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10 Shows Like Netflix's 'Lord of the Flies' You Should Watch Next

21 May 2026 at 16:00

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That book you tried to avoid reading in high school? It's now a pretty damn successful, and fairly faithful, BBC miniseries—succeeding either because brutal times invite brutal narratives, or maybe just because we like watching kids go wild.

And the kids, indeed, are absolutely crucial to the series and to William Golding's original novel: The book version of Lord of the Flies is perhaps better known than read because of its relatively straightforward narrative about how fast humans will devolve once the strictures of society are removed. We know that story, and we can imagine echoes of it in the news every day, but Golding's conceit to let it play out with a bunch of kids still feels shocking.

Many of the shows below were directly inspired by Golding's novel, even if they all center older teenagers or adults. Watch the new adaptation of Lord of the Flies on Netflix, and then consider these other shows about closed societies in extremis.

Yellowjackets (2021 – )

This time-hopping survival drama is about a group of teenage girls who are stranded in the wilderness in 1996 and do terrible things to survive—the extent of which we only learn about via flashbacks from the present day, where the events of 19 months spent in the wild continue to resonate. There are ambiguous teases of the supernatural here, but there's plenty of human-level horror as well. The show plays in some of the same territory as Lord of the Flies in its explorations of the nasty things we get up to when in survival mode, while also cynically (but accurately) positing that there's a huge difference between the version of the past we talk about and the one that really happened. Stream Yellowjackets on Paramount+.


The Wilds (2020 – 2022)

Situated between flashbacks and flash-forwards (not entirely unlike Yellowjackets), mystery/thriller The Wilds sees an airplane full of teenage girls crash on the way to an empowerment program in Hawaii. It quickly becomes clear that the accident was engineered and that the whole thing is some sort of social experiment, and the survivors are forced to compete against each other if they want to live. The show understands the ways in which young women are exploited and expected to compete against each other in the real world, making clear that a Lord of the Flies scenario with women at its center isn't going to go any better, even if it would play out differently. Stream The Wilds on Prime Video.


Lost (2004 – 2010)

If William Golding's Lord of the Flies can be seen as a trifle pat and on-the-nose, this latter-day plane crash narrative goes all-in on mystery and philosophy. We kick off with flashbacks that peel back the layers of the various crash survivors before diving headfirst into warm weather polar bears and mysterious underground bunkers and monsters made of smoke. Whether it's an uncommonly smart network show that rewards careful viewing or a load of nonsense is in the eye of the beholder—but it remains one of the most discussed and debated shows in TV history. Stream Lost on Disney+ and Hulu.


The Society (2019)

Kathryn Newton heads this surprisingly smart Golding riff about a group of teenagers forced to create their own community after all the adults disappear and a dense new forest crops up around their small enclave, cutting them off from everything and everyone else. It's less a show about the law of the jungle than one about coming of age in a world where the usual rules are no longer in effect. Stream The Society on Netflix.


The 100 (2014 – 2020)

At seven seasons, the CW’s YA The 100 is our most deeply explored TV apocalypse, telling the story of the descendants of refugees of nuclear devastation who return to Earth from their habitat in space to encounter the remnants of humanity who have survived on Earth. Naturally, the first people sent to scope things out are the juvenile delinquents (better them than me), and they discover that three civilizations have risen up in the aftermath of the apocalypse, and they are all pretty darned scary (including one populated by cannibals, naturally). More humane, perhaps, than Lord of the Flies, even as it explores similar themes, this show builds an impressive mythology over the course of its run, leading to a conclusion that’s borderline metaphysical. Buy The 100 from Prime Video.


The Decameron (2024)

Loosely adapting Giovanni Boccaccio's 14th century story collection with hints of Bridgerton-esque swagger, this version takes us to plague-ravaged Florence, as a bunch of nobles and attendants make their way across a dangerous landscape to hole up in a countryside villa to wait out the end while draining the liquor supplies—as you would. Rules and social mores are turned upside down, particularly by servant Licisca (Tanya Reynolds), who kind of accidentally kills her lady on the way to the villa, and then decides to take her place. No one's trapped on an island here (and obviously planes hadn't been invented yet), but there's still very much the sense that, however we are cut off from the rules of society, our most cherished values will very quickly turn to shit. Stream The Decameron on Netflix.


