"I apologize. I know I left some of your favorite shows off this list. How do I know that? Because I left some of my favorite shows off this list. The happy and unfortunate fact is that there are far more than 100 great shows, and more created every year. Lists are incredibly important: they are how we define what matters to us, what we want entertainment and art to do, what we expect of our culture." —TIME TV critic James Poniewozik
Vinnie Terranova (Ken Wahl) wasn’t a bad guy: he just played them on TV, as a deep-cover agent who insinuated himself into crime organizations. Where past cop shows were obliged to wrap up their investigations in 30 or 60 minutes, Wiseguy‘s lasted months, allowing Vinnie to risk not only his body but his soul as he developed troubling empathy for his prey. But the real stars of this show were the captivating villains, played by the likes of Tim Curry, Jerry Lewis and Kevin Spacey, who delivered one of TV’s all-time great guest turns as the decadent, volatile arms dealer Mel Profitt, who held a gun on Vinnie in a game of Russian Roulette and deadpanned, “The idle rich are so hard to entertain.” Ah, but they were so entertaining themselves.
In this aliens-among-us mystery, sci-fi writer and surfer Chris Carter melded ’60s don’t-trust-the-Man paranoia with ’90s black-helicopter paranoia. FBI agent Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) was his own biggest x-file, pursuing a conspiracy that involved the alien abduction of his sister. Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) was his rational foil, doubting his outlandish theories even after she experienced a disappearance-and-implantation episode herself. Mulder and Scully also solved standalone paranormal cases, but the the big draw of the show was its baroque mystery—as well as its comic relief and Mulder and Scully’s nerdy sexual tension—and the show petered out after Duchovny jumped ship. But for years this conspiracist gem drilled into our reserves of horror and mistrust, and struck black oil.