While 2025 certainly had some great TV shows, it also had a lion's share of terrible series. If we're gonna talk about the best of 2025, then we naturally have to talk about the worst. Not every show is gonna be a hit, not every season 1 is an Emmy nominee. Many of them simply head to the trash - and some trash even gets a second season. Watch With Us is rounding up the very bottom of our TV watches this year, from an ill-fated Suits spinoff to a goofy political thriller starring Robert De Niro. We've picked and ranked the five worst shows that 2025 had to offer. 7 Best Ryan Murphy Shows, Ranked: From 'American Horror Story' to 'Scream Queens' 5. 'Pulse' - Netflix If The Pitt was the best medical drama of 2025, then Pulse may have been the worst. The show follows a group of surgical and emergency residents at Maguire Hospital, a trauma center in Miami, as they all vie for the same thing: the position of Emergency Medicine Chief Resident. The residents navigate their personal and professional lives as they handle various medical crises while dealing with the fallout of a massive scandal at their place of work. Pulse ultimately failed to charm both reviewers and audiences, and it was justifiably canceled shortly after its disappointing debut. Critics ultimately found that Pulse went all-in on tired tropes without doing enough to set it apart from the other hospital dramas like Breathless or even the 86th season of Grey's Anatomy. If it's just another medical procedural show, then why not watch something that actually elevates itself like The Pitt? Despite some good acting, poor plotting, annoying characters and a questionable depiction of sexual harassment made this show is one to skip. 4. 'Zero Day' - Netflix Robert De Niro stars as George Mullen, a former United States president who is brought out of retirement by his successor to handle a very special assignment. Mullen has been assigned as head of a group investigating a massive, global cyberterrorist attack that resulted in the deaths of thousands of innocent people. You see a new prestige series starring an acting tour de force like De Niro and you think, "How could it go wrong?" Well, when it comes to Zero Day, it can go very wrong. The political thriller executive produced by Noah Oppenheim (A House of Dynamite) ends up a totally forgettable experience - a mealy-mouthed commentary on hot-button issues that fails to deliver anything of substance. Even the additional star power of Angela Bassett, Jesse Plemons and Connie Britton can't help poor screenwriting and middling tension. 3. 'Monster: The Ed Gein Story' - Netflix This is not the first time that Ryan Murphy's name will grace this list since the highly prolific showrunner committed multiple crimes against television this year. But perhaps the less offensive to the tastes was Monster: The Ed Gein Story, although it's really a "lesser of two evils" situation. The third installment of the Monster anthology series follows the life of notorious serial killer Ed Gein while examining his influence on pop culture and true crime. Critics somehow managed to find more value in Monster: The Ed Gein Story than this list's next inclusion, All's Fair, which sports an impressive 6 percent score on Rotten Tomatoes compared to Monster's 22 percent. The main high point of the show is the ensemble cast's across-the-board great performances and some stellar production design as well. However, most found Monster to be a repulsive contortion of Gein's persona while failing to meaningfully comment on pop culture - the only thing Monster: The Ed Gein Story does is indulge in the very thing it wishes to admonish. 2. 'All's Fair' - Hulu The only reason All's Fair isn't number one on this list is that while the show was universally panned by critics, it received enough hate-watches from audiences to justify its continued existence - but just barely. It's one of those Emily in Paris situations, where the car crash on the side of the road makes drivers wanna crane their necks and get a good look, even though they shouldn't. It's the same situation with All's Fair, Murphy's legal drama about an all-female law firm in Los Angeles that managed to clinch a series renewal. A show that receives the moniker from numerous critics as being "one of the worst shows ever made" is unfortunately going to get a lot of people to watch out of curiosity for how exactly a show could be that bad. In the end, All's Fair isn't even a "so bad it's good" situation because the show is too boring, too shallow and poorly written, to be entertainingly awful, all while helmed by an absolutely forgettable performance from Kim Kardashian. 1. 'Suits LA' - Peacock The television "Flop of the Year" award goes to Suits LA, a remarkably ill-conceived spinoff of Suits predicated on the fact that people enjoyed checking out Suits when it was added to Netflix. But trying to exploit the streaming success of an older show doesn't mean that a creatively uninspired sp
Us Weekly
Serious 5 Worst TV Shows of 2025, Ranked - No. 1 Has a 36 Percent Rotten Tomatoes Score
January 1, 2026
2 days ago
6 celebrities mentioned
Health Alert:
This article contains serious health-related information
(Severity: 7/10).
Original Source:
Read on Us Weekly
Health Analysis Summary
Our AI analysis has identified this article as health-related content with a severity level of 7/10.
This analysis is based on keywords, context, and content patterns related to medical news, health updates, and wellness information.
Celebrities Mentioned
Share this article: