logo
15 Great British And Irish TV Shows To Watch

15 Great British And Irish TV Shows To Watch

Buzz Feed21-06-2025

While some British or Irish shows are beloved internationally, there are many amazing ones that perhaps don't get the recognition they deserve.
So, here are 15 incredible from the UK and Ireland that are totally worth a watch...
Dept. Q
Based on the book series by Jussi Adler-Olsen, Dept. Q follows Carl Morck, a well-respected detective who is returning to work following a tragic incident where his partner was paralysed and a policeman was killed. As he returns, he is given a cold case that begins to consume his life. Where to watch: Netflix
Derry Girls
If sitcoms are more your style, then look no further than Derry Girls. It follows five teenagers attending a Catholic girls' school in Derry in the mid-nineties. We watch the group navigate school life during the political unrest, as well as the bizarre situations they get themselves into. You'll laugh, cry, and have a blast!Where to watch: Netflix, All 4, Sky
Peep Show
This sitcom is centred around the dysfunctional friendship of Mark and Jeremy, who are share a flat together in South London. Being somewhat of an odd-couple, the two find themselves in a series of (sometimes painfully) awkward situations. It's quintessentially British, laugh-out-loud funny, and incredibly cringe and binge-worthy. Where to watch: Channel 4
Years and Years
This show is about an extended family that lives in an alternate version of the UK. Technological advancements and political unrest have fractured society, and tensions are high. The show begins in 2019, and fast forwards in time every episode as we see how each member of the family – and society itself – grows and crumbles with time. It's a fascinating watch and can get pretty emotional at times too.Where to watch: Disney+, ITVX, Max
Bad Sisters
This dark comedy show is about the Garvey sisters, who, after the death of their parents, are bound to each other by the promises they've made to protect one another. It's a true dark comedy, with sinister elements lifted up with excellent comedy writing and performances. Where to watch: Apple TV+
Ghosts
If you're from The States, you may already know Ghosts from its US adaptation, but there's nothing like the original, right? It follows Alison Cooper, who unexpectedly inherits a huge old country house from a distant relative. Another unexpected surprise is that the house is full of ghosts from throughout history who make up the various people who died there. It's a nice easy watch, and good fun!Where to watch: Sky, BBC iPlayer, Max
Catastrophe
Rob, from Boston, goes on a business trip to London, where he meets an Irish woman called Sharon. They spend a week casually hooking up while he's over there, but everything changes when Sharon discovers she's pregnant. After finding out, Rob flies back to be with Sharon, and they attempt to get to know each other. As you can imagine – given this comes from the joint minds of Sharon Horgan and Rob Delaney – it's a hilarious show to get stuck into. Where to watch: Amazon Prime Video
I May Destroy You
This drama series from Michaela Coel follows Arabella, who, after being sexually assaulted at a bar, begins to reassess and rebuild her life. We also follow her best friends, Terry and Kwame, who each face their own issues when it comes to sex and relationships. It's a hard-hitting series that's done in a brilliant way, and is totally deserving of its critical acclaim.Where to watch: Sky, BBC iPlayer, Max
Broadchurch
Starring David Tennant and Olivia Colman, Broadchurch is a classic gritty crime drama in the British mould. When the body of a young boy is found on a beach, a small town in Dorset becomes the focus of a gripping police investigation.Where to watch: ITVX, Britbox, PBS
Adolescence
If you haven't seen it yet, here's another recommendation to. The psychological crime thriller follows the case surrounding 13-year-old Jamie Miller who is arrested after the murder of a girl at his school. The incurring investigation reveals Jamie's attitudes towards women; while at home, the family must deal with the implications of Jamie's detention. Where to watch: Netflix
This Country
Creators Daisy May Cooper and Charlie Cooper star in this hilarious mockumentary that revolves around two cousins in rural England and their day-to-day lives. In a light and funny way, the show captures certain aspects of living in a rural community as a young person.Where to watch: Sky, BBC iPlayer
Time
This anthology series is set inside the British prison system. Season one follows Marc (Sean Bean) who is recently imprisoned. Overwhelmed by the dangers of prison life, Marc meets Eric (Stephen Graham), a prison guard who endeavours to protect those in his charge.Season two follows three women beginning their sentences at the same time. Orla (Jodie Whittaker) is a single mother, incarcerated for the first time, Abi (Tamara Lawrance), who is imprisoned on a life sentence, and Kelsey (Bella Ramsey), a pregnant heroin addict. Where to watch: BBC iPlayer, Apple TV
Being Human
This comedy-drama crosses flatshare comedy with supernatural horror-drama. It follows three individuals who are sharing a flat, trying to live a normal life, and fit in. The only problem is – one of them is a ghost, the other is a vampire, and the other is a werewolf. It's funny, but also emotional and exciting!Where to watch: ITVX, Britbox, Amazon Prime Video
Top Boy
This drama is set in a housing estate in East London, and follows two drug dealers attempting to rise to the top of their trade. We see the tension between drug gangs and those attempting to live a life outside of drugs and violence. It's a thrilling series that contains elements of crime thriller and social realism.Where to watch: Netflix
Happy Valley
There's really not much 'happy' about this British crime drama. The harrowing show follows Sergeant Catherine Cawood as she leads a team of police officers to solve cases in Yorkshire, while still dealing with the brutal death of her own daughter. Her own personal strife is tied into the show's main plot, and it's full of tense and emotional episodes.Where to watch: Sky, BBC iPlayer, AMC+
What are some of YOUR favourite British and Irish TV shows you would recommend? Let us know in the comments below!

