Classic TV Series Millennials Grew Up With
Some TV series you just watch. Others practically move in with you. For millennials, a handful of series became the backdrop to growing up, the reason you rushed home after school, and the very thing you and your friends dissected for hours. They were a whole era for sure. And since you’ve found your way here, it could only be two things: you’re a millennial taking a trip down memory lane, or you’re from a different generation, but you’re curious about the cultural moments that are being shared by someone you know or something you’ve seen on social media.
Here are six classic TV series that millennials didn’t just grow up watching. They grew up inside them. The kind of shows that made Friday nights feel sacred, and Sunday reruns feel like a gift. A lot of us watched them on cable, flipping through channels on a DISH Network subscription while our parents pretended not to be watching, too. Good times.
1. Friends (1994–2004)
Get any millennial to tell you the name of a TV show and chances are that they will mention Friends. There were ten seasons, six characters, one overly-large New York apartment, and it never seemed to wear its welcome. The laugh track and the Central Perk set were not what made Friends to be stuck.
It’s simple. It was this sense that these individuals truly loved one another even when they were pushing each other mad. Millennials were raised together with Ross, Rachel, Monica, Chandler, Phoebe and Joey. We could see how they have bumbled their way through their twenties, and we said, well, that will be me.
It is more than two decades out of the air and is still viewed by people every day. That says everything.
2. Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997–2003)
When this show was on TV back in the day, Buffy Summers received that due credit very little, but we are glad the show remains a trend so many years later. Buffy is a teenage girl who was unwillingly selected to save the world but she did it by using her wit, and a wooden stake. Way before strong female lead is a marketing term, Buffy was simply doing it.
The genius of this show was that, the monsters were never about the monsters. The high school was constructed literally on a Hellmouth. A boyfriend who loses his soul when he sleeps with you. A villain created with your own sorrow. Buffy spoke about the real about being horrified, and millennials could taste every bit of it. The ending of the second season really stings, btw.
3. Bones (2005–2017)
Bones was the show you told yourself you’d watch casually, and then suddenly it was 2 AM, and you were two seasons deep. Twelve seasons, and the show really earned every single one of them.
Dr. Temperance Brennan and Seeley Booth are one of TV’s all-time great slow burns. The kind of duo where the tension is so carefully built over years that when things finally shift, you feel it. But beyond the will-they-won’t-they, Bones had a genuinely fun energy. It’s the kind of show that doesn’t get talked about enough in the millennial TV conversation, and that needs to change.
4. Grey’s Anatomy (2005–present)
Anatomy with Grey is more than twenty years old, and it has people in a chokehold. It is no coincidence. Shonda Rhimes created something that the people were not prepared to in the year 2005. Grey is Anatomy is chaotic, grandiose like and heart shattering.
Meredith Gray was not a good man. She was a sort of wild thing. And this is likely the reason why millennials were able to relate to her since she was just doing her best considering the situations that continued to increase. And then the performance would murder somebody you loved, and you would solemnly vow that you would never do it again. But the following week you would return. Every time.
5. CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (2000–2015)
CSI made forensic science cool before that was a thing anyone was trying to do. Gil Grissom and his team turned crime scenes into something almost cinematic, and millennials ate it up. The show ran for fifteen seasons and spawned so many spin-offs that “CSI” became its own genre.
It also reportedly changed how real juries think about evidence because people started expecting the kind of neat, high-tech forensic proof they saw on TV, and it became a documented phenomenon. . A TV show literally influenced the justice system. Not many series can claim that.
Some Things Just Stay with You
Television has evolved a great deal since the time of the initial release of these programs. Streaming, social media, recommendations by algorithm. How we learn and access things today is not similar to what it was like before until millennials were in their developmental age. They lived at the time when television viewing was something that was a community-scheduled, present-at-all-times event.
You would not be able to stop, you would not be able to cut some corners and you would not be able to watch three seasons within a weekend without a little planning. It can not be imitated by any reboot, any remake or even a spiritual successor and that is why these shows are finding their way years after they stopped.