The complete guide to home viewing
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From slice-of-life comedies to post-apocalyptic fantasies, cartoons always seem a bit magical: Theyâre drawings brought to life. And the touch of magic that allows us to fall into these animated worlds is especially comforting during a global pandemic, when uncertainty has become a part of our everyday routines.
Thankfully, peak TV means thereâs no shortage of television, including animation, to help us pass the time and stay distracted as we continue to practice social distancing and stay home as much as possible.
This list is not meant to be a comprehensive guide to the medium, but if you are looking to add titles to your queue, here are 15 animated series to consider.
âBobâs Burgersâ
Available on: Hulu, Fox Now
âBobâs Burgersâ is the television equivalent of comfort food, and lately, I find myself regularly in need of a heaping serving. The Belchers â Bob, Linda, Tina, Gene and Louise â have individual quirks and passions that inevitably lead them to various high jinks, but itâs clear in every episode that they love and support one another, and thatâs a large part of the seriesâ appeal. Well, that and Bobâs pun-happy name for his burgers of the day. Luckily, this long-running series can sustain your binge-watching habit for weeks before you have to start over. (And if the show makes you miss the restaurants in your neighborhood, remember that there are still ways you can support them.)
âCraig of the Creekâ
Available on: Cartoon Network
I do not miss being a kid, but sometimes I want to bask in that carefree feeling I associate with childhood. âCraig of the Creekâ lets me do just that. The series follows Craig and his friends Kelsey and JP, who spend their free time playing in and around their neighborhood creek. This patch of nature within their suburb is the stamping ground for a whole range of kids, including those pretending theyâre horses, those inseparable from their bikes and even some teenage âeldersâ who play tabletop role-playing games in their special hideout. If you want to reminisce about a time when we were able to hang out at parks with friends, this show is for you.
âHaikyu!!â
Available on: Netflix, Hulu, Crunchyroll
Remember competitive team sports? Actual live sporting events including the NBA and Major League Baseball may currently be on hold, but there are plenty of inspiring sports stories to help fill that void. In honor of the postponed Summer Olympics, consider checking out âHaikyu!!,â a sports anime about high-school volleyball. The anime follows ShĹyĹ Hinata, who falls in love with the sport after catching a match on TV, and his rival-turned-teammate Tobio Kageyama. Hinata has passion and raw athleticism but lacks proper training. Kageyama is just as passionate and a volleyball genius but doesnât quite understand the concept of teamwork. No prior knowledge of volleyball required.
Live sports are on hold until the threat of the virus outbreak has passed. So we asked a sports fan to recommend TV shows that provide a sports fix.
âBeastarsâ
Available on: Netflix
Looking for a teen drama murder mystery to take your mind off of the pandemic-related news cycle? âZootopiaâ meets âRiverdaleâ in this anime about boarding school students in a world of anthropomorphic animals. In other words, âBeastarsâ features both sexually active teenagers and social commentary via animal kingdom allegory. The series kicks off with tensions between herbivores and carnivores on the rise after an alpaca is killed and eaten on campus. Among the central characters are Legoshi, a gray wolf conflicted by his instincts and status as a predator; Louis, the red deer star of the drama club who rules the school; and Haru, a white dwarf rabbit who uses her sexuality as a means to assert herself as more than just easy prey.
âCells at Workâ
Available on: Netflix, Crunchyroll
If you need to get that CDC illustration of the coronavirus out of your head for a while, consider checking out âCells at Work.â This anime, set inside a human body, is about the everyday adventures of anthropomorphic cells. The show mainly follows a directionally challenged red blood cell that delivers nutrients all over the body and the white blood cell she frequently encounters. Scenes where the white blood cells battle various germs are pretty violent, but watching an immune system destroy monsters can be satisfying.
âSummer Camp Islandâ
Available on: Cartoon Network
This is another show set in a world of anthropomorphic animals, but âSummer Camp Islandâ is nothing like âBeastars.â This much more kid-friendly series is about the adventures of best friends Oscar and Hedgehog, who learn that magic is real after getting dropped off at summer camp. The camp counselors are witches and the islandâs inhabitants include aliens, werewolves and monsters. We may not be able to go on destination vacations right now, but this funny fantasy island getaway can help tide us over.
We polled more than 40 TV critics and journalists, inside and outside The Times, on the best TV show to binge while stuck at home.
âAmphibiaâ
Available on: Disney+
Appreciating the things that bring us joy feels more important than ever right now, and for me, âAmphibiaâ is one of those things. The series follows a human girl named Anne who has been magically transported to a mysterious marshland inhabited by frog people, where she is taken in by the Planters. You can expect killer tomato plants, tax-collecting toads, mind-controlling mushrooms, a talent show, crushes, giant scary herons and more in this celebration of friendship, family and frogs.
âInfinity Trainâ
Available on: Cartoon Network
If youâve read our list of 51 shows to binge-watch during quarantine, you will have seen my previous recommendation for this anthology series whose creator has described it as âa kidsâ mystery-horror-comedy-science fiction show.â âInfinity Trainâsâ first 10-episode âBookâ follows Tulip, a girl who hops on a mysterious train while she is trying to get to game design camp. When she wakes up, she meets a spherical robot with two personalities, discovers she has a glowing number on her hand and learns that each car on the train contains a completely unique world. Watching the analytically gifted Tulip figure out the unique rules of each car so that she can move onto the next is a particularly nice reprieve as we learn to navigate the ever-evolving rules of life in a pandemic. But itâs what she learns about the train and herself that make this series a must-see.
âKipo and the Age of Wonderbeastsâ
Available on: Netflix
The post-apocalyptic world of âKipo and the Age of Wonderbeastsâ features dangerous creatures roaming its vibrant wasteland, and itâs quite the sight to see. That 13-year-old Kipo, whoâs spent her entire life in an underground community, is excited by every new thing she sees on the surface world is even more relatable now that many of us are living under stay-at-home rules and every trip outside can feel equal parts risky and liberating. (It helps that many of these dangerous beasts are cute.) But whether you are relentlessly optimistic like Kipo, or extremely cautious like her new surface-dwelling friend Wolf, the showâs unique mutant creatures and soundtrack are what make its wonderland worth checking out.
âSamurai Jackâ
Available on: Adult Swim
âSamurai Jackâ might help you disconnect from what seems like a constant flow of news alerts because it is a series that demands to be watched â so much of its strength is visual, itâs hard to look away from the screen. The show follows Jack, a warrior sent to the distant, dystopian future by the evil Aku during a battle. Armed with a magical sword, Jack searches for a way to go back to his own time to defeat the shape-shifting villain before he takes over the world. (And if you find yourself drawn to the showâs silent sequences, consider checking out the creatorâs more recent âPrimal.â)
As a bonus, here are five more animated shows to (re-) watch, regardless of the state of the world.
âAdventure Timeâ
Available on: Hulu
âAvatar: The Last Airbenderâ / âThe Legend of Korraâ
Available on: VOD
âGravity Fallsâ
Available on: Disney+, Hulu
âShe-Ra and the Princesses of Powerâ
Available on: Netflix
âSteven Universeâ
Available on: Cartoon Network
The complete guide to home viewing
Get Screen Gab for everything about the TV shows and streaming movies everyoneâs talking about.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.