UK: Channel 4
- Where to watch in the US: N/A
The Dunblane Tapes
On 13th March 1996 at Dunblane Primary School, as Ann Pearston later stated to the Labour Party conference with chilling clarity, one pistol fired 105 bullets, killing 17 and injuring 14 in just three minutes. Will Stone’s deeply moving documentary spends just enough time on the massacre itself to establish beyond doubt the trauma it imprinted on the community. The focal point, though, is the Snowdrop Campaign launched by Pearston and others, including the grieving parents, to secure legislation banning all handguns before the return of snowdrops the following year.
What, in retrospect, feels like an inevitability proved anything but, as a noisy and well-funded pro-gun lobby capitalised on a conservative government nervously facing the prospect of electoral wipeout. While the raw grief of the parents is still apparent in powerfully effective home videos, but they also recall their perseverance with no little pride. Who knows how many lives they may have saved? Gabriel Tate
- Where to watch in the UK: Channel 4
- Where to watch in the US: N/A
Scrubs
It's a good 20 years since the heyday of Scrubs, an American medical sitcom that won a committed army of fans - who still enthusiastically share clips and discuss favourite episodes online to this day - with its mix of regular comedy smarts, imaginative interludes and good old-fashioned schmaltz. So for the revival, the main characters can't just pick up where they left off: the new version is about people who are definitely older, if not much wiser. Now JD (Zach Braff) is an experienced enough doctor to mentor a new crop of juniors, just as he was once trained by the impossibly eccentric Dr Cox (John C McGinley) - but Dr Cox is still there, messing with JD's mind as before. Also rejoining is Donald Faison as JD's best pal Turk, with the two of them now trying to rekindle their best-pal shenanigans despite some of their antics being the province of much younger men. Plus there are returns for Sarah Chalke as Elliot and Judy Reyes as Carla. Jack Seale
- Where to watch in the UK: Disney+
- Where to watch in the US: Hulu
Paradise season 2
An Emmy nomination hints that the post-apocalyptic intrigue on offer here is a cut above average, and that's largely thanks to a strong lead performance from Sterling K Brown as Presidential security detail Xavier Collins. At the start of season one, the twist was that a city that seemed normal was in fact a vast underground bunker, constructed by the government as a shelter to be used after a catastrophic event. Since then we've learned what that event was, and who was responsible for the assassination that pitched Collins into a maelstrom of violence and suspicion. But in season two, the show has a new frontier to explore: Collins is going back to the surface to see if his wife - or indeed, anyone - is alive. Jack Seale
- Where to watch in the UK: Disney+
- Where to watch in the US: Hulu
Young Sherlock

17 years after Guy Ritchie first tried his hand at grittier Sherlock Holmes movies starring Robert Downey Jr and Jude Law, the director’s back behind the camera for this new TV series – but this Holmes isn’t yet the famed detective we all know. Instead, the pre-Baker street Sherlock (played by Hero Fiennes Tiffin) is a bit of a wastrel, regularly in and out of prison. Eventually, big brother Mycroft (Max Irons) snaps and gets him a job as a servant at Oxford University, where Sherlock stumbles on a conspiracy and makes a new pal – a brilliant undergraduate named James Moriarty.
This series has all the hallmarks of a Guy Ritchie production – action, fistfights, deadpan gags – and plenty of deductions and red herrings to satisfy the mystery fans. There’s also a neat family connection, with Sherlock’s dad Silas played by Fiennes Tiffin’s real uncle Joseph Fiennes (his other uncle is Ralph Fiennes – quite a dynasty). It’s just a shame that relative newcomer Fiennes Tiffin seems more stilted than savvy as Sherlock, especially in contrast to the sharp, funny performance by Donal Finn as future nemesis Moriarty. Huw Fullerton
- Where to watch in the UK: Prime Video
- Where to watch in the US: Prime Video
Vladimir
Campus comedies have their own brand of waspish mischief, as exemplified by a sharp miniseries made by Sharon Horgan's production company and based on the hit novel by Julia May Jonas. Rachel Weisz is an unnamed literature professor at a liberal arts college who has always been the coolest teacher in her workplace, thanks to a cult novel she once wrote - but as middle age approaches she feels her academic and womanly powers waning. Step forward hot young colleague Vladimir (Leo Woodall), on whom all the professor's fantasies are about to be unleashed. As sexy chaos reigns, Weisz's constant breaking of the fourth wall means we're as guilty as she is. Jack Seale
- Where to watch in the UK: Netflix
- Where to watch in the US: Netflix
The Capture season 3
The third series of the compelling surveillance thriller that taps into our anxieties about the world of deep fake manipulation, takes our fears up to stratospheric levels. How can we ever believe what we’re seeing? And how scary is it that terrorists always seem to be one step ahead with technology?
Fortunately, former detective now acting head of counter terrorism Rachel Carey (Holliday Grainger) with the support of the charismatic Home Secretary and rising star Isaac Turner (Paapa Essiedu) is launching a smarter surveillance system capable of catching live deep fakes in action. A heart-stopping situation at Heathrow airport demonstrates that it’s working. Except then it all goes horribly, shockingly wrong.
A top-notch cast including Ron Perlman, Indira Varma, Andrew Buchan, Lia Williams and Hugh Quarshie keep up the tension through the dizzying twists and turns. Even if you don’t usually subscribe to conspiracy theories, it seems safer to trust nobody and suspect everybody while your jaw will drop to the floor on more than one occasion. It’s alarming, very alarming indeed. Jane Rackham
- Where to watch in the UK: BBC iPlayer
- Where to watch in the US: N/A, seasons 1-2 on Peacock
A Woman of Substance
Poverty, passion and power: Barbara Taylor Bradford’s rags to riches saga has it all so was a major success when it was published in 1979. The 1985 TV version (starring Jenny Seagrove and Deborah Kerr) was watched by over 13 million people.
Here the magnificent Brenda Blethyn plays the fabulously wealthy Emma Harte who has dedicated her whole life to revenge (while also becoming a global business tycoon) and Jessica Reynolds is young Emma, a lowly yet resourceful kitchen maid working at the Fairley family’s grand Yorkshire mansion in the early 1900s.
The opening episode concentrates mainly on the relentless hardship, cruelty and misery young Emma endures. No wonder she’s taken in by the sweet words of young Edwin (Ewan Horrocks) who persuades her “we are the same” while we at home are indignantly screaming “no you’re not!” at the screen.
Among the familiar faces in this enjoyable adaptation are Will Mellor, Emmet J Scanlan, Lenny Rush and Leanne Best. Jane Rackham
- Where to watch in the UK: Channel 4
- Where to watch in the US: N/A
Louis Theroux: Inside the Manosphere
Marginal cultures may have once been his bread and butter, but as Louis Theroux highlights here, the fringe is no longer fringe. And such is the speed of change online that those whose noxious views you’d hope would be of niche interest are now galvanising millions. Such is the situation in the so-called manosphere where misogyny is being rebranded as salvation for the purpose - so Theroux suspects - of making money for a handful of savvy male influencers.
To test this theory, he makes the acquaintance of such now-globally recognised names as HStikkytokky (real name: Harrison Sullivan), Myron Gaines and Justin Waller to probe both their business models and psychologies. What he finds are guys with often troubled backstories, whose trauma has now morphed into anti-feminist messaging. But the image of wealth and power they project is, as we discover, illusory and out of reach for most followers. David Brown
- Where to watch in the UK: Netflix
- Where to watch in the US: Netflix
The Other Bennet Sister

