6 Streaming Comedies You Might Have Missed in 2023
Screenshot via YouTube
There are too many streaming services.
I know, I know. Hot take! But it’s been another hard year, so I figure, why not start out stating the obvious? And just as obvious: with so many streamers that it’s impossible for even the pros among us (hi) to keep up with them all, it’s a given that, no matter how hard any one of us tries, there will be hidden gems that we nonetheless miss.
That’s been particularly true this year in the comedy realm, where, streamers of all stripes—though internationally oriented ones in particular—have proven especially prolific. Genuinely, for every Jury Duty (Freevee), Only Murders in the Building (Hulu) and High School Musical: The Musical: The Series (Disney+), there have been at least three stealth bangers struggling to get even a fraction of the buzz.
In that spirit, I’ve curated a brief list of my favorite streaming comedy sleepers, along with a bonus pair of broadcast comedies I think also missed their due.
And if you don’t see your favorite niche streaming comedy on the list below? Don’t worry: if it’s Primo, Class of ‘07, Aimless, I’m a Virgo, or tk, it’s already on my to-be-watched dance card for the Christmas break. And if it’s not any of those? Well, there’s always New Year’s weekend…
Big Door Prize
Streamer: Apple TV+
Starring: Chris O’Dowd, Gabrielle Dennis, Sammy Fourlas, Djouliet Amara, Josh Segarra, Patrick Kerr, Damon Gupton, Mary Holland, Ally Maki, Crystal Fox
Seasons available: 1
Enough Ted Lasso and The Morning Show fans will have been scrolling through Apple’s queue of originals around the time Big Door Prize was brand new that this may not feel “niche” to many of you reading this list. But considering how wildly popular I was so certain this series would be when I was watching the screeners for review, and how muted any eventual discourse about it was, I’m adding it to this list all the same. Hugely funny, hugely tender, and showcasing some of the sweetest and most authentic Teen Acting I’ve seen in a long time, Big Door Prize just blew me away. Come for O’Dowds’s whistling midlife crisis, stay for the truly astounding number of comedic dance solos, and then stick around in 2024 for what promises to be an even more surprising Season 2.
The Cleaner
Streamer: BritBox
Starring: Greg Davies and Zita Sattar, with one-off guest spots from Helena Bonham Carter, David Mitchell, Asim Chaudhry, Roisin Conaty and more
Seasons available: 2
Adapted by the BBC from a German series of almost the same name (now streaming on MhZ!), The Cleaner features Taskmaster’s Greg Davies as Paul “Wicky” Wickstead, a terminally unambitious crime scene cleaner. Generally more interested in going down to the local with his high school buddies and rocking out to his favorite bands than taking adulthood seriously, Wicky is well-suited for such an alienating line of work. Well, and also he’s genuinely good at it—the stains that man can get out!
But while Wicky would be perfectly happy spending his days scrubbing blood and bone from the kitchen tiles without talking to a single other living soul, some annoying guest star always manages to show up and muck up his plans. In some cases, that somebody is the murderer. In others, they’re a neighbor, or a friend, or a lover. Sometimes it’s unclear who they are. But always, the dramatic stakes are low enough that they might as well be in the basement, which lets both Davies and the episode’s one-off guest star take their interactions to just the goofiest, most unexpected places.
Colin From Accounts
Streamer: Paramount+
Starring: Harriet Dyer, Patrick Brammall, Genevieve Hegney, Emma Harvie, Michael Logo, Zak
Seasons available: 1
The Antipodeans know how to make an awkward comedy. From Wilfred (another Brammall joint) to Please Like Me (Josh Thomas) to Wellington Paranormal (the What We Do in the Shadows team) to Deadloch (a murderous Kates production, out earlier this year on Prime Video), Aussies and Kiwis alike have been sending deeply funny, deeply uncomfortable sitcoms to North American streamers for awhile now.
Still, there’s something about the cringe-filled rom-com Colin From Accounts that I think will especially appeal to American audiences right now. Starring Harriet Dyer as Ashley, an overstressed, underpaid medical resident fresh of off a devastating breakup and ready to make some questionable choices, Patrick Brammall as Gordon, a forty-something microbrewery owner with terrible choice in women and anxiety that his cancer might be returning, and Zak as Colin From Accounts (the scruffy dog Gordon partially paralyzes with his car when Ashley flashes him while crossing the street one morning), the series plays a bit like an enemies-to-lovers story, but with a more scatalogical edge than you might expect.
Colin is obviously the star here (Logie award for Zak!) but the humans manage to pull their weight: grating and compelling in equal measure, Ashley and Gordon as a pair—chilly, friendly, romantic, or otherwise—bring the kind of energy to the screen that’s impossible to look away from. Add in Genevieve Hegney, Emma Harvie, and Michael Logo as the couple’s more age-coherent (but no less messy) friends, and you’ve got a solid ensemble. I hope we get more.