Apple TV quick summary:
Thank the heavens for 3-month free subscriptions! So, in rough order (best to worst) of those I've seen:
Slow Horses
British action-drama about a squad of MI5's worst operatives (accident-prone, burnt-out, made major errors, just a total arsehole, etc.) who do low-level stuff, often sort of off-the-books, deniable... and sacrificable. Stupendously good performance from Gary Oldman as their repulsive, rude yet brutally competent leader. 3 seasons. Absolutely bloody brilliant.
Severence
Team of people work for company where their work personalities and memories are completely separated from their normal lives - neither the innie or outie knows each other. Obviously has something to say about corporate life. Excellent, but typical streaming bullshit of random release dates, making me pine for the days of TV scheduling when stuff came out every year at certain dates regular as clockwork, rather then whenever the makers could be arsed getting round to it. 1 season.
Silo
Dramatisation of Hugh Howey's trilogy (Wool, etc.) about a postapocalyptic community in an underground bunker. 1 season, good tense stuff.
Hijack
Silly plane hijack series starring Idris Elba as a sort of corporate fixer saving the day. It might be silly, but at least it's well-executed good fun. 1 season.
Foundation
SF loosely based on Asimov's series. Very, very loosely. It has a sort of structural problem in that the Foundation series is supposed to be about a new sort of social science called "psychohistory" where it's inventor, Hari Seldon, can effectively predict the future of a society's development. The books are really series of short stories, as we look at the organisation at critical points in time, where it have to adjust, in stages all roughly according to Seldon's predictions. The point being, that this is societal: macro development, that certain things are almost guaranteed to happen irrespective of individuals. This is totally alien to what TV audiences want, so the TV series is all about consistent characters and heroic people doing heroic things, which is almost exactly the opposite of the concept of psychohistory. It's generally messy, overcomplex, but it's glossy and stuff, so, okay. Only watched season 1, but there's more.
The Big Door Prize
Small town encounters mystical machine that tells them what their life potential is, causing all sorts of ructions as people re-examine their lives. 1 season. It's pretty decent.
Platonic
Adequate awkward getting-into-middle age comedy-drama with Seth Rogen being the same character he always is and Rose Byrne as ex-college friends reuniting for more friendship. Fine, okay. 1 season.
Black Bird
Drug dealer gets put in prison and then gets a deal to get an accused serial killer to spill the beans for a sentence commutation. Based on a true story. Exactly like you'd expect it to be. Adequate enough. 1 season.
Ted Lasso
Mawkish shit about a US American football coach who is brought to the UK to manage a football (proper football, you know, the kind where they actually kick the ball) team. Several seasons, although only watched bits because I happened to be in the room when my wife was watching it. More than 1 season, didn't care how many to check.