Pride and Prejudice as seen through the bespectacled eyes of Mary (Ella Bruccoleri), the bookish Bennet sibling who, in Jane Austen’s novel, is all piety and heavy notes on the pianoforte.
In comparison to the spirited Elizabeth (Poppy Gilbert) and shining Jane (Maddie Close), Mary is socially awkward and is described here by her overbearing mother (Ruth Jones) as both clumsy and ungainly. Her expected role at balls is not to dance reels, but to fetch drinks, the priority for Mrs B to marry off her daughters who dazzle rather than pay any attention to the one who appears austere.
But in this vibrant adaptation of Janice Hadlow’s bestseller, a light is shone on this sidelined family member, as we witness the emotional toll of being socially eclipsed. Mary’s reaction to being left on the margins is to bury herself in education. But already we sense that studying may not be a ladder out of loneliness so much as a bunker within it. David Brown
- Where to watch in the UK: BBC iPlayer
- Where to watch in the US: Britbox from 6 May
Storyville: Portrait of a Confused Father
Prepare to be floored by this elegiac film about a father-son bond that is abruptly torn apart. Norwegian documentary maker Gunnar Hall Jensen films his son Jonathan obsessively over 20 years, watching him grow from a baby to a boy – and then to a handsome young man with a “wild flow of energy” and a short temper.
That in itself could make a compelling film, but from the start there’s something else – that Jonathan will die before his time, though we don’t know how. As the story goes on, we see the emotional distance between father and son grow. Then things take a darker turn as Jonathan rebels, runs away to Brazil and is “swallowed up by a digital reality with twisted rules for how a man should succeed in the world”. In the end it’s a riveting watch and a deep, sad film about fatherhood, restlessness and failure. David Butcher
- Where to watch in the UK: BBC iPlayer
- Where to watch in the US: N/A
LOL: Last One Laughing UK season 2
The “straight face” Olympics returns, with a whole new cast of comics (plus series one champion Bob Mortimer) locked in a room together and banned from laughing or even cracking a smile. It’s clearly torture for Alan Carr, who could barely get through an episode of Celebrity Traitors without dissolving into giggles and here looks like he’s on the cusp of collapse every time he’s onscreen.
David Mitchell, meanwhile, seems professionally embarrassed by having to be so rude to his peers by not reacting to their material. “It’s like lots of delicious food that we just look at and throw away,” he sighs at one point, after another great comedy routine plays to dead silence. Still, when someone does break in the second of these first three episodes, it’s genuinely spectacular – I don’t think I’ve ever heard a laugh like it. The crew must have been torn between calling a doctor or an exorcist. Huw Fullerton
- Where to watch in the UK: Prime Video
- Where to watch in the US: Prime Video
Check out more of our Drama coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what's on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.
Authors

James Hibbs is a Drama Writer for Radio Times, covering programmes across both streaming platforms and linear channels. He previously worked in PR, first for a B2B agency and subsequently for international TV production company Fremantle. He possesses a BA in English and Theatre Studies and an NCTJ Level 5 Diploma in Journalism.





