More People Should Watch The 2nd Best Show On Netflix

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In 2016, two very different shows about girls with super powers hit Netflix.
One was . The other was a mind-bending mystery set in a small town with a scientist villain who conducted inhumane experiments.

One of these shows is no longer running. And yet The OA is still the second-best TV show sunk into the mines of . The best show is , but The OA isn't far behind.

The OA is difficult to describe, because it sews a handful of different genres into its own ethereal plane. The OA is surreal at times. Yet instead of floating images gently knocking against each other, the sci-fi here is delivered with the grounded assuredness of a Christopher Nolan movie. It moves with the same relentless force.

Some messed up things happen in The OA.

JoJo Whilden/Netflix

Our anchor and main heroine is Prairie Johnson. In the very first scene, Prairie, a young blonde woman, jumps off a bridge. When she wakes up, she's back home. She'd been missing for seven years.

















No one knows what happened to her. Her return is a miracle. Even more shocking: Once blind, she can see again.

Prairie has scars on her back and experiences traumatic episodes, but won't burden her adopted parents with her story. Instead, she takes to the internet, finding like-minded friends via the medium of YouTube.

From here, the story functions a little like the mystery in . We don't know whether Prairie is telling her new friends the truth or not. We don't know whether she truly has supernatural powers. To them, it doesn't entirely matter. She brings unhappy, trapped people together, showing them the same kindness and understanding they've afforded her. Showing them an escape.

Yes, Zendaya is in this show.

Netflix

The OA comes from longtime creative team Brit Marling (who also stars as Prairie) and Zal Batmanglij. The show feels like the product of buzzing minds excitedly throwing out idea after idea. The OA is as intense as it is dense, exploring the human condition, mortality, the afterlife and… the multiverse.

That's right. Forget . This is the show to watch if you want a rich, existential look at the interconnectedness of all things. The world of the OA is vast and the way it works follows the most unexpected rules.

The OA doesn't abide by any strict TV series formula either. The opening credits don't appear until 57 minutes into the show. It was written like an eight-hour film, with a novelistic approach. You don't meet some of the main characters until a third of the way through.