I'm not sure what you are classifying as a drama, but I have over a 140 shows on my currently watching list, so I'm sure I watch more than a few of them. In general, I like shows that are about the drama of a job or situation and hate hate hate shows that are all or mostly about personal or interpersonal drama.
To start with your list:
Justified, yes, one of the best shows ever, in my top 5 favorite shows of all time, and one of the few that I'd give an actual 10 out of 10.
As for 2 through 7: If I was quickly coming up with a list of my least liked shows, 2, 4, 5, and 7 would probably be the shows I named at the top. I spoilered what I had to say on each of the shows because it got too long. Read at your own peril.
I like Bryan Cranston, but I could never see what people thought was so great about Breaking Bad, to me it seems like just another show about a bunch of unlikable people. Add to that how everyone praises it as one of the best shows ever, despite the ratings showing that no one really watched it until the second half of the final season and I've marked it down as an overhyped fad show that will be forgotten in 10 years.
OitNB is not my cup of tea, see my second sentence about me not liking shows based around personal drama. Also note that it suffers from the same overhype that Breaking Bad received, ie based on what numbers are available (which are composed of guestimates and the Live+3 Day numbers for the 1st (6.7m) and 2nd (5.9m) eps of season 4) it ranges somewhere between 'show even CW would cancel' (especially early seasons) and 'moderate cable channel offering' in the later seasons. For comparison, Game of Thrones had about 8m Live+Same Day at the same time and two 2016 middle season episodes of NCIS had 16m (season 13) and 14m (season 14) Live+Same Day viewers. For context, Game of Thrones, starting around season 5 (2015), is basically the most watched cable show and for the past 14 years NCIS has routinely been the most watched show on tv.
Game of Thrones is lite fantasy with blood and boobs so that the casuals who made fun of fantasy geeks in school can now say how much they love fantasy. I watched the first episode all the way through (thanks Rifftrax) and I didn't see any reason people would even want to watch the second episode. I'm sure the books were better, but even then it sounds like a niche of a niche and not something that should be the most hyped show on television. Regardless, I will give that people are watching it, every season it goes up by about 1.5m until as of season 7 this year it's entering big boy network numbers.
I haven't watched much of the Good Wife, but was very meh about what I have seen and a few years ago I would miss out on a show I liked when sports or whatever pushed it late and my DVR recorded the last half of Good Wife and the first half of the show I wanted to watch, so I'm still a little irrationally mad at that show. ;) I haven't seen the UK's House of Cards, but I may check it out. Ozark is on my list of shows to check out, and although I haven't heard of Sneaky Pete before, I've now added it to the list.
If I was going to name off the top of my head a few dramas that I watch and like:
Medical dramas: Chicago Med, Code Black, Night Shift, The Good Doctor, The Resident, Coroner, Doc Martin, Mary Kills People
Legal dramas: Newtons Law, Bull, Suits, Burden of Truth
Crime dramas: Law and Order (Normal, CI, SVU, LA, UK, but not True Crimes), NCIS (Normal, LA, and New Orleans), Hawaii Five-0, Lethal Weapon (for real, one of the few movie-turned-show that is done perfectly), Major Crimes (spin off of The Closer and just ended its last season), Death in Paradise, Motive, Private Eyes, Stalker, Taken
Scifi dramas: Expanse, Altered Carbon, Westworld, Timeless, Dark Matter, Killjoys
Some random ones I can't classify: Happy!, Crashing, Shut Eye, McMafia, Preacher, Get Shorty, Chance (stars Hugh Laurie from House and Ethan Suplee who was Randy the brother on My Name is Earl), Alienist, 12 Monkeys, American Gods
If I was going to name three that I really think people should at least look at, they would be:
Happy!: "
An injured hitman befriends his kidnapped daughter's imaginary friend - a perky blue flying unicorn." -- IMDB
Nick Sax (played by Christopher Meloni who was Stabler in L&O SVU) is a crazy, irreverent, possibly immortal uncaring psychopath and when an imaginary flying unicorn (voiced by Patton Oswald) shows up to tell him that his daughter has been kidnapped, he begrudgingly cuts a swath of destruction across the city to find and rescue her. There is really no describing this show, it is just absolutely crazy. Meloni trademark sardonic delivery of the extremely dark humor of the show is excellent. Every episode I didn't think they could top themselves and every episode they proved me wrong. The ratings were pretty terrible, but Syfy renewed it for a second season and it deserves more eyeballs.
Crashing: "
A New York comic is forced to make a new start for himself after his wife leaves him." -- IMDB
Pete Holmes, a mostly clean standup comic who came from a devote background, plays himself in a fictionalized telling of how his wife left him and he got into the world of comedy.
Shut Eye: "
Charlie Haverford is a scammer with a small chain of fortune-telling storefronts and contracts building tricks for a family that controls the business in the greater chunk of Los Angeles." -- IMDB
Charlie (play by Jeffrey Donovan who played Michael Westen in Burn Notice) is a grifter who is basically owned by one of the local Roma crime families and wants to get out from under their thumb. When he starts having (possibly) real visions, they slowly put him on the road to not being such a terrible person. The drama of the Roma family is a big part of the show and adds a fresh aspect that I would compare to the Russian aspect of McMafia or even the Asian aspect of something like Fresh Off the Boat. I would warn up front that this is not a supernatural show and you shouldn't expect Charlie's visions to a primary factor of the entertainment.
American Gods and Lucifer: Even if you hate them, everyone should flood Neil Gaiman based shows with viewers until we get a (hopefully Bryan Fuller headed) Sandman series.
I might mention a few more as they come to mind, but that will have to do for now as I don't feel like digging into my show lists and cross referencing genres and tags to drag out the rest of the dramas. :)