4. "The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel" season 3 — Amazon Prime Video, December 6
Description: "Midge and Susie discover that life on tour with Shy is glamorous but humbling, and they learn a lesson about show business they'll never forget. Joel struggles to support Midge while pursuing his own dreams. Abe embraces a new mission and Rose learns she has talents of her own."
Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 91% (season 2)
What critics said: "Sherman-Palladino has written a woman who's fearless, blunt, and brilliant at what she does, and watching her rise is Mrs. Maisel's trump card." — The Atlantic (season 2)
3. "Vikings" season 6 — History, December 6
Description: "After years of turmoil and tragedy, the series reaches its biggest climax yet with the Vikings traveling to never-before-seen locations thousands of miles from Kattegat, meeting vicious rivals worthy of their strategic combat and finally facing the consequences of Ragnar's death. The Seer's visions come to fruition as the final season answers important life-altering questions while making it clear, the war is far from over."
Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 91% (season 5)
What critics said: "As usual, Vikings is a bloody good mix of medieval sex and violence, family drama and even a little bit of authentic history." — Los Angeles Daily News (season 5)
2. "Lost in Space" season 2 — Netflix, December 24
Description: "After crash-landing on an alien planet, the Robinson family fights against all odds to survive and escape. But they're surrounded by hidden dangers."
Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 68% (season 1)
What critics said: "Lost in Space loves its science, but it hasn't advanced enough to prove all that memorable in the here and now." — Indiewire (season 1)
1. "You" season 2 — Netflix, December 26
Description: "Obsessed with an aspiring writer, a charming bookstore manager goes to extreme measures to insert himself into her life."
Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 93% (season 1)
What critics said: "You is actually a wicked satire of social media, self-proclaimed "nice guys" and the twisted ideals of romantic fiction." — Time Magazine (season 1)