25 Great Workplace Comedies to Stream (That Aren't 'The Office')
There are only so many times you can rewatch The Office (or even The Office). In fact, in the likely event that you aren't a Peacock Premium subscriber, you can't even stream much of the American series at all anymore.
But fear not: As some of us enter our second year of working at home there are still plenty of critic-approved streaming workplace comedies to satisfy any nostalgia you may have for days of toiling in a crowded office surrounded by your coworkers. (Or merely to kill the extra hours you have to spend at home.) Our suggestions for your next workplace comedy binge—including information on where to stream each show—can be found in alphabetical order in the gallery above. Most of these shows are from the past few decades, but at the end of the gallery we have compiled suggestions for some additional classic workplace sitcoms, as well as a few titles that are just getting started. (Shows such as Sports Night and NewsRadio not currently streaming in full on any free or subscription service are excluded.)
34 episodes (4 seasons) streaming at PlutoTV
The workplace: Platinum Realty, a high-end real estate agency in Los Angeles.
Created by actress/podcaster/director Kulap Vilaysack and starring numerous Comedy Bang! Bang! regulars such as Paul F. Tompkins, Drew Tarver, Tawny Newsome, and Tim Baltz, this semi-improvised parody of reality shows such as Million Dollar Listing managed to slightly outlive its original outlet, the short-lived streaming service Seeso. (Season 4 never aired there and debuted directly on PlutoTV, Bajillion's current streaming home.) Each episode also features a handful of recognizable guest stars, including Zach Galifianakis, Patton Oswalt, Dana Carvey, Jason Mantzoukas, Steven Yeun, Sarah Silverman, Andy Daly, Adam Scott, Thomas Lennon, Paul Scheer, and Gillian Jacobs.
“Like a frog that doesn’t realize it’s being boiled as the water gets warmer, “Bajillion Dollar Propertie$” started as a simple skewering of Bravo and HGTV reality shows but gradually become its own beast, just by stepping up the absurdity." —Steve Greene, IndieWire