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UK police reviewing rapper's anti-Israel comments at Glastonbury Festival
UK police reviewing rapper's anti-Israel comments at Glastonbury Festival

San Francisco Chronicle​

timean hour ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

UK police reviewing rapper's anti-Israel comments at Glastonbury Festival

LONDON (AP) — British police said they were examining videos of a band that led chants of 'death to the IDF' or Israel Defense Forces at Saturday's Glastonbury Festival. Rapper Bobby Vylan, of rap punk duo Bob Vylan, led crowds attending the festival in chants of 'free, free Palestine' and 'death, death to the IDF." Avon and Somerset Police said video evidence would be assessed by officers 'to determine whether any offenses may have been committed that would require a criminal investigation." The Israeli Embassy to the U.K. said on social media that it was 'deeply disturbed by the inflammatory and hateful rhetoric expressed on stage at the Glastonbury Festival." Health Secretary Wes Streeting on Sunday condemned the band's actions as 'appalling." He told Sky News that the BBC and festival organizers had to answer questions about how the comments were broadcast live to millions. The government said Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy has spoken to the BBC director general about Bob Vylan's performance. The BBC said it issued a warning on screen about 'very strong and discriminatory language' during the live stream. Saturday's festival lineup also included Irish-language rap group Kneecap, which gave an impassioned performance for tens of thousands of fans despite criticism by British politicians and a terror charge for one of the trio. Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh, who performs under the stage name Mo Chara, has been charged under the Terrorism Act with supporting a proscribed organization for allegedly waving a Hezbollah flag at a concert in London in November. The rapper, who was charged under the anglicized version of his name, Liam O'Hanna, is on unconditional bail before a further court hearing in August. The group has faced criticism for lyrics laden with expletives and drug references, and for political statements, especially since videos emerged allegedly showing the band shouting 'up Hamas, up Hezbollah' and calling on people to kill lawmakers. On Saturday band members led the audience in chants of 'Free Palestine' and 'Free Mo Chara.' They also aimed an expletive-laden chant at U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who has said he didn't think it was 'appropriate' for Kneecap to play Glastonbury.

Exclusive: Joe Exotic Shares Updates on Prison Life and Deported Husband
Exclusive: Joe Exotic Shares Updates on Prison Life and Deported Husband

Newsweek

time2 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Exclusive: Joe Exotic Shares Updates on Prison Life and Deported Husband

