The 20 best shows on Paramount Plus to watch right now

Anson Mount as Pike in Star Trek: Strange New Worlds
(Image credit: Paramount+)

If you're looking for a list of the best shows on Paramount Plus, then you're in the rꦰight place! On this page we've pulled together 20 of our favorꦦite series that are available to watch right now on the streamer.

Although Paramount Plus isn't quite as big as Netflix, Disney Plus, or Prime Video, it's certainly one of the 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:best streaming services – especially if you're a f🌳an of great TV. As well as being the home of the Star Trek shows, it has an incredible selection of comedy, both new and old, not to mention the Yellowstone franchise, and ⛦plenty of superb standalone series.

We started out with a list of 10 shows and now we've expanded it to 20 – and we're not quite done yet! In the meantime, when you've finished here, why not check out our lists of the 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:best Hulu shows or the 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:best Max shows.

20. 1923

Harrison Ford as Jacob Dutton and Helen Mirren as Cara Dutton in 1923.

(Image credit: Paramount Plus)

There's no arguing with the cꦚasting of this Yellowstone prequel, which stars Harrison Ford and Helen Mirren, alongside former James Bond Timothy Dalton👍. Set in 1923 (obviously), the series follows the ever-troubled Dutton family through a period of great change and hardship in Montana.

For fans of Taylor Sheridan's Western franchis🥀e this will be reassuringly familiar stuff. That's no bad thing, though. Tough and excitin🧔g, 1923 also expands the scope of the saga, moving some of the action outside of the States with subplots set in Africa and at sea. And there's no doubt that casting a pair of bona fide movie legends in the leads lends the show some real class and gravitas.

19. Tulsa King

Sylvester Stallone as Dwight "The General" Manfredi in Tulsa King.

(Image credit: SkyShowtime / Paramount Plus)

Year: 2022
Seasons: 2

Rocky star Sylvester Stallone made the move to TV with this two-fisted crime drama. Stallone plays Dwight "The General" Manfredi, a New York mobster who has ju♚st served 25 long years in prison for murder. On his release he moves to Tulsa and tries to start again – but that's going to mean dealing with a nasty biker gang and figuring out his relationship with Stacy Beale (Andrea Savage), an ATF agent who is investigating Dwight.

Created by Yellowstone's Taylor Sheridan, Tulsa King is something of a throwback. If you're after the new Sopranos, then you're in the wrong place. If, on the oܫther ꦛhand, you want a mob drama with action, humor, and some slightly bananas plotting, then Tulsa King is the show for you.

18. Evil

Katja Herbers as Dr. Kristen Bouchard, Mike Colter as David Acosta, and Aasif Mandvi as Ben Shakir in Evil.

(Image credit: Paramount Plus)

Year: 2019
Seasons: 4

Over its four seasons this quirky horror series quietly became one of the most reliably entertaining shows on Paramount Plus. Forensic psychologist Dr. Kristen Bouchard (Katja Herbers) joins forces with a Catholic priest David Acosta (Mike Colter) to investigate reports of supernatural events.🎃 Pitted against them is Michael Emerson (who played the villainous Ben Linus on Lost) as a rival psychologist and devout evil-doer – not exactly playing agaಌinst type here.

With🍌 a nice mix of one-off episodes and ongoing arcs, Evil really does feel like The Catholic X-Files. It's not afraid to mix humor in with the laughs and the leads are compelling, especially the tormented Acosta, who is grappling with substance issues. Evil wrapped up its final season last year, meaning the whole is available to watch on the streamer right now.

17. Yellowjackets

Christina Ricci as Misty Quigley and Elijah Wood as Walter Tattersall in Yellowjackets.

(Image credit: Showtime)

Year: 2021
Seasons: 3

This gripping – and often unexpectedly very funny – mystery drama takes place in two different time zones. In the '90s, an 𝄹all-girl football team's plane crashes in a mountainous wilderness. With seemingly no hope of rescue, the survivors turn to increasingly desperate measures to survive, including cannibalism. In the present day, we learn that some of the survivors eventually made it back to civil🐼isation, but their adult lives are, if anything, even more perilous...

澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Yellowjackets has a perfect first season and two almost as good follow ups. It's a brilliantly unpre💦dictable and often ruthlessly dark thriller with an e🔜xceptional cast. Christina Ricci impresses as Misty, shy and bullied as a teenager, now a master manipulator. But it's Melanie Lynskey's increasingly off the rails Shauna who has grown into the rotten heart of an increasingly psychotic series.

Seen all of Yellowjackets but still have questions? Check out our guide to the ending of 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Yellowjackets season 3.

16. South Park

Stan, Kyle, Cartman, Kenny, and the rest of the South Park characters.

(Image credit: Comedy Central / ꦆNickelodeon / Viacom)

Year: 1997
Seasons: 26

America's most outrageous animated series is as scabrously filthy and hilarious as when it debuted back in 1997. Trey Parker and Matt Stone's hands-on approach to every aspect of making the s꧒eries means that, while it has its fair share of weaker episodes, it has remained remarkably consistent over more than 300 episodes now.

South Park follows the adventures of four young boys (along with their schoolmates and parents) in the titular town. There are occasional aliens and supernatural events, but mostly the series is about poking satirical fun at everyday life. In that regard, Parker and Stone go out of their way to offend everybody. And while it's fair to s🍨ay that some of South Park's gags have aged po🌜orly, it remains an impressively reliable joke machine. The show returns for its 27th season later this year.

These are the 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:25 best South Park episodes, mmkay?

15. Halo

Halo season 2 photo showing Master Chief on Reach

(Image credit: Paramount Plus)

Year: 2022
Seasons: 2

Halo was one of the flagship shows created to introduce viewers to the fledgling Paramount Plus. Inspired by the famous video game series, it follows the adventures of Master Chief Petty Officer John-117 (Pablo Schreiber), a super-soldier in t🤡he war again🌞st the alien Covenant.

The wider Halo f🍌ranchise has some fairly in-depth lore, established in both the games and expanded universe novels. The Halo show sensibly streamlines a lot of this, taking plౠace in a separate "Silver Timeline." This decision alienated some hardcore fans but made sense for a show aimed at a wider audience. After a solid but occasionally a little sluggish first season, the show really matured in its second year. The action stepped up and so did the drama, resulting in a show that did the legendary FPS justice. Sadly, it was axed after just two seasons.

14. Yellowstone

Kevin Coster as John Dutton in Yellowstone. Plus a horse.

(Image credit: Paramount Network)

Year: 2018
Seasons: 5

Taylor Sheridan and John Linson's mega-hit Western ⛎franchise started with this addictive drama. Kevin Costner stars as John Dutton III, the head of a family o✤f ranchers in Montana, whose border runs alongside a Native American reservation. Meanwhile, land developers are eying up the territory, causing problems for everyone.

Yellowstone is peak Dad TV, full of tough men making tough decisions against rugged landscapes. But while the show's soap opera-ish tendencies have made it an easy series to overlook, there's no disputing that Yellowstone has struck a chord with viewers, and Costner – already Western royalty thanks to 1990s Dances With Wolves – remains as charismatic as ever. The main show wrapped up last year with its fifth and final season, but the fr🐻anchise lives on with spin-off prequels 1883 and 1923, as well as a forthcoming sequel, The Madison.

13. Star Trek: Strange New Worlds

Anson Mount as Captain Pike in Star Trek: Strange New Worlds.

(Image credit: Paramount)

Year: 2022
Seasons: 2

The best of the many recent Star Trek spin-offs is this refreshingly old-school space adventure show. Set a few years before the original 1960s Trek, Strange New Worlds followꦜs the crew of a pre-Captain Kirk USS Enterprise. In the captain's chair is Christopher Pike (Anson Mount), a charming, immaculately coiffed leader who we know will eventually face a terrible fate. Alongside him is Rebecca Romijn as Pike's first officer, nicknamed Number One, and Ethan Peck as a young Spock.

Strange Newꦡ Worlds mainly trades in one-off episodes, which makes it the easiest Trek to get into for new viewers, but there are also some neat arcs ticking along in the background – such as Pike learning of his seemingly inescapable fate. It's also blessed with a truly lovable central cast. Two seasons are streamable now, with a third𒁃 run starting later this year.

