12 Must-Watch TV Shows on Peacock Right Now (June 2025)

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Peacock has one of the best streaming libraries in the game, especially when it comes to comedy.

From The Office to Brooklyn Nine-Nine, the NBCUniversal streamer is hard to beat.

There are also some spectacular reality shows and drama programs on the platform.

Now that the hit Natasha Lyonne series Poker Face has returned for its second season, there’s never been a better time to start watching TV on Peacock.

Need more recommendations? Then read Best New Shows to Watch on Netflix, Max, Hulu, Amazon Prime Video and More, Best Shows on Netflix Right Now, Best Shows on HBO and Max Right Now and Best Shows on Amazon Prime Video Right Now.

 

This comedy murder mystery series follows the Columbo format of “inverted” murder mysteries. Each episode begins with a murder, and the audience gets to follow along as tough-talking protagonist Charlie Cale (Natasha Lyonne) attempts to put the clues together. Charlie doesn’t particularly want to be a detective — in fact, she’s on the run from the mob enforcer (Benjamin Bratt) who’s trying to kill her because she witnessed a crime — but it’s hard to avoid unraveling mysteries when you’re a human lie detector. 

Charlie has an uncanny and foolproof ability to sense when someone is lying, as well as a strong sense of morality. As she drives across the country, it seems she always manages to find a body, as well as a series of lies about how it got there. Rian Johnson, creator of Knives Out, created this “whodunnit” series. Season 2 is now streaming with new episodes released weekly.

Where would modern TV comedy be without The Office? This long-running comedy gave us so many cultural touchstones that it’s hard to imagine life without it. From mockumentaries where the characters look straight at the camera to “That’s what she said” to Steve CarellThe Office‘s gifts keep coming. Without The Office, there’s no Parks and Recreation, no Abbott Elementary, and no The Good Place. (And no dating app profiles that say “Looking for the Pam to my Jim” or vice versa.)

There’s a reason that this sitcom has become so many people’s “put it on in the background” show — it’s warm without being cheesy, relatable without being boring. The cast’s chemistry makes the mundane storylines hilarious. Actors like Rainn Wilson, John Krasinski, Jenna Fischer, and Mindy Kaling, among others, deliver performances that make each character memorable in their own right. The show manages to balance humor with genuine emotional moments, creating a lasting impact on its audience and influencing numerous shows that followed.

All eight seasons of this police sitcom starring SNL‘s Andy Samberg are available to stream on Peacock! Samberg plays man-child Jake Peralta, a talented detective whose wacky antics usually help him crack the case. With the rest of his squad, including on-again, off-again love interest Amy Santiago (Melissa Fumero), the Nine-Nine protects the streets of Brooklyn from crime. They also engage in hilarious office hijinks and grow to love each other like family.

Stephanie Beatriz, Joe Lo Truglio, Terry Crews and Andre Braugher form a fantastic ensemble in this office sitcom whose writing is as sharp as elderly detectives Hitchcock (Dirk Blocker) and Scully (Joel McKinnon Miller) are lazy. As Peralta would say, this show is “coolcoolcoolcoolcool.”

BK99 was praised throughout its run for its clever writing and the ability to tackle social issues with humor and sensitivity. Each episode is packed with laugh-out-loud moments, ensuring fans are entertained from start to finish.

 

Tina Fey and Alec Baldwin are pure magic in a show that has so many jokes per minute it’s almost impossible to catch them all. Inspired by Fey’s time as a writer on Saturday Night Live, 30 Rock follows Liz Lemon (Fey), the harried head writer of a comedy variety show called TGS, and her business-obsessed boss and mentor, Jack Donaghy (Baldwin). The show brilliantly satirizes corporate culture, the entertainment industry, and where the two intersect. (Jack’s job title in the pilot episode is “Vice President of East Coast Television and Microwave Oven Programming,” for example.) 

Liz attempts to balance her career and her love life, as well as the completely absurd antics of the stars of TGS. Narcissistic and clueless Jenna Maroney (Jane Krakowski) and unstable man-child Tracy Jordan (Tracy Morgan) constantly make Liz’s life difficult, but with help from Jack and ebullient NBC page Kenneth Parcell (Jack McBrayer), Liz manages to keep the show running.

Joel McHale stars as Jeff Winger, a slick and narcissistic lawyer who lied about finishing his bachelor’s degree. When Jeff’s law firm finds out about his deception, he is disbarred and forced to finish undergrad at Greendale Community College. Community starts out as a fairly simple story of a group of strangers who form a study group at Greendale, but it quickly became known for the way it parodies other television and film genres. For example, “Contemporary American Poultry” is a Goodfellas-style episode about chicken fingers, while “Pillows and Blankets” is a documentary about a pillow fort war between best friends Abed (Danny Pudi) and Troy (Donald Glover). 

