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    i want my web tv

    TV on the computer: These web series will make you want to ditch cable

    Samantha Pitchel
    Dec 4, 2011 | 6:30 am

    I've been watching a lot more TV since I got rid of cable.

    Added up, monthly subscriptions to Netflix, Hulu and Mubi give faster access to more than Time Warner ever could. And the selection's endlessly diverse (no more relying on TLC for my reality drama when BestWeekEver.tv rounds it up nicely).

    With networks becoming less of a barrier to entry, it's easier to get video projects out to a huge audience. Want to host your own talk show? Try public access, or just stream online. Have a pilot you want to pitch, or a series of scenes you want to film? Say hello to the Web series: broadcast exclusively online, and usually in shorter, 2 to 12-minute episodes, Web series are more accessible to filmmakers on a budget (and audiences with short attention spans).

    Comedy sites like College Humor, Funny or Die, Atom and My Damn Channel — long known for hosting original video content — are all building solid rosters of series; Hulu hosts a number of exclusive shows; and with the recent acquisition of new Arrested Development episodes, Netflix is getting into the game, too. There's not just one, but two awards shows — the Webbys and the Streamys — recognizing the best in the genre.

    There are hundreds of Web series available online, with new pilots popping up weekly. Where to get started? Here are a few of our past and present favorites (warning: these bite-sized episodes can be highly addictive).

    Scripted Shows

    The Line, from Funny or Die and starring Bill Hader and Jo Lo Truglio

    Shot in 2008 (and now available on Hulu), this seven episode series follows two friends set on being first in line for the premiere of summer blockbuster Futurespace. Written by Hader and SNL writer / comedy prodigy Simon Rich, The Line features cameos from Paul Scheer as “The Spoiler,” Jason Sudeikis as a crabby theater owner and Bobby Moynihan, Will Hines and Chris Gethard as equally nerdy Futurespace fans trying to deal with girlfriends, kids and other responsibilities—all while camped out on a sidewalk for 11 days.

    Wainy Days from My Damn Channel and starring David Wain

    About to enter its fifth season, this long-running series follows ex-The State / Stella member David Wain (you know, the one that Michaels Black and Showalter used to pick on all the time?) as he attempts to navigate the NYC dating scene as a neurotic 30-something (generally, while getting picked on all the time). The show bills itself as "lightly fictionalized," though some of the more awesomely awkward episodes—like the one where David gets a litle too in touch with his feminine side—are hopefully heavier on the make believe. Wainy Days features tons of comic cameos; winner of the 2008 Webby for Best Comedy Series, it also excels in the well-crafted-jokes-per-minute category.

    Back on Topps from YouTube and starring Randy and Jason Sklar

    Some shows are created specifically for an actor, or a network; Back on Topps is produced by Topps, the same company that puts gum in your baseball cards. (What don't they do!) The advertisement-slash-comedy series is written by brothers Randy and Jason Sklar—hosts of the podcast Sklarboro Country—who also star as Leyland and Leif Topps, heirs to the sports card empire. When they lose their unearned corporate status, they have to scramble to win their business back. Bonus: tons of pro athlete guest spots. Back on Topps is a solid comedy that stands on its own, avoiding being sales-y (despite its funding source).

    Broad City from FX starring Ilana Glazer and Abbi Jacobson

    This series, created by UCB alums Ilana Glazer and Abbi Jacobson, is as much an ode to New York as a look at what it’s like to live there; episodes have everything from misty skylines to summery city parks, plus subway trips, street pretzels, Rockefeller Plaza and other iconic shots. While at time precocious (debating whether or not they’re cool enough to hang in Brooklyn’s McCarren Park, for example), the series is touching, focusing on Abbi and Ilana’s friendship with each other as they each deal with dating, work, moms and weird social situations. Broad City is produced by Amy Poehler, and just got picked up by FX.

    Bestie x Bestie starring Jenny Slate and Gabe Liedman

    SNL alum Jenny Slate and stand up comic Gabe Liedman are best friends, as illustrated in these under-two-minute clips where they chat about Important Stuff (and look really cute while doing it).

