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Looking for your new favorite TV show to binge (or, you know, to watch at an appropriate pace)? Today’s streaming services offers endless shows to choose from, many of them with Jewish themes.

To help you choose the perfect show for you, we’ve rounded up a few of the best Jewish and Jewish-ish options on Netflix, Apple TV+, HBO Max, Hulu, and Amazon Prime. Happy streaming!

1. "Nobody Wants This" (Netflix)

This sharp romcom centers on a non-religious podcaster (Kristen Bell) and a Conservative rabbi (Adam Brody) as they navigate the intersections of love, religion, and identity in a world full of stereotypes and projections. Providing both humor and nuance, "Nobody Wants This" has sparked conversations about representation, interfaith relationships, and cultural baggage.

Note: This show repeatedly uses the word "shiksa," a slur aimed at folks who present as female and do not identify as Jewish.

2. "Lady in the Lake" (Apple TV+)

Set in 1960s Baltimore, this noir mystery follows Maddie Schwartz (Natalie Portman), a Jewish housewife-turned-journalist looking into the disappearance of Cleo Johnson (Moses Ingram), a Black mother, wife and bartender. This series aptly captures middle-class Jewish anxieties and privilege during the Civil Rights era and has a story that is sure to leave you guessing.

3. "We Were the Lucky Ones" (Hulu)

This sobering Holocaust-era drama tells the story of a real-life Polish Jewish family separated by war and determined to reunite against all odds. Through critically acclaimed performances and historical fidelity, this show honors Jewish resilience and centers survival without erasing the lingering impact of trauma. For a more in-depth review, read Wes Hopper's "'We Were the Lucky Ones:' Bringing the Holocaust Out of History Books and Into Our Homes." 

4. "Reformed" (French: "Le Sens Des Choses") (HBO Max)

This French dramedy revolves around Lea Schmoll, a newly ordained Reform rabbi who balances ritual, pastoral issues, and her personal life. Loosely inspired by Rabbi Delphine Horvilleur, the series addresses debates over topics such as circumcision, cremation, interfaith relationships, and gender roles within French Jewish life.

5. "Rough Diamonds" (Netflix)

In Antwerp's Haredi diamond district, a wayward son returns to bury his brother and gets pulled back into his estranged family's secret-laden business. This crime drama looks at the intersections of ritual, community pressure, and the friction between secular and religious life.

6. "Billy Joel: And So It Goes" (HBO Max)

This two-part documentary traces Billy Joel's life from his boyhood in Long Island to becoming one of America's greatest songwriters. The show touches on his family fleeing the Holocaust and Joel's own complicated relationship with his Jewish identity. This series paints a tender portrait of the artist as he reckons with belief, fame, and family legacy. 

7. "The Baker and the Beauty" (Amazon Prime)

This romantic comedy series centers on the relationship between an international supermodel of Ashkenazi descent and a Yemenite Sephardic baker is also. As writer Bonnie Azoulay points out in Alma, it’s also a surprising testament to the reality of Jewish diversity.

“We are constantly privy to their clashes in culture…[which] reflects how a small country can consist of so many different cultures, and that sometimes there is conflict between your own people,” Azoulay writes.

8. "The Goldbergs" (Hulu)

With every episode set in the year of “1980-something,” this show is based loosely on the real-life experiences of show creator Adam F. Goldberg’s childhood and his colorful family – complete with ’80s pop culture references, an overly attached Jewish mom, and hijinks galore.

As Dan Pine points out, characters often act selfishly at the expense of others, only to apologize later with a heartwarming wrap-up. “Basically, every episode is a mini-Kol Nidre,” he jokes. “A Goldberg sins, a Goldberg atones and makes a face-to-face apology, all vows are nullified, and back they go to being fallible human beings.”

9. "Broad City" (Hulu)

Based on the real-life friendship of creators Abbi Jacobson and Ilana Glazer, this comedy follows two broke, Jewish millennials and their ridiculous, often-obscene adventures and schemes while attempting to “make it” in New York City.

Writes reviewer Wes Hopper, “Jacobson and Glazer, as comfortable with their Jewishness as they are with their sexuality, are part of a new wave of Jewish women who continue to test the limits of what’s permissible in popular American comedy.”

10. "Crazy Ex-Girlfriend" (Netflix) 

After a chance meeting with a former fling, lawyer Rebecca Bunch (played by Rachel Bloom) leaves behind her luxurious Manhattan lifestyle and relocates to a California suburb… where aforementioned former fling lives. Bloom, the show’s co-creator, won a Golden Globe for Best Actress for her portrayal of the singing, dancing lead.

