There is no one like Betty White. I know everyone says that about everyone the second they die, but with Betty — it’s just actually true. She worked in Hollywood for over eighty years and somehow got MORE beloved with every decade that passed. That’s not a career. That’s a superpower.
I’ve been watching Betty White stuff since I was a kid catching Golden Girls reruns with my mom on Saturday nights, and I still find myself going back to her work whenever I need something that feels like a warm blanket. Which is often.
So here’s my completely opinionated rundown of the Betty White movies and TV shows that are actually worth your time — plus a few deep cuts that deserve way more attention than they get.
What made Betty White different from every other actress of her era?
Betty White didn’t just survive Hollywood — she outlasted it, repeatedly. She started on radio and local television in the late 1940s, before most of us even had a TV in the living room. By the time she hosted Saturday Night Live at age 88 in 2010 — the oldest person to ever host the show — she’d already been famous for sixty years.
She was sharp, she was filthy when she wanted to be, and she never played the sweet old lady ironically. She just was the sweet old lady who would absolutely say something that would make you spit out your drink.

The Golden Girls (1985–1992) — the one you absolutely have to watch
The Golden Girls is the crown jewel, full stop. Betty played Rose Nylund — the relentlessly optimistic, occasionally dense, deeply kind widow from St. Olaf, Minnesota — and she made the whole thing work in a way that’s hard to explain until you’ve watched it.
Here’s the thing about Rose: she could have been insufferable. A naive, sweet character who never gets the joke? On paper, that’s a nightmare. But Betty played her with such genuine warmth that you loved Rose because she was like that, not in spite of it. The St. Olaf stories alone are a masterclass in comedy timing.
All seven seasons are on Hulu. Do not skip the early ones because they look dated. They hold up.
The Mary Tyler Moore Show (1973–1977) — the role that actually launched everything
Before Rose Nylund, there was Sue Ann Nivens — the Happy Homemaker host who was secretly the most morally flexible person at WJM-TV. Sue Ann was catty, man-hungry, and absolutely delightful, and Betty won TWO Emmy Awards for the role.
If you’ve only ever seen Betty as the sweet one, Sue Ann will genuinely reorient your understanding of her range. She plays a character you’re not supposed to like, and somehow you like her more than anyone else in the room. That’s a specific talent and Betty had it in spades.
This is also the role that cemented Betty White as a TV icon decades before Golden Girls existed, which I don’t think enough people know.
Hot in Cleveland (2010–2015) — the late-career gem people slept on
Hot in Cleveland ran for six seasons on TV Land and Betty played Elka Ostrovsky, the dry-witted caretaker of a house shared by three women who’d relocated from LA. Elka had secrets, opinions, and a delivery that could flatten you from across the room.
The show itself is uneven — some episodes are much better than others — but Betty is magnetic in every single one. If you’re a fan who’s already done Golden Girls and Mary Tyler Moore, this is your next move. It’s genuinely funny and she clearly loved making it.

The Proposal (2009) — her best movie role, and it’s not close
The Proposal is a Sandra Bullock and Ryan Reynolds romantic comedy that Betty White absolutely steals. She plays the grandmother, she dances around a fire in the woods, she says things no grandmother should say, and the whole theater loses it every time.
I know some people are snobbish about rom-coms, and those people are wrong and also not fun at parties. This movie is a great time, and Betty’s in it, which makes it a great great time.
Lake Placid (1999) — yes, really
Lake Placid is a horror-comedy about a giant crocodile eating people in Maine, and Betty White plays a foul-mouthed widow who’s been secretly feeding it. It is absolutely unhinged and she is absolutely perfect.
If you’ve never seen this one, clear ninety minutes this weekend. It’s one of those performances where you can tell she had the time of her life making it, and that energy is completely contagious. Back when I was first building my list of underrated Betty moments, this was the one that kept surprising people.
Password and game show appearances — the origin story
Betty White was a game show fixture for decades — Password, Match Game, What’s My Line, Password Plus, Super Password. She and her husband Allen Ludden (who hosted Password) met on the show, which is honestly the most romantic origin story in television history.
These appearances are scattered across YouTube and some streaming archives. They’re worth seeking out not just as nostalgia but because you can watch Betty’s comedic instincts in real time — how she reads a room, how she lands a joke, how she handles the unexpected. She was a natural in a format that exposed anyone who wasn’t.
Toy Story 4 (2019) and other voice roles
Betty voiced Bitey White — yes, that was the character’s name — in Toy Story 4, which was delightful even if it was a small role. She also did voice work in The Lorax and various animated projects over the years.
These are not the main event, but they’re sweet little footnotes in a career that somehow kept finding new formats to be excellent in.

Is there a bad Betty White performance?
Honestly? Not really. There are lesser projects — some of the TV movies are thin, some of the later cameo appearances feel like they’re just trading on her name — but Betty herself is never bad. She’s one of those performers where even a mediocre script gets elevated because she shows up fully every single time.
According to the Television Academy Foundation, Betty White holds the Guinness World Record for longest TV career for an entertainer — over 80 years. That’s not just longevity. That’s consistency at a level that almost doesn’t make sense.
Where can you actually stream Betty White’s work right now?
Here’s the practical rundown: The Golden Girls is on Hulu. The Mary Tyler Moore Show is on Peacock (and worth subscribing for, in my opinion). The Proposal rotates around but is usually on HBO Max or available to rent. Hot in Cleveland is on Paramount+. Lake Placid is on various platforms and honestly worth a $3.99 rental if you can’t find it free.
For the game show deep cuts, YouTube is genuinely your best bet — there are full Password episodes archived online that are free and completely wonderful.
If you want to do a proper Betty White marathon, I’d go: Mary Tyler Moore → Golden Girls → Lake Placid → The Proposal → Hot in Cleveland. That’s the full arc of one of the most remarkable careers in American entertainment history, and it will take you a solid couple of weeks to get through. Completely worth it.
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Betty White worked for over eighty years and somehow made every decade feel like the good one. That’s the thing I keep coming back to. There was never a point where she was coasting or mailing it in or doing the nostalgia tour version of herself. She was always there, fully present, funnier than you expected.
Watch the Golden Girls first if you haven’t. Then go back to Mary Tyler Moore and see where it all started. Then watch Lake Placid at midnight with snacks and just let yourself be delighted.
She would have wanted you to have a good time.
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