The Top 10 TV Shows of 2018 (So Far)

07. THE ASSASSINATION OF GIANNA VERSACE: AMERICAN CRIME STORY (FX)

Season: two, following The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story. Nine episodes. Finale aired March 21st.

Who’s In It? Darren Criss, Edgar Ramirez, Penelope Cruz, Cody Fern, Finn Wittrock, Ricky Martin, Judith Light, Mike Farrell, Max Greenfield

Best Outing: Episode 5, “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell”

Must-See TV: If David Lynch reigned over television in 2017, this year belongs to Ryan Murphy. But, we already knew that back in January, when the second season of American Crime Story swept everyone away to the lascivious ’90s. On the surface, it’s a total distillation of Murphy’s worst trademarks — his hit-or-miss brand of melodrama, his ensemble of larger-than-life caricatures, and his manic, sweeping gesticulations at cultural commentary — only it’s made pure through execution. Stylish, sensual, and curiously affecting, The Assassination of Gianni Versace feels like a genuine statement from the veteran producer (and from writer Tom Rob Smith).

Much like the first season wasn’t really about the OJ Simpson, this series is hardly about Versace. Instead, it’s a lavish and sobering portrait of queer culture, not just for yesterday, but today. Through the eyes of spree killer Andrew Cunanan, played to dizzying spectacle by Darren Criss, we witness a thriving scene hampered by society around it. It’s a tricky line Murphy toes, and one that hasn’t been without its share of controversy, but he nails it. And thanks to a saucy soundtrack that ranges from Phil Collins to Laura Branigan to Aimee Mann covering the goddamn Cars, Murphy makes it an event. –Michael Roffman

Extra! Extra! Read Allison Shoemaker’s review here.

The Top 10 TV Shows of 2018 (So Far)


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Episode 2 – Mac Quayle

In this episode, Brooke speaks with Mac Quayle, the Emmy-winning and Grammy-nominated composer of shows like Mr. Robot, Feud, American Horror Story, American Crime Story: The People vs. OJ Simpson and The Assassination of Gianni Versace. Here, Mac shares how he started out, working with composer Cliff Martinez (Traffic) on films like Contagion and A Normal Heart and how he became the go-to guy for show runners, Ryan Murphy and Sam Esmail. He also reveals his inspiration and process for creating music for some of the most memorable scenes on television.

The Best TV of 2018 (So Far)

2. The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story

Just as The People vs. OJ Simpson: American Crime Story wasn’t just about the OJ case, The Assassination of Gianni Versace isn’t just about the fashion icon’s murder at the hands of Andrew Cunanan. Showrunner Ryan Murphy uses Versace’s death as the jumping off point to assess the ripple effects of homophobia in the United States, while still telling the gripping true story it’s based on with impeccable casting, pacey scripts, and slick production values. Murphy takes bold risks with the storytelling structure too, opening with the killing and reversing through Cunanan’s meltdown to trace the trail of destruction he wreaked.

The Best TV of 2018 (So Far)

The 10 best TV shows of 2018 (so far)

3. ‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story’ (FX)

The latest “American Crime Story” adaptation is a misnomer, as it follows (mostly in reverse chronological order) the life of Versace’s murderer, Andrew Cunanan. But as played in a tour de force and award-worthy performance by Darren Criss, Cunanan’s and Versace’s (Edgar Ramirez) interwoven stories are riveting and revealing, a study of the lives and struggles of gay men in the 1990s. At times difficult to watch, the portrait of the spree killer is gilded and fascinating, gorgeous and off-putting from beginning to end.

The 10 best TV shows of 2018 (so far)

The Best TV Shows of 2018 (So Far)

21. The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story (FX)

Anthology series. 9 episodes.
The second iteration of Ryan Murphy’s true crime anthology is not nearly as mesmerizing as The People v. O.J. Simpson, maybe because it doesn’t have David Schwimmer saying “Juice” repeatedly. Still, this one, which focuses on what led the serial killer Andrew Cunanan (played by Darren Criss) to slay the fashion designer (Édgar Ramírez, with Penélope Cruz, pictured, as his sister, Donatella) in 1997, is a fascinating study of a total psycho who loved cheesy dance music and should appeal to fans of, well, American Psycho.

The Best TV Shows of 2018 (So Far)

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Judith Light on her iconic career and her lifetime of advocating for equal rights

Judith Light, who most recently starred in Transparent and The Assassination of Gianni Versace, has been acting for decades. But there was a moment, as she was just starting out, when she almost left the business for good. “Early on in my career — because I wasn’t getting what I wanted and I saw other people getting what I wanted and I wasn’t getting it — I went into a depression,” she tells designer Zac Posen (a board member of Yahoo Lifestyle’s parent company, Oath, which is a division of Verizon) in the third episode (above) of Yahoo Lifestyle’s new “Loud and Clear” video series. “I thought to myself, ‘I have to get out of the business.’ I looked up and I said, ‘Look, whatever it is that you want me to do, I’m here to be of service.’ And it was in that moment that everything changed.”

Light got her big break on the soap opera One Life to Live. “Maybe I won’t leave the business now,” she remembers thinking when she was cast. But it was when she landed the role of Angela Bower on Who’s the Boss that her life really changed. “It was a cultural shift,” she tells Posen of the show. “It was the woman in the workplace and the man at home. And I have young women come up to me to this day to say, ‘I went into the fashion business [or] advertising — I knew I could do it because that was my role model.’”

In addition to her life as an artist, Light’s role as an activist is equally important to her. She has spent decades fighting for LGBT rights. “We are one family, we are one humanity, we are of one mind, and to me the whole issue of prejudice and bigotry is something that has propelled me through life,” she says.

“Dan came out,” Light says, recalling the struggle of actor Danny Pintauro, who played her son on Who’s the Boss, and how that affected her. “And there were other people I saw that were trying to live their best and truest life.”

Her work on screen is a mirror of that activism. In the Gianni Versace miniseries, Light played Marilyn Miglin, a woman in denial about her husband’s sexuality. Discussing the series’ executive producer, Ryan Murphy, Light says: “He sees the stories that need to be put into the culture to have discussions about the shift in the culture. The Assassination of Gianni Versace is really about how the gay community was viewed at this particular time, and if the culture were different some of the things that happened may have not had to happen.”

In her life and work, Light has made sure to do what she so admires in Murphy — start important conversations. “Nothing to me is more important than being of service and kindness and gratitude,“ she says. "Who is it that you want to be? … If you live in that question, you can have a very extraordinary life. The unexamined life, to me, is not worth living.”