Unsure where Strange New Worlds sits in relation to Deep Space 9 or The Next Generation? Check out our 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Star Trek timeline.

7. The Twilight Zone

Rod Serling, the creator and host of the original 1950s version of The Twilight Zone in a swirling vortex surrounded by dolls.

(Image credit: CBS / Paramount Plus)

Year: 1959
Seasons:
5

There have been many horror and sci-fi anthology shows over the years, but none have made as much of an impact as The Twilight Zone. Created and hosted by screenwriter Rod Serling, The Twilight Zone ran for five game-changing seasons and 156 episodes between 1959 and 1964, with Serling penning many of the episodes himself. Not only was the series a masterclass in how to tell one-and-done stories week-after-week, it was also remarkably consistent. The stories would move from horror to fantasy to sci-fi to comedy, but you were pretty much always guaranteed a ratt꧑ling good yarn – not to mention a sting in the tale.

Many have tried 🌌to replicate the success of the original Twilight Zone – it's been revived no less than three times, but there's no denying that Stirling's original remains the best and a true t🍃elevision landmark.

One of our writers reminisces about two of 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:The Twilight Zone's best episodes.

6. Key & Peele

Keegan-Michael Key, Jordan Peele, Kate Burton, and Stephnie Weir in Key & Peele.

(Image credit: Comedy Central)

Year: 2012
Seasons:
5

Before he rebranded himself as the master of smart, subversive and satirical horror films like Get Out and Nope, Jordan Peele was most famous for his work with Keegan-Michael Key. Together, the pair made five seasons of sketch show Key &𒐪 Peele for Comedy Central, a relentlessly funny shotgun blast of absurdist ideas and social commentary.

Summing up a sketch show is a difficult task, so instead we'll suggest you check out a few specific sketches to get a flavor of the show, all of which are available on the Comedy Central YouTube: the from season 5, the from season 4 (the former US President has even praised Peele's impression of him), and the blisteringly funny from season 2. Key & 🐬Peele's ability to quickly create fully realized characters is unmatched, and their show is a fountain of hilarious ideas.

5. Dexter

Michael C. Hall as Dexter Morgan, the killer of killers in Dexter.

(Image credit: Showtime)

Year: 2006
Seasons:
8

This serial killer thriller, inspired by Jeff Lindsay's novel series, has an irresistible premise. Over eight seasons Dexter Morgan (Michael C. Hall) struggles to keep three very different parts of his life separate. To his friends and relatives he is a kind family man. At work he is a forensic technician working with the Miami Police. But by night D꧟exter is a serial murderer, albeit one with a very specific MO: he only k🏅ills killers.

Dexter was an immediate sensation when it launched in 2006, and for its first four seasons it was a remarkably gripping watch. Alas, its final years were less surefooted, leading to an infamously awful final episode. Happily, that was not the end for Dexter. Hall reprised the role in 2021 for Dexter: New Blood, a sequel miniseries that helped clear the original show's name, while another sequel, 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Dexter: Resurrection, is set to drop later this year.

4. Star Trek: The Next Generation

Patrick Stewart as Captain Picard next to Q (John de Lancie) in Star Trek: The Next Generation.

(Image credit: CBS / Paramount Plus)

Choosing the best Star Trek series is hard. The original series remains a science fiction classic, while Deep Space 9 steered the franchise into darker, more morally complex territory. But The Next Generation is our pick for a very simple reason: its impeccable, endl🐼essly endearing cast. Patrick Stewart as the legendary Captain Jean-Luc Picard, Jonathan Frakes as charming first officer Will Riker, Michael Do♔rn as stout Klingon security officer Worf, Marina Sirtis's empathic councillor Deanna Troi – and on, and on.

A Star Trek show lives and dies by its crew. And while The Next Generation's first two seasons were... uneven, the Starfleet officers of the Enterprise NCC-1701-D made it worth sticking with. That the show underwent an incredible transformation in its third year, and evolved into one of the smartest and mo꧙st consistently exciting shows on TV, was the cherry on the cake. The Next Generation secured Star Trek's place in sci-fi history, and established a future for the franchise that continues to this day.