    Horrible People, from My Damn Channel atarring AD Miles, Kristen Schaal, Joe Lo Truglio

    Horrible People is an over-the-top drama in the style of your favorite mid-morning stories, packing a decades worth of plot into 10 short episodes. Written by Fallon head writer AD Miles, the show follows all the classic soap tropes: a crazy, overbearing mom; unexpected pregnancies; jealousy; murder; etc.

    Very Mary Kate, from College Humor and starring Elaine Carroll

    Clocking in at about a minute and a half each, these glimpses into the private life of Mary Kate Olsen, as imagined by writer and star Elaine Carroll, are brilliant. Carroll plays the impish, dreamy Olsen in a muppet-like manner that’s oddly not far from dead-on. Episodes unfold to expose MK and sister Ashley’s obsession with blimps, and introduce Bodyguard and acting coach Philip Seymour Hoffman, who serve as polar opposite influences on the spoiled star.

    Clark and Michael from CBS and starring Michael Cera and Clark Duke

    This 2006 series, originally commissioned by CBS, made teen dreams come true: a mockumentary-style look into the lives of two aspiring writers, the show focuses on real-life actors Clark Duke (Greek) and Michael Cera (Arrested Development). The meta-humor of the two friends trying to sell a script to a major network and the absurdity of their cluelessness (in one episode, they try to get Kenny Loggins to perform the show’s theme song) are the perfect mix for plenty of weird guest spots from other Arrested Development alum, Patton Oswalt and Martin Starr, among others.

    Web Therapy from L Studio / Showtime and starring Lisa Kudrow

    Despite the fact that she’s made a living playing airheads, a la Friends’ Phoebe and Romy and Michele’s Michele, there’s something about Lisa Kudrow that makes her totally believable as a brilliant therapist. Maybe the fact that she insists on conducting sessions via iChat, or that the sessions tend to expose her own agendas, makes it a little easier to imagine. Web Therapy was picked up by Showtime after airing online, and won the Best Writing and Best Female Actor awards at both the Webbys and the Streamys. Like Head Case before it (and Dr. Katz before that), the fictional doctor has an exclusive list of celebrity clients, including Selma Blair, Courtney Cox, Alan Cumming, Jane Lynch and Meryl Streep.

    Talk Shows

    7 Minutes in Heaven from Hulu and starring Mike O’Brien

    Imagine you had a sleepover party with a bunch of your closest celeb pals (for example, the Insane Clown Posse, Connie Britton, Christina Ricci or Amy Poehler). Wouldn’t it be the most fun like ever? SNL writer Mike O’Brien, the host of 7 Minutes in Heaven, knows firsthand that it totally is; each quick episode features an interview (in a closet, natch) that ends with an awkward kiss (Seth Meyers’ chin peck was particularly adorable).

    Between Two Ferns with Zach Galafianakis from Funny or Die and starring Zach Galafianakis

    One of the better known web series out there, thanks to high profile guests and the rising star of Galafianakis himself, this low-budget anti-talk show loves putting guests in an uncomfortable position. On a studio stage framed by ferns, an erratic Galafianakis prods interviewees for personal information and usually ends up belligerent. It’s a good time. (The episode that features Conan O’Brien, Andy Richter and Andy Dick is particularly memorable.)

    Kevin Pollak’s Chat Show, starring Kevin Pollak, Samm Levine

    Actor Kevin Pollak (who’s appeared in nearly 100 films, but is best known for his role in The Usual Suspects) runs this weekly talk show, which streams live for free every Sunday at 3 p.m. With an archive of over 100 episodes and guests including filmmaker Jane Campion, comic Eddie Izzard, cool uncle Dave Coulier and actors Henry Winkler and Bryan Cranston, there’s a lot to explore. And each interview is like a mini-Inside the Actor’s Studio, with expert interviewer Pollak spending hours asking his own questions alongside those submitted via Tweet and chat from live viewers. It’s not all serious, though—each episode features games like Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon or The Larry King Game, and usually things get at least a little offensive.

    unspecified
    news/entertainment

    Riley Green review

    Country singer Riley Green kicks off RodeoHouston with Toby Keith tribute

    Craig Hlavaty
    Mar 2, 2026 | 10:39 pm
    Riley Green RodeoHouston concert 2026
    Courtesy of Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo
    Country singer Riley Green opened RodeoHouston on Monday, March 2.

