The 20 best TV shows on Apple TV+ right now

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A homicide detective tries to piece together what happened at a 20-year high school reunion and afterparty that led to the death of pop star Xavier.

This surprisingly sweet animated musical comedy from Loren Bouchard is about a group of New Yorkers connected to the celebrated park.

The story of renowned poet Emily Dickinson as a rebellious 19th-century teen is told with modern music and sensibility in this irreverent and
 charming comedy. 

An alternate history of the space race, which posits what might have happened had the Soviet Union beaten the U.S. to the moon – and the competition for the final frontier never ended.

Apple’s cameras go to far-flung locations to see homes that incorporate thought-provoking design and challenge preconceived notions about how we should live. 

Brooklynn Prince plays a role few young actors are precocious enough to pull off: kid journalist Hilde Lysiak, who investigated a murder in her small town.

This episodic anthology series from the husband and wife duo behind “The Big Sick” follows the lives of
American immigrants.

Maya Rudolph plays a billionaire who goes through a midlife crisis and decides to dedicate herself to her charity foundation, much to the chagrin of the people who already work there.

The peppy workplace sitcom set at the offices of a fantasy video-game company is full of positivity (even amid black comedy), interoffice dynamics and a cast that’s fabulously in sync.

Apple’s first trilingual TV show, with dialogue in English, Japanese and Korean, tells a time- and continent-spanning story about multiple generations of one Korean family.

Britain’s national treasure David Attenborough lends his voice and scientific acumen to this series that imagines what the planet looked like when it was inhabited by dinosaurs.

A charming musical comedy stars Cecily Strong and Keegan-Michael Key as a couple stuck in a town where life is a 1950s musical. 

It takes place in a world in which people can “sever” their work and personal lives so that their work self never remembers their real life and their real self never remembers working.

Will Ferrell and Paul Rudd bring their collective comedic talents to a far more serious story based on the
true-crime podcast.

The series follows the group of washed-up spies who work at a lesser MI-5 bureau, stuck with grunt work. The series has a great sense of British cynicism and wit.

This preschool take on the cunning canine of “Peanuts” fame is sweet and funny for the tyke (and the parents forced to watch the episodes a dozen or so times). 

The Emmy-winning comedy, about an American football coach drafted to lead a British soccer team is a deeply funny and meaningful show with
lovable characters. 

The series, with cooperation from Earvin “Magic” Johnson, tells the former player’s story with the speed and verve of a quick pickup basketball game. 

Honest, sweet and hilarious, this British comedy is about a couple trying desperately for a baby. 

Jared Leto and Anne Hathaway bring their combined Oscar-winning talents to a chronicle of the rise and fall of commercial real estate startup WeWork, based on the Wondery podcast.

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