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As it turns 50, here are its greatest hits so far. Home Box Office launched on 8 November as a pay channel for movies and live sport. It pivoted to original programming in the 90s and transformed the small-screen landscape. Unshackled from the limitations of broadcast television, HBO was able to attract top-tier talent, push boundaries and redefine what the medium could do. What remains is a half-century of gamechanging dramas, coruscating comedies and landmark documentaries. Their settings span from Los Angeles funeral parlours to London pubs, Manhattan boutiques to Baltimore stash houses.
Their protagonists range from sexy vampires to sweary media moguls, dragon riders to depressed mobsters. Fire up that static ident and commence the countdown β¦. Lisa Kudrow riffed on her post-Friends career with this ahead-of its-time mockumentary about a washed-up sitcom star trying to relaunch her career. Hilarious, heartbreaking and scathing about Hollywood, it even made a comeback itself, landing a second series nine years after the first.
How meta. Clammy and claustrophobic with a killer twist. David Simon and co warmed up for The Wire with this Emmy-winning six-parter about a drug-ravaged West Baltimore neighbourhood.
A harrowingly authentic portrayal of poverty and addiction. Once they tuned into its slow-burn storytelling and jazzy rhythms, what emerged was a love letter to the city and the power of community.
Kate Winslet won a raft of awards for her gut-punch portrayal of a struggling single mother during the Great Depression, desperately trying to earn the love of vile daughter Veda Evan Rachel Wood. Bill Paxton played a retail boss with three wives in a fundamentalist Mormon community, but this richly emotional drama covered more than the juicy subject of polygamy.