Even more unpopular opinion: I didn't even make it five minutes into one episode of Rick and Morty. There was just such a repelling vibe and nothing remotely funny about it. Couldn't stick it out. (I have that reaction to pretty much everything in their Adult Swim lineup, though: strikes me as less "adult" and more "unfunny, twisted pre-adolescent with exceptionally warped views on what it means to be an adult"... JMHO, of course.)
Currently, I'm halfway through Amazon Prime's Upload: In the near future, death has gone digital, as people regularly "upload" into virtual afterlives. The wealthy get vast simulated resorts with every available luxury, while the poor get stuck in bare-bones avatars in empty rooms with data caps. Twentysomething programmer Nathan and his friend were going to change that with their planned freeware app - but an accident in his self-driving car leaves him clinging to life, where his pushy rich girlfriend pressures him into signing the upload papers to her family's afterlife plan in Lakeview. As Nathan learns that digital afterlife isn't the heaven the ads make it out to be, his caseworker Nora begins to suspect that there's more to his death than a simple car malfunction...
So far, it's a somewhat uneven comedy, but there are some fun moments and it has solid potential. The near-future it envisions is amusing and almost plausible, as corporations bend and merge to exploit new technology: Oscar Meyer Intel creates the first human clone in the first (disastrous) attempt at a human "download" back into an organic body. The characters can be interesting, and there's some nice chemistry with Nathan and Nora (Nora being about the most rounded and relatable character.) I just wish it would dial back the obsession with sex... and not regular, healthy, adult sex, but adolescent smirk-and-snigger sex that lingers on erections and boobies and a sort of ever-present horniness that apparently defines all human beings according to the writers. There's also a bit of a creepy vibe in how women are treated - the girlfriend is way over the top of the "stuck-up manipulative rich girlfriend" scale, and there's a co-worker who keeps hitting on/borderline stalking Nora even though she's made it very clear that she has no interest, though I think some of it is deliberate. Will stick it out to the end, but I don't foresee myself eagerly awaiting another season.