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Joe Exotic, star of the Netflix documentary Tiger King that garnered him global attention during the COVID pandemic, told Newsweek in an exclusive new interview that he has "lost everything." Exotic, whose real name is Joseph Allen Maldonado, became a household name five years ago when Netflix aired a documentary centered on him, his affection for tigers, and a zany cast of characters working at his tiger sanctuary in Wynnewood, Oklahoma, from 1999 to 2018. Prior to the documentary's release, he was convicted of two counts of murder-for-hire against Carole Baskin—an adversary in Tiger King—and eventually sentenced to 21 years in prison. This November marks eight years that he's behind bars. Exotic claims to have never reaped any rewards for being the centerpiece. In fact, he said he hadn't even seen Tiger King until about five months ago because he's currently weighing his legal options in a battle with the streaming giant. The 62-year-old spoke at length with Newsweek via phone from inside the Federal Medical Center in Fort Worth, Texas, about his health issues, how he reacted and is dealing with his husband's deportation to Mexico, and how he has sought pardons or a commuted sentence from numerous politicians and celebrities, including President Donald Trump. Health Issues Exotic has prostate cancer and cancer in his left lung. The day prior to the interview, he went to the doctor and was directed to take another PET scan because it's believed the cancer from his prostate has spread to his ribs. Even while held inside a medical facility to do his time, he called the medical care within "pathetic." "My earliest out date right now is October 1, 2030," he said. "With the medical care I get in here, I probably won't even make it five more years." "Tiger King" star Joe Exotic spoke with Newsweek about his prison experience, health issues, fighting back against Netflix, and how he's dealt with the deportation of his husband. "Tiger King" star Joe Exotic spoke with Newsweek about his prison experience, health issues, fighting back against Netflix, and how he's dealt with the deportation of his husband. Newsweek Illustration/Canva/Getty/AP Newsroom Deported Husband In May, his 33-year-old husband Jorge Marquez Flores was deported to Mexico for illegal entry to the United States, after completing a federal prison sentence. Exotic has attempted different forms of pleas and outreach to reunite and live with Flores someday in the U.S., including offering to give the government half his earnings in exchange for a post-prison—in addition to saying he would purchase one of Trump's "gold cards" floated as a broader method to grant U.S. residency to those who invest $5 million in the country. Exotic speaks with Flores, who he last saw in person on May 16, two to three times a day. "He is in Mexico at his aunt's house, praying to God and making videos, asking President Trump for forgiveness and to let [him] come home," Exotic said. "Our plan is, I'm gonna go to Mexico. I really want to go live in Cozumel." He added: "I will work to do whatever I got to do, to either buy a Trump gold card for him, or to go through the asylum process to get him back into America the right way because he shouldn't have come in the wrong way. He knows that; I know that. We don't hold him being deported against anybody because that's the law." Pleas for Pardons In April 2019, a federal jury found him guilty on two counts of hiring someone to murder Baskin, founder of Big Cat Rescue in Florida, eight counts of violating the Lacey Act by falsifying wildlife records, and nine counts of violating the Endangered Species Act by killing five tigers and selling tigers across state lines. Regarding Baskin, he said the documentary portrayed her as close to who she actually is. "To this day you'll never convince me she didn't kill her husband because I investigated it for almost 10 years, and I have her original diary," Exotic said. "I interviewed all of her staff and all of her past staff. She killed him." Baskin has denied that she had any involvement in her husband's disappearance or death. Exotic also takes umbrage with the Endangered Species Act charges. "That's my ultimate goal, to prove that generic tigers that are branded in captivity in the United States do not belong on the United States endangered species list because the endangered species list of 1973 was written to protect the native species and the habitats of our lands," he said. "Tigers, elephants, chimpanzees, orangutans, none of that belongs on our endangered species [list]. We are spending billions of dollars regulating something in America that is protected." Exotic continues to try to talk to anybody who will listen in hope he can get a pardon, or at least an early release. Representative Lauren Boebert, a Colorado Republican, said last week that her office received an inquiry from Exotic for help. He's made additional reach outs to lawmakers and celebrities including Secretary of State Marco Rubio (when he was a senator), former GOP Florida Representative Matt Gaetz, Joe Rogan, Andrew Tate, Dana White, Hulk Hogan, and President Trump. "I've got a lot of big names out there asking President Trump to make this right," Exotic said. "Why he won't is beyond all of us. You know, he would be so popular and so praised if he would just let me go home." He added: "I don't even need a pardon because I would take just a commuted sentence to time served because I don't need to carry a gun and I don't do drugs. I just need to be able to travel to work because I can become a millionaire with this platform and do good with my charity work as a felon." He said he "looks up" to Trump, who he acknowledged to also be a felon "persecuted by the very same government that persecuted me." Prisoners 'Drooling' From Drug Use "I would never believe it if I didn't live it," Exotic says about his days in prison, which he says is akin more to a college dormitory than doors and bars you would see in TV or movies. He gets up around 7 or 8 a.m., takes a shower, and then watches his fellow inmates in the low-security facility. "Drugs in here is crazy," he said. "You would never believe how many drugs are inside a federal prison. And that's why when I was running for president, I was like, you are so wasting your time on drugs against the war on the border when you can't keep them out of a fenced-in federal is nothing but a college for wannabe drug addicts." He said he spends days watching half the prison population "act like 2-year-olds drooling because they're so high on synthetic marijuana." Fame But Being Alone "It is it overwhelming and gratifying that the entire world knows who I am," he admitted. "I absolutely am upset that they made me out to be a meth head and some crazy fool." Exotic said he gets along with everyone in prison because he honors his words and minds his own business. His life outside is emptier. Both his parents died, one in 2019 and the other in 2020. His husband is in a foreign country and may not be able to return. His three siblings have maintained no contact with him since 1997, which he says is because he's a homosexual. "There is light at the end of the tunnel," he said. "But what keeps me going—I've never even had a speeding ticket. I have no criminal history, period. I know who I am, and my parents raised me to do right." He continued: "And even though I've lost everything I've ever worked for, I am so looking forward to walking out these gates—whether it's with President Trump's blessing or not, and making my life or what I have left of it 10 times better than the life that I had. And I had a pretty good life."