The other (equally hilarious) members of the study group are the naïve overachiever Annie (Alison Brie), self-righteous activist Britta (Gillian Jacobs), clueless businessman Pierce (Chevy Chase) and religious mom Shirley (Yvette Nicole Brown). Ken Jeong plays the group’s deranged Spanish teacher, and Jim Rash is the eccentric Dean of the college. Once you watch this show, you’ll be “streets ahead.”

Few shows have had as much impact on American pop culture as Saturday Night Live. While all 50 seasons of SNL are available to watch on Peacock, we recommend you check out this four-part docuseries about the history of the groundbreaking variety show. 

Featuring stars like Amy Poehler, Will Ferrell, and Kenan Thompson, it breaks down the audition process, the writer’s room, and the infamous “weird year” when Lorne Michaels left the show. (Spoiler alert: It did not go well without him.) 

 

Do you ever feel like AI is everywhere? In Mrs. Davis, an incredibly powerful artificial intelligence has not so much taken over the world as saved it. Mrs. Davis, as Americans call the AI, has ended war, famine, and most diseases. But Sister Simone (Betty Gilpin), a young nun with a complicated past, is determined to destroy the program. When her ex-lover, Wiley (Jake McDorman), appears and tells her he is part of a resistance fighting Mrs. Davis, she is drawn into a web of ancient conspiracies and mysteries. 

Written by Tara Hernandez and Damon Lindelof (Lost, The Leftovers), Mrs. Davis somehow toes the line between wacky and profound. It’s a show about the complicated relationship between technology and religion. There are also whales, magicians and rodeos, so expect the unexpected.

If you’re missing the mysteries and exotic locations of The White Lotus, The Resort might be a good substitute. The limited series takes place at a hotel in the Riviera Maya, where married couple Emma (Cristin Milioti, How I Met Your Mother) and Noah (William Jackson Harper, The Good Place) are on a vacation to try to bring the spark back to their floundering relationship. Once at the resort, they get drawn into an unsolved mystery — it turns out that a different couple (Skyler Gisondo and Nina Bloomgarden) disappeared at the resort 15 years before their visit.

As flashbacks reveal the story of the missing couple, Emma and Noah grow closer by working together to solve the mystery. Fans praise the performances, the unexpected twists, and the chemistry of the cast.  

If medical mysteries are your jam, House is the show for you. Dr. Gregory House (Hugh Laurie) is a curmudgeonly doctor with a brilliant ability to diagnose patients with his powers of observation. Inspired by Sherlock Holmes, Dr. House is a fascinating character, and every episode of the medical procedural involves him diagnosing a bizarre ailment. At the same time, he struggles to manage chronic pain from his injured leg. Alongside his only friend, Dr. James Wilson (Robert Sean Leonard), House saves lives in his abrasive and brash manner.

House fans love the show for its humor, its Holmesian mysteries and Laurie’s performance. Dr. House lives by the philosophy that “everybody lies,” and his cynicism challenges viewers to look at the world in a new way while raising interesting questions about medical ethics.

This 8-season drama follows the three Halliwell sisters, Prue (Shannen Doherty), Phoebe (Alyssa Milano) and Piper (Holly Marie Combs), who discover that they are the most powerful witches in the world. Their connection, called “The Power of Three” in the show, allows them to use magic to fight the forces of evil and protect the innocent. 

Exploring the nature of good and evil and the bonds of sisterhood, Charmed is a fun and melodramatic fantasy series that fans of Buffy the Vampire Slayer will adore, though the sisters face the trials of young adulthood instead of being teenagers. There’s romance, action and of course, plenty of magic in this cult classic show.

Did you ever play “Mafia” or “Murder” as a kid? The Traitors takes the premise of those games and pumps up the stakes. While no one actually dies, host Alan Cumming leads a group of contestants — many of whom are famous from other reality TV shows — through challenges in a mysterious castle. A few members of the group are “Traitors,” tasked with killing off the competition in order to win a cash prize. If the “Faithfuls” correctly identify all the traitors, they win the pot instead. There’s backstabbing, trash-talking and colorful personalities that clash as everyone tries to prove their status as a faithful. 

Past contestants have included Survivor’s “Boston Rob,” Real Housewives personality Brandi Glanville and Bachelorette Gabby Windey. Watching personalities from different franchises interact is a blast, and watching people you can’t stand get eliminated is even better.

It’s more than just models with briefcases. In this adventurous, tropical spin on the 2005 game show Deal or No Deal, contestants don’t just choose a case full of money — they have to fight for it. 

Hunky host Joe Manganiello (True Blood) leads the competitors through physical challenges, scavenger hunts and strategic games as they try to earn their chance to face the banker and walk away with the cash. Fans love DONDI because it’s a game show, house reality show, survival show and competition show all in one, plus the fact that taking risks with your strategies can lead to huge rewards. But of course, huge losses are always possible too — prizes have ranged from the millions to the single digits. Anything can happen on the mysterious “Banker’s Island.”