10 Shows Like Netflix’s Human Resources (Ranked)

Human_Resources_TV_Series

Human Resources is a 2022 American animated series, a spin-off of Big Mouth. The first season of the series was released on March 18, 2022 on Netflix. Human Resources is, at this moment, a very hot thing in the world and in order to help those that liked the show, we have composed a list of the 10 best shows like Human Resources, so as you’ve liked the show, we’ll give you some additional series to watch.

10. Solar Opposites

Solar Opposites Season 3

Original Run: May 8, 2020 â€“ present
Number of Episodes: 17

Solar Opposites is the story of aliens from a better world, whose ship crashed on Earth. They live in a residential area of the United States3. The synopsis is presented, at the beginning of each episode, by Korvo, who explains that their home planet, the planet Schlorp, was a perfect Utopia. After an asteroid completely destroys their planet, 100 adults and their replicant (along with a Pupa) set off across the galaxy in search of a new home.

They ended up on Earth, an overpopulated planet. As Korvo seeks to repair their ship in order to leave, the other 3 adjust to human life. At each end of the intro, Korvo makes a running gag about an incongruous situation on Earth. Some episodes present a parallel story around miniaturized humans living in a kind of post-apocalyptic universe

9. Inside Job

Inside Job season 2

Original Run: October 22, 2021 â€“ present
Number of Episodes: 20

In this comedy set in a shadow government organization, Cognito, Inc. in the United States, all the conspiracy theories are real and a woman, Reagan Ridley, tries to keep their activities under wraps. prying eyes. The series follows a tech genius and her partner who try to uncover the secrets about the world that are “hidden in the shadows” as she works in a place full of reptilians and magic mushrooms.

8. Archer

Archer

Original Run: September 17, 2009 â€“ present
Number of Episodes: 134

The series is set in New York, at the headquarters of ISIS (International Secret Intelligence Service), a fictional spy agency where the protagonist Sterling Archer, a spy codenamed Duchess, works. Sterling is very skilled at his job, but also extremely self-centered and selfish, addicted to unbridled hedonism, as well as being an inveterate alcoholic and often insane behaviors.

The ISIS field agents are Lana Kane and Ray Gillette, the other characters in the series are: Cyril Figgis, the accountant, Pam Poovey, the director of human resources, Dr. Algernop Krieger, head of the “Research and Development” section of the ‘ISIS, and the secretary Cheryl Tunt. To them is added the head of ISIS, as well as Sterling’s mother, Malory Archer, dominant boss, alcoholic like her son. In Archer Vice, after the closure of ISIS, the team decides to pursue a criminal career in drug trafficking, to be able to sell a ton of cocaine, hidden by Malory in his study.

The new headquarters thus becomes Cheryl / Carol’s luxurious mansion. In the sixth season, ISIS is rehabilitated as a contractor to the CIA, and the series therefore returns to its usual format.

The second and definitive closure of ISIS occurs during the seventh season, this time by the CIA, thus prompting the team to open a private investigation agency in Los Angeles, the Figgis agency, of which Cyril is the owner. and the only one to have the qualification as a detective. In the eleventh season Archer, after being in a coma for three years, will have to resume his old life as a secret agent, going through numerous difficulties.

7. Clone High

Clone High

Original Run: November 2, 2002 â€“ April 13, 2003
Number of Episodes: 13

The high school of clones is not just any high school, since in it we can find the clones of the most historically well-known personalities in the world. They live their youth as if they were ordinary teenagers. There is, in the series, a small love chain (Joan of Arc loves “Abi” and he loves “Cleo” who has another contender who is JFK), and there are also moments of grace and others of problems or conflicts.

6. Disenchantment

Disenchantment

Original Release: August 17, 2018 â€“ present
Number of Episodes: 30

The first season begins with Princess Bean having two failed arranged marriages and meeting a naive elf named Elf and a demon named Luci, over the course of the following episodes the roughhouse trio and have misadventures in the Dreamland kingdom much to her father’s disapproval, king Zøg who is trying to use Elfo to create the mystical elixir of life.

