The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel Season 4: Must Watch Series After Season 4

The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel Season 4 is now available! Yes, the 4th Season will premiere today, February 17th, 2022. This sitcom is set in the late 1950s and early 1960s and follows Miriam “Midge” Maisel (Rachel Brosnahan), a vivacious young woman who attempts to remake herself as a stand-up comedian after parting away with her husband Joel (Michael Zegen).

The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel has received a lot of positive press since its premiere in 2017, and it has gone on to win several Emmy Awards, which include Exceptional Tv Comedy, Exceptional Leading Lady in a Tv Comedy for Rachel Brosnahan, and Supporting Role Leading lady in a Comedy Series for Alex Borstein.

The fourth season starts slowly as we adjust to our new reality. This is the next important step in many people’s lives, some of which are far more favorable than others.

Here’s a list of series to watch if you couldn’t get enough of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel Season 4

Hacks

IndieWire

2021 1 Season Comedy/Drama

Midge spends a lot of Mrs. Maisel hustling to be taken seriously as a comic, but Deborah Vance from Hacks has been doing it for a long time, perhaps enough to have committed the ultimate sin of being a woman who dared to age past her prime.

Deborah is a renowned comic whose long-running Las Vegas gig is at peril in the realm of Hacks. She teams up with Ava, a successful author from Los Angeles who was banned after writing an inappropriate tweet, to assist punch up and modernizing her content.

Many of the show’s funniest humor stems from the inevitable misconceptions and hard times that come with creating such an odd pairing combination, which will no doubt recall Mrs. Maisel fans of Midge and Susie’s banter. Hacks is a hilarious, well-written book about the difficulties of being a female in the show industry.

Girls5eva

Vulture

2021 1 Season Musical

The Fantastic Mrs. Maisel favors seriousness over comedy in her insights on show business, but Girls5eva is a touch more irreverent. The comedy, which was produced by Tina Fey and Robert Carlock, follows a ’90s girl trio that reunites 20 years later when a rapper borrows their one and only song.

The ladies have all grown older, but they’re still seeking to make the most out of their second chance at fame, which often ends in disaster. It’s jam-packed with Fey and Carlock’s trademark wacky humor, and it’s a blast poking fun at how ridiculous the entertainment business was and is.

Come for the earworms, but stay for Fey’s dead-on Dolly Parton impersonation. Fans will not have to wait indefinitely for the show’s sophomore season. It will debut somewhere this year.

I’m Dying Up Here

IndieWire

2017 2 Seasons Drama/Comedy

I’m Dying Up Here is set a few decades following Mrs. Maisel and is about a different age of comedians. The show follows a gang of comedians in 1970s Los Angeles as they make their way up the comedy ladder. Some are wealthy, while others live in cupboard apartments, but the documentary examines how they all struggle in various ways.

If you like Lenny Bruce (Luke Kirby) popping up to say anything bitingly filthy on Maisel, you’ll probably appreciate I’m Dying Up Here.

Broad City

WIRED

2014 5 Seasons Sitcom

Broad City is unquestionably one of the craziest series ever to appear on television. Featuring the lifestyles of Abbi Abrams and Ilana Wexler, 2 BFFs who are always praising and lifting one other up, it’s brutally genuine and honest.

We can’t help but appreciate their friendship, which is filled with a positive spirit and unconditional affection. We haven’t seen enough friendships with women like this on television, and we want more. It’s one of those performances that you’ll quote for the rest of your life because it’s that memorable.

The Queen’s Gambit

The New Yorker

2020 1 Season Drama

Although chess masters and stand-up comedians have nothing in common and Beth Harmon and Midge are diametrically opposed — Mrs. Maisel fans will like The Queen’s Gambit’s passionate evocation of the 1950s and 1960s, as well as the narrative of a woman prospering in a unique sector formerly dominated by males.

The Queen’s Gambit depicts Beth, an orphan girl with the intellect of a chess master, as she wins competition after competition throughout the world while battling addiction, love, and all the other aches and pains that come with growing up. Beth isn’t as outgoing as Midge, and she’s just as determined, stubborn, glamorous, and witty.

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