Supernatural TV Shows
Supernatural television lives in the gap between the world we know and the one we suspect. Ghosts, demons, islands that shouldn't exist — the genre uses the impossible to get at very possible things: grief, faith, family, and the fear that the rules were never what we were told.
Its modern era is defined by three giants. Supernatural ran fifteen seasons on two brothers, a muscle car, and an ever-deepening cosmology — one of the most loyal fandoms in TV history; Lost turned a plane crash into a six-year cultural obsession and changed how networks thought about mystery; and The Vampire Diaries made small-town gothic romance into appointment television. Rankings reflect our quality score, which favors series with enduring acclaim, while the recently premiered section senses each new arrival.
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