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There are only a few shows that did not make this list, because they’re not streaming. Newhart isn’t here, because it’s not streaming; The Cosby Show also isn’t here, but you can stream it on Philo, a live TV platform. The shows that are here are all available on a regular streaming platform, and they make up the best ’80s sitcoms had to offer.
1) Scarecrow and Mrs. King (1983-1987)

Technically, this spy show is classified as a drama (due to episode length), but the hijinks single mom Amanda King regularly gets up to as she “helps” a mysterious “Agency” operative, Lee “Scarecrow” Stetson, could qualify this show as a comedy.
Single-camera sitcoms were rare in the ’80s, with most of the more notable ones starting at the very end of the decade, and mostly running in the ’90s. Scarecrow and Mrs. King is also considerably less serious than similar shows of the era, with plots that regularly relied on the two leads being forced to do espionage together, usually with comical errors in judgment along the way.
All four seasons of its run are on both Tubi and The Roku Channel. In a lot of ways, it’s a spiritual sequel to Get Smart, a spy comedy from the ’60s.
2) Moonlighting (1985-1989)

Moonlighting is another show that lives in many genre categories, but given that it is known to this day for how well it introduced an edgier comedy style into television, it deserves a mention here.
Bruce Willis and Cybill Shepherd play business partners who both hate and love each other, as they go into the private detective business. Much like Scarecrow and Mrs. King, Moonlighting relies on the chemistry between its two leads to find comedy in more serious premises. Moonlighting also injected a lot of “will they or won’t they” energy into its early days, which, of course, would become a standard trope of romances in ’90s and later sitcoms.
Moonlighting, which wasn’t streaming for a long time, can be found in full on both Hulu and Prime Video.
3) Kate & Allie (1984-1989)

Kate & Allie was a lovable sitcom that aired on CBS from 1984-1989. It starred Saturday Night Live original cast member Jane Curtin as part of a single, divorced mom duo in New York City; the other mom was television actress Susan Saint James.
Even though the show was popular and highly rated during most of its run, public opinion of it cratered during its final season, when Allie (Curtin) got remarried, and the writers contrived a reason to have Kate (Saint James) move back in with her and her new husband.
Despite disappointment in the ending, it was a good, classic sitcom for much of its run, and it can be streamed in its entirety on The Roku Channel.
4) It’s Garry Shandling’s Show (1986-1990)

Comedian Garry Shandling had a meta multi-cam sitcom before he made his all-time great workplace sitcom, The Larry Sanders Show, for HBO. It’s Garry Shandling’s Show took an unusually meta approach for its entire run, with the cast knowing they were in a TV show, and often including the audience in “manipulating” the events of episodes.
Even though the show originally aired on Showtime, it lives on in streaming on HBO Max.
5) Night Court (1984-1992)

Night Court is the only show on this list that got a second chance at life; the classic ’80s sitcom got a three-season revival on NBC in 2023. The original Night Court ran for an impressive nine seasons, and they’re all available to stream on Prime Video.
The quirky workplace sitcom took place at the night shift for a Manhattan Criminal Court, presided over by the young (for the job) judge, Harry T. Stone (Harry Anderson). The show was created by Reinhold Weege, who started out on the popular ’70s sitcom Barney Miller, which took place in a police precinct.
Night Court found the comedy inherent in the kinds of cases that would appear in front of Judge Stone.