The 8 Show (2024)

If you want to see people at their worst, you don't need to get stranded on a deserted island—just turn on the TV. Generally, South Korean TV shows and movies have been ahead of the curve when it comes to addressing the exploitative nature of late-stage capitalism, and this show fits right in with the likes of Squid Game. Eight strangers are selected to compete in a game in which they're locked together in a building and sequestered on different floors each night. They earn money for each minute they last, but all their provisions must be purchased with money they've won, and at an extreme markup. At first, the contestants pool their resources so that everyone gets more money—until they learn that people on higher floors are getting more. Then things get nasty. Stream The 8 Show on Netflix.


And Then There Were None (2015)

Your first instinct might be to eschew the idea that an Agatha Christie adaptation has anything to do with Lord of the Flies, even one where a bunch of people are stuck on an island. It's more than that, though: Christie absolutely delighted in putting her (frequently posh) characters under pressure until they popped, those polite conversations at afternoon teas concealing hideous instincts lurking beneath the surface. And in that vein, And Then There Were None is probably her nastiest (complimentary) portrait of people rewriting the once-cherished rules when pushed. Eight strangers arrive on the fictional, thoroughly isolated Soldier Island, off the Devon coast, brought together under various strange pretexts. At a tense dinner, they are presented with a gramophone recording explaining that each of them has been responsible for a death, and that each will face justice in turn. Dun dun dun. Stream And Then There Were None on Acorn TV.


All of Us Are Dead (2022 – )

In All of Us Are Dead, high school becomes hell, almost literally, when a viral outbreak sees a Hyosan school become ground zero for a strange plague. The teenage students soon realize they've been quarantined from the rest of the city, and help isn't coming. Nihilism isn't uncommon in zombie narratives, nor are themes involving the breakdown of social structures. But All of Us Are Dead explores the world of a cloistered high school under constant threat as a parallel to our own: Class and background continue to be potent forces, even (or especially) amid the trauma of the attacks, and arbitrary social hierarchies solidify under the constant trauma. The closed school location is brilliantly utilized, and there's some appropriately soapy drama, too. Stream All of Us Are Dead on Netflix.


The Stranded (2019)

At first glance a bit more grounded than some of the shows here, The Stranded takes place on a Thai island in the midst of a tsunami. The island was formerly home to a prestigious high school, and a bunch of students have snuck back for an ill-timed party on the last day of class. A bad idea, clearly, after the storm hits. Kraam (Papangkorn Lerkchaleampote), one of the few students who actually lives on the island, is trapped there along with a couple dozen classmates. Kraam knows the island, but Anan (Chutavuth Pattarakampol) assumes leadership while other students either take on necessary roles, or fall in line. As the miniseries progresses, the new political order breaks down, even as the island's mysteries reveal themselves. Stream The Stranded on Netflix.

What's New on Netflix in June 2026

20 May 2026 at 15:45

Netflix's June lineup has a little something for everyone: true crime docs, sports series, comedy films, reality TV, and more. First, the live-action fantasty series Avatar: The Last Airbender (June 25) returns for its second season at the end of the month. Netflix is also launching a Survivor-style competition show—Outlast: The Jungle (June 10) lands 16 players on a remote island to play for a $1 million prize.

Following its May slate of soccer content in the lead-up to the 2026 World Cup, the streamer is hosting The Hot Seat (June 3), a comedy roast featuring World Cup winners from France 1998 and France 2018 alongside stand-up comedians. The Rest is Football (June 10) is a daily series hosted by Gary Lineker, Alan Shearer, and Micah Richards with analysis from the 2026 tournament. And USA 94: Brazil's Return to Glory (June 7), a documentary originally scheduled for release in May, covers Brazil's 1994 World Cup run.

Other sports content includes the third season of AMERICA'S SWEETHEARTS: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders (June 16) and Chris & Martina: The Final Set (June 26), a documentary exploring Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova's friendship and dominance in tennis.