This iconic slasher movie is leaving Netflix — I'm not missing out and neither should you
This iconic slasher movie is leaving Netflix — I'm not missing out and neither should you

Tom's Guide

time4 hours ago

  • Tom's Guide

This iconic slasher movie is leaving Netflix — I'm not missing out and neither should you

Between the "Scream" franchise, "The Blair Witch Project"-induced "found footage" phenomenon and M. Night Shyamalan mind-benders like "The Sixth Sense" and Oscar-winning thrillers like "Silence of the Lambs," the 1990s were a great time for horror. One of the most crowd-pleasing (if not exactly critically acclaimed) titles in the slasher genre is "I Know What You Did Last Summer," which sees an iconic foursome of Jennifer Love Hewitt, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Freddie Prinze Jr. and Ryan Phillippe battle a hook-wielding maniac in their small seaside town. The movie comes from director Jim Gillespie and screenwriter Kevin Williamson, the latter of whom recently tapped into the "murderous coastal town" genre yet again with his new Netflix show "The Waterfront." And, as is always the case with the platform's ever-changing library, you now only have a few days left to catch the '90s horror favorite on Netflix before it departs the streamer on July 1. With "IKWYDLS" officially getting a present-day reboot scheduled for theatrical release on July 18, it's high time to revisit the jump-scare original. Here's why you should add "I Know What You Did Last Summer" to your watch list this weekend. "I Know What You Did Last Summer" centers on four teenage friends who accidentally hit a pedestrian following a beach trip to celebrate July 4. They don't alert the authorities and instead dispose the body, vowing to never discuss the horrible incident again. However, a year later, Julie James (Jennifer Love Hewitt), receives a letter revealing that someone else was on the road that night and knows exactly what they did. Seeking revenge, a hook-wielding killer fisherman begins haunting the four friends throughout their town of Southport, North Carolina, set on taking out the kiddos one by bloody one. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. Again, the original "I Know What You Did Last Summer" wasn't exactly an immediate hit with professional critics. On Rotten Tomatoes, where the film holds an approval rating of 48%, the critical consensus reads: "A by-the-numbers slasher that arrived a decade too late, the mostly tedious 'I Know What You Did Last Summer' will likely only hook diehard fans of the genre." However, some critics were more charmed by the horror flick, which, along with "Scream" a year earlier, helped revive the slasher genre. Derek Elley of Variety called it a "polished genre piece with superior fright elements that should perform at better-than-average theatrical levels," while Richard Harrington of The Washington Post dubbed it "a smart and sharply-drawn genre film with a moral center, and with a solid cast of young actors to hold it." In the decades since its release, "I Know What You Did Last Summer" has endured among horror fans (and been the subject of many a funny parody) thanks to its very nineties-ness, from those Williamson-penned precocious teens to the megawatt '90s names playing them ("Party of Five" star Jennifer Love Hewitt, "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" icon Sarah Michelle Gellar.) It's a bloody-good-fun relic of a long-gone era, but one that's clearly still resonating with viewers all these years later. Watch on Netflix until June 30, 2025

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store