15. Into the Night (2020)

Into the Nightis a Belgian post-apocalyptic mini-series. Well, technically it’s post-apocalyptic… but the series takes placeright asa cosmic event wipes out most of Earth.

It may not have the best characters or acting you’ve seen on TV, but the premise is intriguing—especially if you love science fiction—and the pilot episode is directed in a way that keeps you hooked all the way through.

Related:The best TV miniseries to binge-watch

14. Santa Clarita Diet (2017)

Santa Clarita Dietis one of the most unique TV sitcoms you’ll ever watch. It’s a double parody of two genres: the zombie horror genre and the home-life sitcom genre.

Sheila and Joel are two real estate agents in the middle-class suburbs of Santa Clarita, but Sheila wakes up one day to discover that she craves human flesh and can’t eat anything else.

The pilot episode sets everything up so well, and establishes the light-hearted tone that shapes the entire series to come.

Related:The Most Beautiful TV Shows in 4K and HDR, Ranked

13. Heroes (2006)

RememberHeroes? The cultural hit that turned TV on its head in the middle 2000s? The ensemble-cast superhero TV series that appealed to a mainstream audience with subject matter that was strictly reserved for “nerds and geeks” until then?

Well, the series would fumble its second season and tumble into the dumpster with its remaining seasons, but the first season ofHeroesis one of the most solid seasons of speculative TV.

And we can thank the the pilot episode ofHeroesfor that, because it deftly introduces a large cast of characters and pulls us into each of their stories, all while hooking us with mystery after mystery and question after question.

12. Money Heist (2017)

Don’t you hate how most heist movies wrap up in just under 2 hours? Seems pretty unreasonable, doesn’t it? So much can go wrong during a heist, and a movie just can’t capture it all.

Which is whyMoney Heistis so awesome. This limited series takes the idea of a bank heist—against the Royal Mint of Spain, no less—and really runs with it.

The entire first episode is just setup that leads to the actual break-in, and the rest of the series is about the actual heist. It’s methodical, suspenseful, thrilling, and the pilot episode does an excellent job setting up expectations for the ride.

Related:The best geeky TV series on Netflix

11. The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (2017)

The Marvelous Mrs. Maiselis the strongest contender for best original series put out by Amazon Studios.

The pilot episode of the series doesn’t do anything special per se, except to showcase the incredible writing, acting, direction, and set design that stays consistently high-quality throughout the entire series.

It’s an oddly uplifting series despite the heavy themes and subject matter, and it certainly feels like a one-of-a-kind show. It’s even rarer because it starts off strong and gets even better over time.

10. The Shield (2002)

When I sayThe Shield, I’m talking about the gritty drama series on the FX network that was about corrupt cops, NOT the television spin-off of the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

To this day,The Shieldis the greatest TV series about dirty cops ever made (only surpassed byThe Wire, which may or may not belong in the same category).

It aired during a time when cop shows were too plentiful and too sterilized and too optimistic.The Shieldbroke the mold by featuring an anti-hero protagonist that oozed moral gray.

Not to mention the shocking end in the pilot episode, whichreallymade it clear that this was a cop show like no other.

9. The Good Place (2016)

Michael Schur brought us much joy with his various TV sitcoms—includingThe Office,Parks and Recreation, andBrooklyn Nine-Nine—but he perfected his craft withThe Good Place.

You can sense the classic Schur elements in this series, but it feels far removed from his other three sitcom hits. Instead,The Good Placefeels tighter, more refined, and solid from the first scene.

The premise is great and ripe with potential, and the writers wringe every ounce of awesomeness out of it over the course of four seasons. But it all starts with the excellent pilot episode!

Related:Happy Feelgood Netflix Shows to Watch When You’re Sad or Down

8. Fringe (2008)

The first season ofFringeis the weakest of the series, but what I love about the pilot episode is how masterfully it blends character dynamics with an increasingly strange yet compelling premise.

I won’t spoil anything here, butFringeis like a mixture ofThe X-FilesplusThe Twilight Zone, and this first episode perfectly captures that essence with its twists and shocks.

The show became more serial over its run starting with the second season, but it always stayed true to the horror-slash-science-fiction trappings promised by the opener.

7. The Newsroom (2012)

The Newsroommay have gotten lost in its idealism and buried under flat characters along the way, but the pilot episode of the series was a powerful one.

Opening with one of the most engaging TV monologues in recent history, and carried by great acting talent,The Newsroom’sfirst scene successfully promised a well-produced show, and got you invested in where it might go from there.

Related:The best Aaron Sorkin movies and TV shows

6. Arrested Development (2003)

Smartly-written TV sitcoms are hard to come by, butArrested Developmentis one of the most notable examples, and we can thank this show for proving how funny a comedy TV show can be without any laugh tracks to back it up.