The film lineup for June includes Office Romance (June 5), a rom-com starring J.Lo and Brett Goldstein as an airline CEO and the corporate lawyer she falls for (relatable!), and Little Brother (June 26), also a comedy, with John Cena as a well-known real estate agent opposite Eric André as his "little brother."

Here's everything else coming to Netflix in June, and everything that's leaving.

What's coming to Netflix in June 2026

Available soon

Available June 1

  • Bee Movie

  • The Big Lebowski

  • The Chronicles of Riddick

  • Cinderella Man

  • Creed

  • Creed II

  • Creed III

  • Father of the Bride

  • Father of the Bride: Part II

  • The Fault in Our Stars

  • Four Weddings and a Funeral

  • Fried Green Tomatoes

  • The Girl on the Train

  • The Hand that Rocks the Cradle

  • Hawaii Five-0: Seasons 1-5

  • Hot Summer Nights

  • House on Haunted Hill

  • Identity Thief

  • Inside Man

  • Inside Man: Most Wanted

  • The Karate Kid

  • The Karate Kid

  • The Karate Kid Part II

  • The Karate Kid Part III

  • Little Miss Sunshine

  • Made of Honor

  • Miracle

  • Muriel's Wedding

  • My Best Friend's Wedding

  • Out of Africa

  • Pitch Black

  • Rachel Getting Married

  • Riddick

  • Rocky

  • Rocky Balboa

  • Rocky III

  • Rocky IV

  • Rocky V

  • Rookie of the Year

  • Rudy

  • Runaway Bride

  • Scooby-Doo

  • Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed

  • Tyler Perry's The Family That Preys

  • The Wedding Date

  • The Wedding Planner

Available June 3

Available June 4

Available June 5

Available June 6

  • Grey's Anatomy: Season 22

  • Resident Alien: Season 4

Available June 7

Available June 8

Available June 9

Available June 10

Available June 11

Available June 12

Available June 13

  • Song Sung Blue

Available June 14

  • Piece by Piece

Available June 15

  • Drinking Buddies

  • Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief

  • Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters

Available June 16

Available June 17

  • André Is an Idiot

Available June 18

Available June 19

Available June 20

  • The Root Of The Game—Netflix Sports Series

Available June 22

Available June 23

  • Ryan Hamilton: This Just Hit Me—Netflix Comedy Special

Available June 24

Available June 25

Available June 26

Available June 27

  • Agent Kim Reactivated—Netflix Series

Available June 30

  • Sullivan's Crossing Season 4

What's leaving Netflix in June 2026

Leaving June 1

  • Fifty Shades of Grey

  • Fifty Shades Darker

  • Fifty Shades Freed

  • Glory

  • Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom

  • The Lego Movie

  • Ray

Leaving June 2

  • Kim's Convenience: Seasons 1-5

Leaving June 3

  • Brockmire: Seasons 1-4

Leaving June 7

  • Blindspot: Seasons 1-5

  • Shiva Baby

Leaving June 9

  • A Lot Like Love

Leaving June 10

  • TURN: Washington's Spies: Seasons 1-4

Leaving June 16

  • Aquarius: Seasons 1-2

  • Unbroken

Leaving June 19

  • The Iron Claw

Leaving June 20

  • The Expendables

  • The Expendables 2

  • The Expendables 3

  • The Expendables 4

Leaving June 21

  • Zoey 101: Seasons 1-2

Leaving June 30

  • Sex and the City: Seasons 1-6

10 Shows Like 'Big Mistakes' You Should Watch Next

19 May 2026 at 16:30

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Dan Levy's follow-up to Schitt's Creek teams him with I Love LA creator Rachel Sennott for a comedy that, in the best tradition of crime shows, starts small and gets absolutely ridonculous. Laurie Metcalf stars as mom and matriarch Linda alongside Dan Levy's closeted gay minister Nicky and Taylor Ortega's chaos-magnet Morgan. Linda demands that the two of them get a piece of jewelry for their dying grandmother's last birthday, leading to a tiny bit of theft that finds them in debt to the mob. Not content to put the family through the wringer just once, Netflix has renewed it for a second season. In the meantime, enjoy these other crime comedies that try and mostly fail to keep things in the family.

