The Adventures of Tintin
The boy reporter and his dog Snowy stepped off the comic-book page and into a faithfully animated series that arrived on HBO in 1991. For many American kids, this was their first Tintin — and it stuck.
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The boy reporter and his dog Snowy stepped off the comic-book page and into a faithfully animated series that arrived on HBO in 1991. For many American kids, this was their first Tintin — and it stuck.
The elephant king told his own childhood stories in this gentle, storybook-paced animated series that arrived on HBO in 1989. A quieter corner of the cartoon dial — orchestral, unhurried, and deeply comforting.
A profane, darkly funny HBO series about a washed-up baseball pitcher who returns to his hometown with nothing but a mullet and monumental delusions. Created by Danny McBride (who also stars), it turned small-town mediocrity into comedy gold.
One movie star, his three guys from Queens, and the super-agent screaming them all toward the top. Entourage was HBO's mid-2000s fantasy of Hollywood — Maseratis, premieres, Malibu — and Jeremy Piven's Ari Gold turned "let's hug it out" into the decade's boardroom catchphrase. Aspiration as entertainment, and for a few years it absolutely worked.
Flight of the Conchords stars Bret McKenzie and Jemaine Clement as fictionalized versions of themselves—a deadpan New Zealand musical-comedy duo struggling to break into the NYC music scene while writing and performing original songs. Created by James Bobin, Jemaine Clement, and Bret McKenzie, the show aired on HBO from 2007 to 2009 with a small but devoted cult following. Their oddball manager Murray Hewitt (Rhys Darby) and their lone superfan Mel (Kristen Schaal) round out their world. Signature songs like 'Business Time' and 'Hiphopopotamus vs. Rhymenoceros' became instant cult classics.
Jim Henson's underground puppet world of Fraggles, Doozers, and Gorgs — a whole ecosystem quietly built to teach peace and interdependence, wrapped in songs. If you were a 90s kid, you caught it in reruns, and "Dance your cares away" is still lodged somewhere in your head.
Four single women navigate New York nightlife, relationships, and Manolo Blahnik shoes. HBO's June 1998 breakout became the defining show of female friendship and the cosmopolitan—literally.
The creaking door, the dolly shot down to the crypt, and then HIM: a rotting puppet sitting up with a shriek of laughter. "Hello, boils and ghouls!" The Cryptkeeper's puns were worse than the murders — and the murders were on HBO, so they were very, very murdery.
Tony Soprano walks into a psychiatrist's office with panic attacks—and changed television forever. HBO's landmark 1999 drama paired mob violence with suburban therapy, making prestige TV a thing.
HBO wired a real taxi with hidden cameras, put a real cab driver behind the wheel, and let strangers talk at three in the morning. Passengers found out they'd been filmed only when the ride ended. It won an Emmy in its first year, ran on and off for fifteen years, and remains one of the strangest things a premium network ever put on the air.