Arrested Developmentis witty, absurd, clever, irreverent, and downright hilarious—as long as you’re paying attention. The jokes are dense and layered, and there’s a lot to unpack in each scene.

The pilot episode ofArrested Developmentis the perfect introduction to the Bluthe family, establishing each character’s personality and quirks in just a few lines.

Netflix rebooted the series with seasons 4 and 5, but those feel like they belong to a different show. We recommend watching the first three seasons and leaving it at that.

Related:The Most Dysfunctional TV Families of All Time, Ranked

5. Prison Break (2005)

For me,Prison Breakonly had one good season, and that was the very first. The follow-up seasons were a mess that retroactively ruined what the show had accomplished.

But if you only watch the first season, it’s fantastic. The pilot episode starts with a bang as Michael Scofield actually breaks INTO prison, then spends the rest of the season executing his master plan: to break his wrongfully convicted brother out.

Everything is set up so well in the pilot episode, and I’m sad that I can’t watch this again with fresh eyes.

Related:The Best TV Shows About Jail, Prison, and Inmates

4. The Walking Dead (2010)

The pilot episode ofThe Walking Deadwas the best episode of the show’s entire run—which is sad given how much potential was wasted, but also fine because the episode can stand on its own.

It’s a satisfying story with its own beginning, middle, and end, so you don’t need to watch the rest of the series (or even the rest of the season) to appreciate the story in this first episode.

It’s well-directed, well-written, well-acted, tense and suspenseful, with a memorable mood and atmosphere. It’s on par with some of the best zombie movies you may have seen.

Related:The best AMC shows worth wathcing

3. Orphan Black (2013)

Imagine you’re walking through a subway station only to cross paths with someone who looks exactly like you, and yet they’re completely not-like you in every way—almost like they’re from a different social class altogether.

You’re intrigued, so you follow them… and before you know it, they’ve jumped in front of a train and committed suicide.

That’s basically the opener toOrphan Black, and it only gets wilder from there. It’s one of the best sci-fi TV shows to watch, and the pilot episode is a great intro to the craziness of this series.

2. Battlestar Galactica (2004)

The reimaginedBattlestar GalacticaTV series actually debuted with a three-hour miniseries, but I didn’t know that when I first watched it. I’d jumped right in with the pilot episode.

Even though I was confused in some parts, I found that it was easy enough to follow along despite having skipped the preceding miniseries. And more importantly, the pilot episode—titled “33”—remains as one of my favorite episodes of TV ever.

This pilot episode is one of the most tense, suspenseful, and effective openers to any TV series. It perfectly sets up the premise and shows what this show is going to be all about.

Related:Amazing sci-fi TV series worth rewatching

1. Lost (2004)

Without question,Losthas the best TV pilot episode of all time. It’s flawless in direction, casting, acting, pacing, cinematography, scoring… everything! From start to finish, it pulls you in and refuses to let go.

This pilot episode has slick introductions to some of the best characters on TV, a familiar situation that turns into a life-threatening disaster, an exotic and dangerous location, and a handful of wild mysteries that keep you on edge.

The episode’s final line may just be one of the most iconic TV lines ever uttered. “Guys, where are we?”

Read next:The most epic TV series of all time

whatNerd

whatNerd

whatNerd

The 15 Best Pilot Episodes of All Time: When TV Series Start Right

The 13 Best TV Shows Set in Wintery Snow and Ice, Ranked

The 15 Best TV Shows About Gangs and Gangsters, Ranked

The 15 Best Simpsons Episodes of All Time, Ranked

The 11 Best Female Detective TV Shows, Ranked

The 13 Best Animated TV Shows for Adults Worth Watching

The 11 Best Silent TV Characters Who Are Mute or Don’t Speak

The 16 Greatest TV Characters Who Struggle With Addiction

What Is Lakorn? The 7 Best Lakorn Series for Beginners

The 15 Best Horror TV Shows of All Time, Ranked

The 15 Best Historical K-Drama Series of All Time, Ranked

The 12 Best TV Shows That Take Place on a Beach, Ranked

The 10 Most Trippy Simpsons Episodes That Are Super Weird

The 10 Best Movies and TV Shows About OCD Behaviors

The 13 Best TV Shows Set in Wintery Snow and Ice, Ranked

The 10 Best Weapons Crafted in the “Forged in Fire” TV Series

A Guide to British Accents Using Popular TV Characters

The 17 Best TV Show Intros That Are Visually Striking

The 8 Best BattleBots Machines From the TV Series, Ranked

8 Surprising Facts About House of the Dragon You Might Not Know

8 Iconic TV Shows Where the Setting Feels Like a Character

5 Adult Jokes in Kids Cartoons That Slipped Past Censors

The 11 Best K-Drama Series About Cheating, Affairs, and Adultery

whatNerd