3. Colin From Accounts

Harriet Dyer as Ashley Molden and Patrick Brammall as Gordon "Flash" Crapp, plus Colin the dog, in Colin From Accounts.

(Image credit: Binge/Paramount Plus)

Year: 2022
Seasons:
2

This Australian comedy has grown into a huge word-of-mouth hit over the last few years. Harriet Dyer plays Ashley Molden and Patrick Brammall is "Flash" (real name Gordon Crapp), two singles who meet and embark on a bumpy relationship. So who is the Colin from the title? That's actuall🧔y the name of a stray dog that Gordon accidentally runs over in the first episode. The two rush the dog to a vet and are faced with the tou🐟gh decision of either putting him down or adopting him. They choose the latter and name him Colin "from Accounts Payable, who's working on the big merger."

Colin From Accounts's secret sauce is that it mixes its edgy jo𝐆kes and spiky banter with deep characterization. Both Ashley and Gordon feel li🎀ke real, flawed, complicated people. And Colin? Well he's just adorable. A third season is currently in production.

2. Twin Peaks

Kyle MacLachlan as Special Agent Dale Cooper giving a thumbs up during Twin Peaks.

(Image credit: ABC)

Year: 1990
Seasons:
2

There's a reason why 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Twin Peaks remains so beloved, 35 years after it changed the face of TV. Its blend of surreal murder mystery, soap opera, and extra-dimensional horror was groundbreaking, and while it inspired countless imitators, nothing quite compares 🍨to David Lynch and Mark Frost's baffling, brilliant series. Peaks brought a more mature style to US television when it first aired in 1990 and became an instant smash hit as audiences around the world longed to discover who murdered homecoming queen Laura Palmer.

♒Twin Peaks lived fast a𝓀nd died young. Its second season started strong, but once the Palmer mystery had been resolved (against Lynch and Frost's wishes) the show floundered. Still, Lynch made sure it went out in style, giving the show one of TV's greatest endings and a cliffhanger that would pay off 25 years later in the excellent sequel, Twin Peaks: The Return.

1. The Curse

Emma Stone as Whitney Siegel and Nathan Fielder as Asher Siegel in The Curse.

(Image credit: Showtime)

Year: 2023
Seasons:
1

Nathan Fielder follows up the impossibly funny Nathan For You with this brilliant, if absolutely agonizing sort-of-comedy. Whitney (Fielder) and Asher Siegel (Emma Stone) are a married couple who star in a grim reality TV s🐭how about a couple who do supposedly good deeds for the people of Española, New Mexico. In truth, they are also trying to boost their own business interests, buying and flipping cheap homes for the maximum amount of money.

Uncut Gems' Benny Safdie co-created, co-wrot💛e and also appears in the series, and some of that film's unrelenting tension is palpable here. But The Curse also f🐎eels in many ways like the natural next step of the sort of jaw-dropping mix of cringe comedy and cutting satire that Fielder excelled at in Nathan For You, here taken to new extremes. The Curse is so funny, so devastating, and so original that it feels like nothing else on TV.


For more TV streaming picks, you can read our lists of the 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:best shows on Amazon Prime, the 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:best shows on Disney Plus, and the 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:best shows on Netflix.

澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Paramount Plus
Whatever country you're in, it's easy to sign up to Paramount Plus, where you can enjoy a vast library of shows and movies. Just 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:head to the website here to get signed up.

And don't forget that new customers are also able to take advantage of the service's 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:7-day FREE trial, letting you effectively try before you buy.

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Will Salmon
Streaming Editor

Will Salmon is the Streaming Editor for GamesRadar+. He has been writing about film, TV, comics, and mus❀ic for more than 15 years, which is quite a l🎃ong time if you stop and think about it. At Future he launched the scary movie magazine Horrorville, relaunched Comic Heroes, and has written for every issue of SFX magazine for well over a decade. His music writing has appeared in The Quietus, MOJO, Electronic Sound, Clash, and loads of other places too.

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