This Is a Gardening Show (2026) — Review
Show Review  ·  Netflix  ·  Documentary  ·  April 22, 2026

This Is a
Gardening Show

Hosted by Zach Galifianakis  ·  Directed by Brook Linder  ·  Vancouver Island, Canada

Netflix  ·  Season 1  ·  6 Episodes  ·  15–16 minutes each  ·  TV-14

Episodes
Ep. 1Apples
Ep. 2Tomatoes
Ep. 3Foraging
Ep. 4Root Vegetables
Ep. 5Corn
Ep. 6Composting
Host Zach Galifianakis  ·  with farmers, foragers, food historians, and curious kids from Vancouver Island

Don't sleep on this one. This Is a Gardening Show is one of the most peaceful, unique, genuinely calming things on Netflix right now and almost nobody is talking about it. Six episodes. Fifteen minutes each. Zach Galifianakis in a garden on Vancouver Island. That is the whole show. That is enough.

Each episode picks one thing from the earth — apples, tomatoes, corn, root vegetables, foraging, composting — and Zach goes out to meet the people who grow it, tend it, forage it, or obsess over it. He interviews experts. He interviews kids. He tastes things and declares them the best he has ever tasted, which you believe every time because the man is visibly delighted by all of it.

There is no competition. No drama. No cliffhanger. No villain. Just a man who has been gardening as a hobby for 25 years, going around Vancouver Island learning from people who know more about it than he does, and sharing that warmth with whoever is watching. In 2026, that is genuinely radical television.

Zach Galifianakis

What makes this work is Galifianakis himself. He is not performing enthusiasm for the camera. He is actually enthusiastic. You can see it in the way he leans in when a farmer is explaining something. The way he bites into a heirloom tomato and goes quiet for a second before saying it is the best thing he has ever eaten. He is a hobbyist who got a Netflix show to pursue his hobby and the result is something that feels completely natural rather than manufactured.

His segments with kids are the funniest part of the show. He sits with groups of elementary school students and asks them about gardening and the conversations go exactly where you expect them to go, which is off the rails and into genuine comedy. A debate about whether corn makes a good telephone. A serious discussion about whether Diarrhea Town is a real variety of apple. Galifianakis plays these scenes completely straight and it is consistently wonderful.

In a sea of prestige drama and bloated thrillers, This Is a Gardening Show is a quiet little miracle. Fifteen minutes of peace, six times over. Watch it.

One of a Kind

There is nothing else on television quite like this. It is not a competition show about gardening. It is not a prestige documentary about climate change, though it has something genuine and quiet to say about reconnecting with the earth and where food comes from. It is not a cooking show. It is its own thing entirely, somewhere between an educational docuseries and a meditation on slowing down and paying attention to the world around you.

Each episode is short enough that you never feel the urge to check your phone. The Vancouver Island photography is stunning. The farmers and foragers and food historians Galifianakis interviews are all fascinating people you would never otherwise have met. The whole show feels like the television equivalent of a long walk outside.

The Only Downside

It is too short. Six episodes at fifteen minutes each is ninety minutes of television. You finish the season in one sitting and then you want more. That is the only complaint worth making about This Is a Gardening Show. The future is agrarian, as Galifianakis says in every episode. He is not joking.

The Verdict

Peaceful, unique, genuinely calming, and completely one of a kind. Zach Galifianakis at his most natural, Vancouver Island at its most beautiful, and a show that has something quiet and real to say about the world without ever raising its voice to say it.

Don't sleep on it. Watch all six episodes tonight.