Good Girls (2018 – 2021)

Beth, Ruby and Annie (Christina Hendricks, Retta, and Mae Whitman, respectively) are three moms in suburban Michigan, and they are all having serious money troubles. They're not exactly criminal masterminds, so they concoct a scheme to rob the local grocery store to solve them—a store that just happens to be serve as a front for a money-laundering operation. They make off with $500,000—but the gang leader whose money they unknowingly stole wants it back. Oh, and the store manager spotted one of their distinctive tattoos and is threatening blackmail. It's definitely not a sitcom, but it's a solid comedy-drama with a talented cast of characters who keep finding themselves in deeper and deeper trouble over the course of four seasons. Stream Good Girls on Netflix.


Deli Boys (2025 – )

Pakistani-American journalist and producer Abdullah Saeed has long been celebrated for his investigative reporting and his Vice documentaries, many of them dealing with the impacts of cannabis laws. That experience lends a unique verisimilitude to this comedy series following two brothers—hardworking Mir (Asif Ali) and hard partying Raj (Saagar Shaikh)—who, after the death of their wealthy father, learn that the bulk of their family's money comes not from the public-facing chain of delis, but from the illegal drug operation running behind the scenes. It's fast-paced and frequently very fun, and plays with the notion that the only way to make it in modern America is to live some kind of double life. Stream Deli Boys on Hulu.


Search Party (2016 – 2022)

Alia Shawkat stars here as Dory Sief, an aimless millennial who decides, after seeing a missing-person poster for a college acquaintance, that she's going to make it her purpose to track down Chantal (Clare McNulty) with the extremely begrudging support of her friends. The show shifts focus from season to season, but it's really in the second that the similarities to Big Mistakes become most clear: While initially a darkly comic take on a Nancy Drew-style mystery, the show later finds the gang desperate to cover up a mostly unintentional murder. It's a funny, smart, and impressively weird oddity of a show. Stream Search Party on Netflix.


How to Get to Heaven From Belfast (2026 – )

How to Get to Heaven comes from Irish playwright and Derry Girls creator Lisa McGee, though that earlier and justifiably beloved show will only moderately prepare you for the latest. Three high school friends from Belfast reunite after learning that their fourth bestie has died unexpectedly—except that maybe she didn't, a mixed blessing given that they all have life-ruining secrets that they were hoping to bury. Now they're off to investigate the mystery of the maybe-murder, and find themselves in way over their heads and in a complex web of lies, secrets, and old vendettas. The tone is all over the place in a way that somehow works, and the show has a beating heart beneath the absolute chaos. Stream How to Get to Heaven From Belfast on Netflix.


Vincenzo (2021)

Vincenzo reads like a typical crime drama with just a bit of a twist: Song Joong-ki plays Park Joo-hyung AKA Vincenzo Cassano, Korean by birth but later adopted by an Italian family; as an adult he becomes a lawyer and Mafia consigliere. When the head of the Cassano Family dies, the Don's biological son looks to clean house, forcing Vincenzo to flee to Korea to claim a large cache of money he'd stashed. This is when it gets weirder and more interesting: The money's hidden under a commercial building full of weird and quirky tenants, and circumstances soon put Vincenzo at odds with the pharmaceutical conglomerate that has its eyes on the complex. What started as an unconventional mob story becomes a story about a guy using his mafia skills (the show doesn't shy away from violence) to battle capitalism on behalf of some charmingly goofy new friends. Stream Vincenzo on Netflix.


Barry (2018 – 2023)

Bill Hader won a couple of Emmys for his performance as Barry Berkman, a depressed and anxious hitman who discovers a love of acting that leads him to look for a life beyond killing people, even though he's rather good at it, and keeps getting drawn back in. Barry's mentor and father figure in his quest to rebuild his life on the stage is the wildly eccentric Gene Cousineau (Henry Winkler, who also won an Emmy here), who's entirely supportive of Barry—until he learns of his protégé's double life. Stream Barry on HBO Max.