    Looking like a member of the Dutton clan that grew tired of the ranching business and got really into Toby Keith and duck hunting, Riley Green opened the 2026 edition of the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo on Monday, March 2 in front of 59,250 attendees.

    The Alabama native and former college football quarterback — because of course he was — strikes a starched jeans balance between the tender, woo-pitchin’ of guys like Merle Haggard and George Jones and the deep, blinding romance of neo-traditionalists Tracy Lawrence and fellow 2026 RodeoHouston performer Tim McGraw, with a cowboy hat resting over his epic flow.

    Speaking of the Taylor Sheridan Television Universe (the TSTU), Green will soon be seen on the Sheridan-produced Yellowstone spin-off series Marshals, which premiered on CBS this past weekend, as a troubled former Navy SEAL.

    The ACM New Male Artist of the Year for 2020, the 37-year-old didn’t get around to playing RodeoHouston until just last year. When Green isn’t in a recording studio, performing onstage, starting a duck hunting brand, or conspicuously vacationing with his shirt off in a tropical climate near other young country stars, he retreats to his farm or deep into a far-flung swamp on a hunting excursion. That being said, if I ever start a country punk band, I’m going to call it Riley Green’s Forearms, because they seem to attract audiences as much as his music.

    Green’s show kicked off just after 9:20 pm with the man himself blowing into a duck call and launching into “Different ‘Round Here,” luckily out of earshot of any ducklings NRG Center potentially bedding down for the night.

    “Hell Of A Way To Go” came with a mid-song disclaimer that it was his grandfather who was a fan of Alabama football, lest any alumni in the crowd get things twisted, before switching it to up Texas.

    Green honored his mentor, Jamey Johnson, with a widescreen cover of the woolly singer-songwriter’s timeless “In Color”. Green’s earliest work was heavily influenced by Johnson, and the pair have become lasting friends.

    He and fellow country star Ella Langley have become inexorably linked since their 2024 chart-topping duet "You Look Like You Love Me” like a nu-country Conway and Loretta. Sadly, there was no convertible riding out onto the rodeo dirt with Langley riding shotgun to jump into the duet, but the female audience members filled in admirably in her stead. "There Was This Girl," his gold-certified debut single, followed it up.

    The late Toby Keith got some shine with a medley of his hits, including Green taking a turn at Keith’s 2002 anthem "Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue," which has earned something of a resurgence due to the USA hockey team singing it at the Winter Olympics.

    Green slowed things down and took a break on a stool for “Jesus Saves” and “Don’t Mind If I Do,” showing off his solo acoustic chops.

    The smoldering bedroom romp “Worst Way” got the biggest squeals of the night, with tall boys hoisted over cowboy hats, while his 2019 hit, "I Wish Grandpas Never Died" — the triple-platinum tribute to his late grandfathers, Lendon Bonds and Buford Green — brought the waterworks and a sea of smartphone flashlights through the stadium.

    Green made his way out of the building with his band’s take on Alabama’s “Dixieland Delight,” jumping into a Ford pickup and into a few thousand fans’ dreams.

    Setlist

    Different ‘Round Here
    Change My Mind
    Hell of a Way To Go
    In Color (Jamey Johnson cover)
    You Look Like You Love Me
    There Was This Girl
    Toby Keith Tribute Set


    • I Should’ve Been A Cowboy
    • Courtesy of the Red, White & Blue

    Jesus Saves
    Don’t Mind If I Do
    Worst Way
    I Wish Grandpas Never Died
    Bury Me in Dixie / Dixieland Delight

    Riley Green RodeoHouston concert 2026

    Courtesy of Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo

    Country singer Riley Green opened RodeoHouston on Monday, March 2.

    rodeohoustonconcert review
    news/entertainment

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