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These are 10 of the best dramas to binge on Prime Video. Prime Video has plenty of great sci-fi, horror, fantasy, and superhero shows, but these are their more grounded offerings. There’s a mix of Prime Originals and beloved classics here, too.
1) Daisy Jones and the Six

Prime Video has some dramatic miniseries that are originals, but they’re not as prolific as some of the other streaming services. Daisy Jones and the Six is one of the few that is strictly drama and is also not an anthology. An adaptation of the novel by Taylor Jenkins Reid, this soapy miniseries tells the behind-the-scenes tale of a fictional band from the 1970s that is definitely not Fleetwood Mac.
Sam Claflin and Riley Keough are the main rivals and lovers of the show. It’s worth a watch if you like the California music scene aesthetic of the 1970s, and if you enjoy Claflin or Keough (or both), it’s a treat.
2) Desperate Housewives

Desperate Housewives premiered in quite possibly the most incredible fall season of television: 2004. Because of how soapy it was, it often got forgotten among its televisual siblings โ Boston Legal, House M.D., Lost, Veronica Mars, (to name a few) โ but it was entertaining and over-the-top from start to finish.
Its entire eight-season run is on Prime Video, and it’s a chance to binge a show that never lost its mid-aughts charms.
3) Secret Diary of a Call Girl

When Secret Diary of a Call Girl debuted in 2007, it served as Billie Piper’s follow-up to her first stint on Doctor Who as Rose Tyler, and it was quite the follow-up. It’s another dramedy, but the stakes are still high, as it focuses on the life and times of Hannah Baxter, who is secretly a call girl named “Belle.”
It’s based on the memoirs of a real, former call girl, Dr. Brooke Magnanti, who had a very popular, anonymous blog in the early 2000s. Piper as Hannah got a chance to be more than just The Doctor’s companion, joining a host of female TV protagonists who were allowed to be unlikable when they needed to be.
4) Dead Like Me

Dead Like Me is one of legendary TV writer Bryan Fuller’s “gone too soon” shows. It’s a dramedy about a pack of reapers who are tasked with ensuring people’s souls go peacefully right before they die.
George, the series’s protagonist, dies right as the show starts; a toilet seat from a dying space station falls from the heavens and kills her. Rube (Mandy Patinkin) is the head of the band of reapers as they do their mortal clean-up tasks. It’s a charming take on a procedural, and even if it couldn’t have much of a life on Showtime, it lives on in streaming paradise on Prime Video.
5) Mozart in the Jungle

The episode lengths of Mozart in the Jungle run at most 30 minutes, but it’s still a very dramatic dramedy. It revolves around the bombastic world of classical music in New York. Specifically, it focuses on a symphony trying to improve its odds in a crowded pool of similar organizations.
Symphony president Gloria (Broadway legend Bernadette Peters) tries to keep things afloat administratively, and that includes wresting control from conductor Thomas Pembridge (the equally legendary Malcolm McDowell), who isn’t happy to be supplanted. He’s replaced by the young, ridiculous conductor-composer Rodrigo, played by Gael Garcia Bernal. Lola Kirke plays the young oboist trying to stay afloat in all of this.
It’s a quirky, fun show that finds drama in its setting and the challenging personalities that populate its world.
6) Moonlighting

Moonlighting, one of the “it” shows of the late 1980s, was missing from streaming for years, due to music rights. That changed in 2023, when Moonlighting first appeared on Hulu, and now it’s also on Prime Video in its entirety.
It’s definitely a dramedy at heart, but it has the average episode length of a drama at the time, and each episode is about solving crimes, as well as the relationship between David Addison (Bruce Willis) and Maddie Hayes (Cybill Shepherd). It’s a chunk of television history, and it’s so good it’s now available to binge.