Bad Sisters (2022 – 2024)

A pitch-dark and pitch-perfect comedy, the Irish import Bad Sisters picked up several well-deserved Emmy nominations in its first year. Writer and co-creator Sharon Horgan leads the cast as Eva Garvey, oldest of five sisters, including Grace (Anne-Marie Duff), who's married to John Paul, an abusive and isolating husband. When the dude winds up dead under rather suspicious circumstances, down-on-his-luck insurance investigator Tom (Brian Gleeson) starts poking his nose into things. We know the sisters definitely wanted John Paul dead, but did they actually do the deed? Tom's family business will go under if he has to pay out on the life insurance policy, so he's very motivated to pin the (potential) crime on at least one of the women. Stream Bad Sisters on Apple TV.


The Gentlemen (2024 – )

This is very much a Guy Ritchie show inspired by a Guy Ritchie film—which ought to tell you all you need to know about the vibe (polished, snarky, and ultra-violent). Theo James plays army officer and Eddie Horniman (I believe I mentioned Guy Ritchie?), heir to the Horniman estate (there it is again) who, upon the death of his father, is named the Duke of Halstead. He learns that dad was tied to various criminal enterprises, and that his scouse brother is millions of pounds in debt to a drug dealer. What else is the dapper, military-trained Duke to do but learn to navigate the violent underworld while looking cool? Stream The Gentlemen on Netflix.


The Sticky (2024)

Though it's tempting to find questionable taste in setting a caper show in Quebec and then having it involve maple syrup, The Sticky is loosely based on The Great Canadian Maple Syrup Heist—a real thing that happened in 2012. Margo Martindale (Justified) plays Ruth Landry, a maple syrup farmer struggling since her husband's incapacitation and running up against a greedy businessman trying to buy her land out from under her. She meets dopey security guard Remy Bouchard (Guillaume Cyr), who's been stealing a barrel or two at a time from the warehouse where he works, and then mobster Mike Byrne (Chris Diamontopoulos) who, she realizes, could provide the muscle needed for a heist. In the best tradition of something like Fargo, the foolproof plan to steal a bunch of syrup gets well out of hand, very quickly. The show ends on a bit of a cliffhanger, but there's still a relatively complete story in its single season. Stream The Sticky on Prime Video.


The Brothers Sun (2024)

A fun action-comedy and member of the Netflix one-season-and-done club, The Brothers Sun stars Oscar-winner Michelle Yeoh as Eileen Sun, the exiled matriarch of a family of Taiwanese gangsters. She'd come to Los Angeles years before, taking a son, Bruce (Sam Song Li), who grew up knowing little of his origins and has few ambitions beyond becoming great at improv comedy. An assassination attempt sends his older brother to L.A., drawing Eileen and Bruce back into the criminal fold, with rival factions coming at them from every side. Stream The Brothers Sun on Netflix.

10 Shows Like 'Margo's Got Money Troubles' You Should Watch Next

14 May 2026 at 17:30

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Just renewed for a second season, Margo's Got Money Troubles stars Elle Fanning as the title's Margo, an 20-year-old aspiring writer who becomes pregnant following a brief an affair with her married English professor. Her mom, Shyanne (Michelle Pfeiffer), is supportive but pretty negative about Margo's future prospects, while her estranged father, Jinx (Nick Offerman), is willing to pitch in and help out now that he's out of rehab. Still, she needs money if she's going to manage it all, and so takes to OnlyFans (and, at this point, who amongst us hasn't?). Stream Margo's Got Money Troubles on Apple TV, and then check out these other shows following women who make bold choices in the face of upheaval.

Sex Education (2019 – 2023)

There’s a fair bit of sex on TV (having migrated from the now largely sexless big screen), but that’s not the same thing as sex positivity. In this British comedy-drama, Asa Butterfield and Gillian Anderson star as an insecure, shy teenager named Otis and his mother, Jean, a frank and sometimes painfully honest sex therapist. When a school bully needs some sex advice, Otis dispenses some of the wisdom he’s picked up from mom, eventually making a name for himself around school by selling his knowledge as expertise. It’s a funny and charmingly raunchy show, treating sex with humor and positivity, and it features a great will-they-or-won't they couple in awkward Otis and the more fearless Maeve (Emma Mackey). The tone is similar to that of Margo, as is the sense that sex is simultaneously funny and fine. Stream Sex Education on Netflix.