As the story progresses, some episodes give pieces of Bean’s history and relatives, others introduce new lands and kingdoms that are part of the medieval world in which the series is set, and some introduce new characters. The final three episodes form an arc that begins with Zøg fed up with his failed experiments on Elf, but his advisor, Odval has found an ingredient that is guaranteed to make the spell work.

Bean and Luci are sent on this mission and after traveling, battling Big Jo and saving Elf, they manage to get the final ingredient and return to the Dream World but are faced with a new revelation, Elf is not a real elf.

5. Family Guy

family guy gags

Original Run: January 31, 1999 â€“ present
Number of Episodes: 383

The program revolves around the adventures of Peter Griffin and his family who reside in Quahog, a fictional town in Rhode Island. Peter is an incompetent, obese and dull worker. His behavior is particularly changeable: at times he is an absent father and addicted to alcohol who cannot make himself respected by his loved ones, while at other times, albeit briefly, he manages to worthily play the role of head of the family.

His wife Lois Griffin is a beautiful woman and a discreet housewife and she doesn’t always manage to be a good mother, especially with Meg. She is a piano teacher (although she is seen practicing this activity mainly in the first few seasons) and sometimes demonstrates artistic ambitions and exhibits uninhibited behavior.

The couple has three children: Meg, the typical girl with adolescent problems, perpetually excluded, derided and trapped in various relationship difficulties, Chris, an obese boy, naive and with a passion for drawing, and the intellectual Stewie, a brilliant newborn with a passion for science fiction weapons and time machines. Along with the Griffin family also lives the anthropomorphic dog Brian, the best friend of Peter and Stewie who has to deal with his big problems of alcohol and drug addiction and with unrequited love towards Lois.

4. South Park

South Park

Original Run: August 13, 1997 â€“ present
Number of Episodes: 317

The series follows the adventures of Stan Marsh, Kyle Broflovski, Eric Cartman and Kenny McCormick, four boys who live in the fictional small town of South Park, located within the real South Park Basin in the Colorado Rockies. The boys attend primary school (initially the third and, starting from the fourth season, the fourth grade).

3. The Office

The Office

Original Run: March 24, 2005 â€“ May 16, 2013
Number of Episodes: 201

The series depicts the daily life of office workers at a paper sales company, Dunder Mifflin, in Scranton, Pennsylvania, through heterogeneous characters and the relationships, friendships, loves and events of their lives.

2. BoJack Horseman

Bojackhorseman

Original Run: August 22, 2014 â€“ January 31, 2020
Number of Episodes: 77

In a parallel world where humans and anthropomorphic animals live side by side, BoJack Horseman, a horse actor best known for starring in a fictional 1990s sitcom, Horsin’ Around, lives in Hollywood (renamed in the first season “Hollywoo” after the letter D disappeared from the panel). After an 18-year slump, he strives to regain fame in the hypercompetitive world of show business, and will succeed for a time thanks to his interpretation of the role of Secretariat in a biopic on the life of the famous racehorse.

BoJack juggles between a life of debauchery and often cumbersome friends: Princess Carolyn, in turn his girlfriend, his ex-girlfriend and his agent, Todd Chavez, whom he hosts at his home and considers himself his roommate, and Mr. Peanutbutter, his friend and rival at the same time, hero of a sitcom of the same style and the same time as BoJack, but whose career was more successful.

His problems of addiction to drugs, alcohol and sex cause him many setbacks, and despite his newfound fame, he remains depressed and locks himself in a continual cycle of self-destruction over the seasons; while his friends pursue their own lives.

1. Big Mouth

Big Mouth

Original Run: September 29, 2017 â€“ present
Number of Episodes: 51

The series follows the adventures of 5th graders at an East Coast middle school near New York City as they face the throes of puberty and their first steps into adulthood. The episodes also focus on the evolutions between their friendships without ignoring their mutual awakenings to sexuality.

Each episode is centered on a sentimental or sexual question, with no real taboos. Female sexuality is represented as much as that of boys. The questions of first periods, masturbation for both sexes, real or supposed homosexuality, as well as rape and infidelity are thus tackled.