10 Best Resident Alien Alternatives That Mix Laughs and Sci-Fi

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If​‍​‌‍​‍‌​‍​‌‍​‍‌ you find Alan Tudyk’s dry-witted, deadpan alien doctor in Resident Alien making you laugh, cringe, and root for him all at the same time, then it’s very likely that you would want to watch more series that have a similar combination of sci-fi strangeness and offbeat humor. That mixture of alien strangeness, small-town soap, and lovable comedy is quite an implausible combination but not a unique one. Luckily, there are plenty of TV shows—some classic, some lesser-known—that convey the same “alien plus absurd humanity” feel as the ones on the list. Here are 10 shows that the audience of Resident Alien will be inclined to watch ​‍​‌‍​‍‌​‍​‌‍​‍‌next.

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10. Upload

What if death is not the end, but a digital upgrade? Upload envisions a world in which humans can transfer their consciousness into a virtual afterlife. Developed by Greg Daniels (The Office, Parks and Rec), the series satirizes technology culture to dating apps, all while slipping in smart emotional moments. Like Resident Alien, it employs sci-fi as a framing device to mock what makes us. Human.

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9. Eureka

This cult classic drops you into a town filled with geniuses—and their disastrous experiments. From conversational houses to broken gadgets, Eureka lives off making everyday life a comedic catastrophe. Underneath it all, however, it’s about regular people dealing with outlandish circumstances, something Resident Alien viewers will appreciate right away.

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8. Solar Opposites

Aliens attempting to “fit in” never fail to age, and Solar Opposites is here to make it work. Hailing from the creators of Rick and Morty, this animated show follows a family of aliens in witness protection in suburban America as they become entangled in ridiculous human nonsense. With biting social commentary and weird side stories (hi, The Wall), it’s the type of irreverent comedy that goes hand in hand with Harry’s adventures gone wrong.

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7. People of Earth

This underappreciated comedy asks: what would happen if alien abductees formed a support group? Equally ridiculous and sentimental, People of Earth plays the idiosyncrasies of its human characters just as much as it builds out its aliens. The result is laugh-out-loud, adorable, and surprisingly poignant—exactly where anyone who adores the heart behind Resident Alien’s eccentricity wants to be.

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6. The Orville

Seth MacFarlane’s The Orville proudly displays its Star Trek DNA, but it almost immediately settles into its own tone through embracing both humor and emotional storytelling. One minute it’s riffing on cringeworthy workplace politics, the next it’s addressing moral struggles on a universal level. That mix of humor and substance will come as no surprise to fans of Resident Alien.

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5. 3rd Rock From the Sun

Before Harry attempted to be human, there was the Solomon clan. 3rd Rock from the Sun tracks four aliens who assume the form of a typical suburban family to research Earth’s bizarre traditions. The humor is farcical and more slapstick than Resident Alien, but the delight in seeing foreigners bumble their way through human idiosyncrasies is ageless.

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4. Futurama

When deliveryman Fry awakens a thousand years in the future, he is surrounded by robots, mutants, and space nonsense. Futurama is full of smart sci-fi satire, ridiculous adventures, and—interestingly—gut-wrenching emotional punches. Like Resident Alien, it’s smart enough to have its cake and eat it too when it comes to clever comedy and deeper questions regarding identity and belonging.

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3. American Dad

Seth MacFarlane is on the list again with American Dad. Its alien resident, Roger, is outrageous, sarcastic, and reinventing himself each week in even more outrageous disguises. Although the show is not a heavy sci-fi one, Roger’s anarchic presence provides the same catharsis as Harry’s fish-out-of-water behavior in Resident Alien.

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2. Sneaky Pete

Okay, so it’s not sci-fi—but hear me out. Sneaky Pete centers on a con man pretending to be someone else, always one step away from exposure. That constant tension of keeping up a fake identity mirrors Harry’s secret life in Resident Alien. Add in sharp writing and dark humor, and you’ve got a surprisingly fitting companion show.

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1. Mork & Mindy

Where it all started. Mork & Mindy brought the world Robin Williams as Mork, an alien who comes to Earth to observe and find himself hilariously caught up in the mundane lives of human beings. It’s goofier and more old-school sitcom than Resident Alien, but the DNA is the same: an outsider observer, completely bombing, yet making us laugh in the process.

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If you’re here for the sci-fi shenanigans, the offbeat characters, or the unexpectedly rich explorations of human nature, these shows contain the same magic that sets Resident Alien apart. A few are established classics, a few are more recent experiments—but all of them will be entertaining to watch while you wait for the next trip to Patience, Colorado.

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