Single Drunk Female (2022 – 2023)

Samantha Fink (Sofia Black-D’Elia) is a 28-year-old alcoholic who hits absolute rock bottom in the form of an embarrassing public meltdown. Committing to sobriety, she moves back to Boston with her strict and controlling mother (Ally Sheedy) and reconnects with her best friend, Brit (Sasha Compère). Of course, for all of that sounding like a good idea, it also puts her right back in the environment that contributed to her drinking in the first place. Funny and humane, this is another show about a messy, complicated young woman trying to get a fresh start following a life-changing event. Stream Single Drunk Female on Tubi.


Weeds (2005 – 2012)

A classic of the crime-in-the-suburbs genre, Weeds finds a single mom making herself a success in a business that the broader society might frown upon. Mary-Louise Parker stars as Nancy Botwin, a recently widowed mom who's desperate to maintain the upper-middle-class lifestyle once provided by her husband. She can't really handle the idea of giving up the conspicuous consumption to which she's become accustomed, so she decides to make some bank for herself. And what better way to do that, particularly in the LA 'burbs, than by selling weed? (Obviously, the show was made and is set before the drug was legalized for recreational use in 2016.) Like Jon Hamm's Coop, Nancy is just not ready for her family to give up on nice things. Stream Weeds on Prime Video.


Fleabag (2016 – 2019)


This critical favorite stars Phoebe Waller-Bridge as the title character (she's only ever referred to as "Fleabag") in a comedy-drama about a free-spirited, deeply angry single young woman living in London and sharing her romantic ups and downs via confessional asides to us, the audience. She falls, rather reluctantly, for "The Priest" (Andrew Scott)—she's a confirmed atheist and he's, obviously, not, so the relationship is appropriately messy. Like Margo, Fleabag definitely has money troubles, going from art theft to running a struggling (you won't be surprised to learn) Guinea pig-themed café. Waller-Bridge won separate Emmys as the star, creator, and writer of the series. Stream Fleabag on Prime Video.


The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (2017 – 2023)

Mrs. Maisel was one of Prime’s first and buzziest original series, a comedy-drama from Amy Sherman-Palladino (Gilmore Girls) about the title’s Midge Maisel (Rachel Brosnahan), a New York housewife of the late 1950s who discovers a talent for stand-up comedy. Inspired by the real-life careers of comedians like Totie Fields and Joan Rivers, the show is both warm and funny, with great performances and dialogue; it also achieves something rare in being a show about comedy that’s actually funny. Mrs. Maisel and her milieu are obviously far different from that of Margo, but there are similar themes involving funny, complicated women saying "fuck it" to life and career expectations. Stream The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel on Prime Video.


A Virtuous Business (2024)

This charming South Korean comedy-drama show takes us to a rural village in the impossibly long-ago 1990s, where four women from different backgrounds decide to make a go of selling sex toys and other adult-type products door-to-door. None of the women is in a particularly desperate situation, which, here, makes things even more interesting: They're all engaged in an entirely taboo (certainly at the time) industry to make a few extra dollars, or for a bit of fun on the side—a solid reminder that sex-adjacent work isn't only for those in dire straits. Stream A Virtuous Business on Netflix.


P-Valley (2020 – )

A soap opera in southern-gothic style set at a strip club in a Mississippi backwater? In terms of tone, this drama is leagues away from Margo. And yet, there's connective tissue in the stories of women who have strayed well outside the confines of polite society, and don't much care if you like it or not. P-Valley follows the lives (and dramas) of the people working at the titular strip club in the Mississippi Delta, the secret ingredient being creator and Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Katori Hall, who very deftly blends juicy soap opera elements with an appreciation for the talents of these dancers, as well as deft commentary on the struggles of poor and Black Americans in the South. A long-awaited third season is coming later this year. Stream P-Valley on Prime Video and Starz.


