Television loves addiction. It loves the chaos, the spirals, the late-night benders framed as genius fuel or tragic poetry. What it loves far less is what comes after. Rock bottom makes for compelling TV. Recovery, apparently, does not. We get the typical relapse. The tortured genius monologue delivered at 2 a.m. over a drink that’s doing a lot of narrative heavy lifting. What we almost never get is what happens after the chaos stops being cinematic and starts being exhausting.
Recovery, apparently, is where writers fear ratings go to die.
But here’s the thing. Sobriety isn’t boring. It’s destabilizing. It removes excuses. It forces characters to confront who they are without the mess to hide behind. Which, last time we checked, is called character development.
In other words, it’s great television.
So here are ten characters who don’t need another relapse montage. They need a sober storyline. Not as punishment. Not as redemption. But as a plot twist that finally lets them live.
1. Rue Bennett (Euphoria)
Rue has done enough spiraling to qualify for a punch card. What she hasn’t been allowed to do is stay. A sober Rue wouldn’t be inspirational wallpaper. It would be awkward, boring, ragey, and deeply real. Watching her learn how to exist without chemical shortcuts would be the most transgressive thing Euphoria could pull off. Less glitter tears. More emotional accountability.
THE MINDFUL BINGE: Watch The Euphoria Special Episode: Trouble Don’t Last Always On HBO Max For Real Relapse & Recovery Talk
2. Carmy Berzatto (The Bear)
Carmy isn’t just stressed. He’s addicted to stress. Chaos is his coping mechanism, and urgency is his emotional support animal. A sober arc wouldn’t dull his edge. It would expose the lie that genius requires suffering. Watching Carmy learn boundaries instead of self-immolation would be a public service announcement wrapped in a chef’s jacket.
THE MINDFUL BINGE: The Bear (Season One) – A Look at Addiction from An Al-Anon Perspective
3. Don Draper (Mad Men)
Don Draper sober would be terrifying. No alcohol. No disappearing acts. No reinvention montages. Just a man forced to sit in the life he built without anesthetic. The show loved watching Don unravel, but sobriety would have denied him his favorite trick: escape. That’s not boring. That’s accountability with a mid-century aesthetic.
4. Kendall Roy (Succession)
Kendall’s addiction has always been treated like flavor text for his daddy issues. Recovery would take away his favorite scapegoat and force him to face the possibility that the problem isn’t substances. It’s him. A sober Kendall wouldn’t be fixed, but he’d be exposed. And Succession was always at its best when the masks slipped.
5. Jackie Peyton (Nurse Jackie)
One of TV’s most nuanced addiction portrayals, followed by one of its quickest retreats from recovery. Jackie’s sobriety was framed like a personality downgrade. Less sharp. Less interesting. As if being clean meant being dull. A real sober arc would have flipped that myth on its head and let competence and recovery exist in the same room.
THE MINDFUL BINGE: Nurse Jackie Reflects the Best and Worst of Ourselves
6. Tony Soprano (The Sopranos)
Tony Soprano in therapy was revolutionary. Tony Soprano sober would have been radioactive. Take away the numbing, and suddenly every moral contradiction has nowhere to hide. Sobriety wouldn’t have softened the show. It would have made it unbearable in the best possible way.
7. BoJack Horseman (BoJack Horseman)
BoJack Horseman came closer than most shows to showing recovery, then kept yanking the rug out for dramatic effect. Letting BoJack stay sober, still messy, still responsible, would have been its bravest move. Growth without spectacle is rare on TV. That’s precisely why it matters.
8. Lip Gallagher (Shameless)
Lip’s early recovery arc was one of Shameless’ best ideas. Then the show got distracted. Long-term sobriety, parenting, and purpose don’t get enough screen time because they’re mistaken for boring. Watching Lip build a life rather than just survive would have been a quiet flex.
9. Jessica Jones (Jessica Jones)
Jessica’s drinking is treated as personality seasoning. Trauma plus whiskey equals edge. A sober Jessica wouldn’t lose her bite. She’d lose the anesthesia. Recovery here wouldn’t mean healing neatly. It would mean choosing to feel everything and still show up swinging.
10. Hank Moody (Californication)
Hank Moody is addiction with a smirk. Drinking as creative fuel. Consequences as optional. A sober arc would finally challenge the fantasy that brilliance requires self-destruction and that charm excuses harm. Watching Hank reckon with himself without the booze would be the boldest thing the show never tried.
Hollywood, This Is the Part You Keep Skipping
Let’s be honest. Hollywood doesn’t avoid recovery because it’s boring. It avoids recovery because it’s inconvenient.
Sobriety removes the shortcuts. No more montage-driven meltdowns. No more substances to blame when a character behaves badly. No more tortured-genius myths doing unpaid labor for lazy writing. Recovery forces characters to grow up, take responsibility, and make choices without the fog machine of chaos.
That’s harder to write. And harder to glamorize.
Addiction lets television posture as “gritty” without asking for transformation. Recovery demands follow-through. It asks writers to imagine lives that continue, not just collapse beautifully. It requires patience, nuance, and the courage to let characters exist without constantly setting themselves on fire for our entertainment.
And here’s the real truth: audiences are ready. People in recovery are already living these arcs. Sober-curious viewers are already questioning the myths. What’s lagging isn’t interest. It’s imagination.
Recovery isn’t a buzzkill. It’s a reckoning.
So Hollywood, if you’re listening:
Stop treating sobriety like the end of the story.
Stop confusing chaos with depth.
Stop pretending growth doesn’t make good television.
Because recovery isn’t where things get dull.
It’s where characters finally have nowhere left to hide.
And that’s the most compelling storyline you’re still refusing to tell.
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