20 Of The Greatest TV Theme Songs

Think about the last time you sat down to binge a series. Did you hit “Skip Intro”? If you did, we need to talk. Because the TV theme song isn’t just a countdown to the plot—it’s the sonic DNA of the show. It’s the “hook” that sets the mood, establishes the stakes, and tells your brain exactly what kind of emotional ride you’re about to take.

From the orchestral swells of high-fantasy epics to the gritty trip-hop of New Jersey mobsters, these tunes are the ultimate earworms. They bridge the gap between our living rooms and the fictional worlds we inhabit. Here are 20 of the greatest, sorted for your convenience.

All in the Family (CBS)

Archie and Edith Bunker sitting at a piano singing “Those Were the Days” is as authentic as it gets. It’s a nostalgic look back at a pre-war world, delivered with a warmth that balanced the show’s sharp social commentary and cultural wars.

Cheers (NBC)

It’s a somber, piano-led reflection on the “difficulties of modern life” that builds into the most welcoming chorus in TV history. It didn’t just introduce a show; it made a fictional bar in Boston feel like your actual home away from home.

Friends (NBC)

The Rembrandts’ “I’ll Be There For You” is the ultimate 90s artifact. Modeled after R.E.M.’s caffeinated pop style, it’s a song about friendship that survived ten seasons and a million “claps” in living rooms worldwide.

Game of Thrones (HBO)

Ramin Djawadi’s cello-heavy theme is a swirl of magic and mystery. It matches the “clockwork” visual of the opening credits perfectly, sounding so epic that HBO simply reused it for the prequel series, House of the Dragon.

Hawaii Five-O (CBS)

Morton Stevens brought the power of a full orchestra to the energy of surf rock. That opening drum roll and the piercing brass are designed to get your heart rate up before a single wave even crashes on the screen.

Mission: Impossible (CBS)

Lalo Schifrin’s theme is a mini-action movie in 5/4 time. Pounding bongos, sizzling stings, and trilling flutes—it set the blueprint for every spy and heist thriller that followed it for the next five decades.

Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood (PBS)

Fred Rogers didn’t have a flashy voice, and that’s why it worked. His warbling, warm delivery of “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?” was a direct message to children that it’s okay to be yourself, even if you aren’t perfect.

Sanfort and Son (NBC)

Quincy Jones reportedly wrote this in 20 minutes, and it’s a masterpiece of funk. The “scrappy, gritty” harmonica was meant to mimic the raspy voice of Redd Foxx himself, sounding exactly like a busy junk shop in Watts.

Star Trek (NBC)

Alexander Courage created a minute of “woosh and hum” that feels like the future. Between the wordless soprano vocals and the otherworldly flute, it’s a sonic invitation to a high-stakes adventure on the final frontier.

Succession (HBO)

Nicholas Britell did something brilliant here: he took a classical, aristocratic piano melody and slammed it against a distorted, murky hip-hop beat. It’s the sound of old-money entitlement collapsing into 21st-century gangster decadence.

The Brady Bunch & Gilligan’s Island (ABC/CBS)

The “Cheat Sheet” themes. Sherwood Schwartz believed that “confused people don’t laugh,” so he wrote lyrics that explain the entire premise of the show in under sixty seconds. It’s efficient, catchy, and an absolute lost art form.

The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air (NBC)

The rare theme song that is also a top-tier hip-hop track in its own right. Will Smith and DJ Jazzy Jeff’s storytelling rap is so ingrained in the collective consciousness that people who weren’t even born in the 90s know every single word.

The Jeffersons (CBS)

“Movin’ On Up” is quite simply the greatest gospel-tinged celebratory anthem in the history of the medium. It’s soulful, triumphant, and perfectly captures the era when the sitcom was the undisputed king of the culture.

The Muppet Show (ITV/CBS)

It’s a brassy, bouncy tribute to the DIY spirit of variety shows. From the “show must go on” energy to the inclusion of Statler and Waldorf’s heckling, it captures the beautiful chaos of Jim Henson’s world.

The Rockford Files (NBC)

Mike Post at his best. That lonesome harmonica and the cocky synth line perfectly captured James Garner’s private eye: a guy who lived in a trailer, got his car dented, but always had a sly grin.

The Simpsons (Fox)

Danny Elfman wanted something “frantic and frenetic,” a throwback to the chaotic 60s scores. What he got was a 30-year masterpiece that is flexible enough to be stretched for a long gag or compressed when the writers have too much story.

The Sopranos (HBO)

Alabama 3’s “Woke Up This Morning” is a bit of an odd trip-hop relic on its own. But paired with Tony Soprano’s gritty commute through the Lincoln Tunnel, it becomes the ultimate anthem for suburban mobster malaise.

The Twilight Zone (CBS)

Bernard Herrmann started it, but Marius Constant’s four-note “siren” is what stayed. It’s a musical warning label that tells the viewer they’ve left the rational world and entered a place where the rules of physics don’t apply.

The X-Files (Fox)

This one was a happy accident. Composer Mark Snow literally struck his elbow on his keyboard, found a delay effect he liked, and created a whistle that defined a decade of paranoia and alien mysteries.

Too Many Cooks (Adult Swim)

What starts as a 1980s family sitcom parody spirals into an eleven-minute fever dream. It’s an earworm so aggressive it becomes a slasher movie, a sci-fi epic, and a cooking show all at once. Pure madness.