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This eventually led to a brand new TV series that first made its streaming debut with Peacock back in 2024, and it’s coming back for a second season. With Ted Season 2 on the way, it’s now a perfect time to go back through the first season of episodes and see just how great it’s been so far. It really has been a strong season, and that makes this ranking a little more difficult. Read on below for Ted Season 1 episodes ranked from least best to best.

7). Ejectile Dysfunction
What makes Ted so fun overall is that it really is just a bunch of teenage shenanigans between two best friends. Many of the episodes get John (Max Burkholder) and Ted (Seth MacFarlane) into wild situations thanks to mistakes they make as a result of being dumb teens, and “Ejectile Dysfuction” is a perfectly self-contained example of it. John wants to watch pornography for the first time, and after going through hoops to rent a tape with a fake ID, he and Ted end up getting it stuck in the VCR. But that’s just the beginning.
The real meat of the episode is how each of the family members react to the situation. The mother Susan (Alanna Ubach) believes it to be a secret tape her husband Matty (Scott Grimes) is hiding, John and Ted hope to sneak into school and switch it out with a working VCR, and Matty and Susan try and connect on a more physical level. It’s a great episode that’s just full of wacky fun where it all works out for everyone.

6). Subways, Bicycles and Automobiles
Blaire (Giorga Whigham) is undoubtedly one of the best additions to the Ted TV series dynamic as she offers a more progressive stance for John and Ted to bounce off of, but clearly loves the two of them. Blaire and Ted’s changing relationship is one of the best scene to see develop through the first season, and the two of them spend the most time here over the course of a wild Halloween evening. They go through some very weird circumstances (including a teacher who’s too obsessed with Ted), and it’s fun to see them grow closer as a result.
Meanwhile, John has a very weird standout side story where his mother tries to set him up with a new friend, only to find that he’s a nearly 40 year adult with some odd habits. It’s probably the overall wackiest episode in the season in terms of how much actually happens, but hits hard all the same.

5). He’s Gotta Have It
John’s main story through the season is about how much he feels like a loser compared to everyone else. He’s got Ted by his side, but this episode seems him discover that literally everyone in school has already lost their virginity. As the final episode of the first season, it’s a return to basics for the sitcom that sees the 1990s vibe come back in full. John’s focused on getting to prom and going out with a girl who likes him back, but it ultimately doesn’t work out the way he expects.
What really makes this a lot of fun, however, is the special Ted charm that only it can get away with. John’s interrupted by the O.J. Simpson chase on TV, he tries to impress his date by using Aladdin (and it turns out that it’s a big and dangerous trend among fans), and it all comes to a sweet end that ties it back to the Ted films. It was a great season finale all around.