Calling its protagonist “the nuanced Jewish heroine we needed,” writer Emily Burack says, “Rebecca doesn’t shy away from her Jewishness, even if it’s not always at the forefront. It’s how most of us interact with our Jewish identity.”

11. "Difficult People" (Hulu)

Yet another comedy about struggling millennial New Yorkers, Difficult People stars Julie Klausner (also the show’s creator) and Billy Eichner as broke comedians making questionable life choices.

In a letter to Klausner and Eichner, Alexandra Pucciarelli says the show gives us permission to be “a dirt person.” She writes: “Difficult People asserts that we as Jewish people will always be the Other in society, and it’s better to just embrace rather than hiding from it.”

12. "Fauda" (Netflix) 

In this Israeli action drama, IDF agent Doron Kavillio (played by Lior Raz) comes out of retirement, leaving his quiet new farm to hunt down the terrorist he thought he'd killed. When his cover is blown, a series of chaotic events unfold.

Calling the series “compelling and stressful,” Jewish educator Lori Sagarin says shows like Fauda “[provide] us with a vital avenue for understanding and remaining in relationship with what is happening in Israel today.”

13. "Grace and Frankie" (Netflix) 

Modern-day acting icons Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin star as the titular Grace and Frankie, polar opposites who have never much liked one another. When their husbands announce their love for one another, the two women begin to forge an unlikely friendship.

Writing for Jewish Women’s Archive, Rebecca Long posits that the show “gives unique narrative space to a friendship between two women who I would venture to classify as soulmates, bashert.”

14. "Mad Men" (Netflix) 

Set in 1960s New York, this multiple-award-winning show follows the now-iconic Don Draper (played by Jon Hamm), a high-powered advertising executive and family man, through his personal and professional life. The seven-season series ran from 2007 to 2015.

Though Draper’s character isn’t Jewish, JTA reporter Gabe Friedman argues that Mad Men is one of the most Jewish TV shows in years. “The show’s core story…is really a Jewish story,” he argues.

15. "The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel" (Amazon Prime)

Jewish TV showrunner Amy Sherman-Palladino (Gilmore Girls) is behind this screwball comedy about a 1950s Manhattan housewife-turned-comedian. Maisel charms viewers with blunt, quick-witted humor, late-50s pop culture and comedy, and countless Jewish references, from brisket to Yom Kippur break-fast to Tishah B’Av in the Catskills.

“The Jewish shtick is lathered on generously, but played endearingly by [show lead Lauren Brosnahan],” reviewer Wes Hopper says.

16. "Schitt’s Creek" (Netflix) 

When the extravagantly wealthy Rose family goes suddenly broke (thanks to a little visit from the IRS), the couple and their two spoiled, adult children move into a rundown hotel in a small town they once purchased as a joke.

Starring Eugene Levy and Catherine O’Hara as the hilarious and absurd Jonathan and Moria Rose, the show – which the Canadian Jewish News has dubbed a “classic Jewish fish-out-of-water tale” – chronicles the family’s attempts to fit in and find a new kind of life… in the least likely of places.

17. "Shtisel" (Netflix) 

This series follows family patriarch Shulem Shtisel (played by Dov Glickman), the rabbi of a yeshiva in a strict, Haredi neighborhood in Israel. Not yet sold? Rabbi Sharon Forman explains “Why 'Shtisel' Should be Your Next Binge-Watch.”

As one of Netflix’s top five most-watched shows, perhaps it’s not surprising that an outcry from North American viewers compelled the canceled show back into production.

18. "The Spy" (Netflix)

This Netflix miniseries follows the true-life exploits of Mossad secret agent Eli Cohen (played by Sacha Baron Cohen) in the years before the 1967 Six-Day War between Israel and Syria.

The story chronicles Cohen’s life in Egypt, including his rejection from the army, his infiltration of the Syrian Ministry of Defense, and his eventual appointment as deputy defense minister, due in part to his close friendship with the Syrian president.

If you’re fascinated by the show, read TIME’s account of the real-life Cohen, who was hanged by the Syrian government in 1965.  

19. "Transparent" (Amazon Prime)

This show (and its series finale, set as a musical!) focuses on the Pfeffermans, a Los Angeles Jewish family, in which one parents come out as transgender.

Named “the Jewiest television show ever” by the Forward, Jewish fan Marissa Solomon says Transparent is also an example of how not to repent. “I’m grateful for this insightful, Jewishly infused show for so many reasons, even if the characters show me how I don’t want to be,” she muses before Yom Kippur.