Vida (2018 – 2020)

Two very different Mexican-American sisters move back to their childhood home in the Boyle Heights neighborhood of Los Angeles following the death of their mother (the "Vida" of the title)—who they soon discover had been married to a woman. Mom left the daughters controlling shares of the bar she owned, but also a big chunk to her wife, forcing Lyn and Emma (Melissa Melissa Barrera and Mishel Prada) to make nice with a woman they didn't know existed. The comedy-drama explores the intersections of queer and Latinx identities from the perspective of women, with a not-disproportionate emphasis on the importance of sexuality (the show is as horny as it is smart). Stream Vida on Hulu and Prime Video.


I May Destroy You (2020)

Series creator/writer/co-director and star Michaela Cole plays a social media influencer turned novelist struggling to reclaim and rebuild her life after she is raped. It’s a meaningful, but frequently very funny comedy-drama about the darkness that threatens to overwhelm a woman’s life, and the long road back. Stream I May Destroy You on HBO Max.


Casual (2015 – 2018)

Valerie Meyers (Michaela Watkins) is recently divorced, so she takes her daughter and moves in with her single brother, Alex (Tommy Dewey). Reconnecting with family is always fun so, ya know...definitely uncomplicated. He's the founder of a dating site, and helps her get back into the dating scene while she helps him find some meaning in his relatively untethered life. Like Margo, Valerie is picking up her life after a significant upheaval and figuring out what she wants from life. Stream Casual on Disney+, Hulu, Prime Video, and Tubi.

10 Shows Like 'Paradise' You Should Watch Next

12 May 2026 at 17:30

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In Dan Fogelman's Paradise, we're apparently in an affluent suburban town in which everything looks fairly tidy. It's the home of Sterling K. Brown's Xavier Collins, a widower and secret service agent, which would be more impressive if the president he'd been serving (James Marsden) hadn't been murdered (much of the narrative is revealed in flashbacks). Oh, and that cute little town? Turns out that it's ... something else. These 10 shows also come at their dystopian narratives sideways, using science fiction in surprising ways. Stream Paradise on Hulu and then head down these other dark holes.

Silo (2023 – )

Rebecca Ferguson stars as Juliette Nichols, an engineer who gets wrapped up in an investigation involving the local sheriff (David Oyelowo)—usual procedural stuff, except that the characters all inhabit a massive silo, 144 levels deep, protecting the remaining 10,000 humans from the allegedly poisoned world above. Those running the silo have managed to convince everyone left that only strict adherence to rules and procedures will keep them safe from the dangers outside. This is a more dour, less colorful apocalypse than the one in Fallout—it's a prestige drama that incorporates elements of horror, mystery, and science fiction to tell human stories about fear and control. A third and concluding fourth season are both coming, so the show has the increasingly rare advantage of a planned conclusion. Stream Silo on Apple TV+.


Ascension (2014)

This smart, not terribly well-remembered miniseries establishes an alternate timeline à la For All Mankind: The Kennedy administration sends a generation ship into space (allegedly) in order to ensure the survival of humanity through the Cold War; as the series opens, it's been just a bit over 50 years since the launch (2014, as it happens). The first murder ever committed on the Ascension raises a ton of questions, as does the fact that nobody back on Earth seems to have ever heard of this massive project. Look out for a couple of shock reveals and smart twists. Stream Ascension on Tubi.


Snowpiercer (2020 – 2024)

Though initially feeling like an unnecessary extension of Bong Joon Ho's allegorical post-apocalyptic film, Snowpiercer ultimately takes on a life of its own as a clever sci-fi melodrama, smartly recognizing that there are no heroes and few true villains at the end of the world—it's mostly just people doing whatever they can to survive. In a frozen future, humanity survives on an extremely long train that circumnavigates the globe. If it stops, the power will go out and everyone (literally everyone) will die. Those who came aboard with wealth live near the front in relative luxury, while the poor live on scraps (or worse) in the train's tail. Daveed Diggs stars as former detective Andre Layton, a "Tailie" deputized by Jennifer Connelly's Melanie Cavill, engineer and the train's Head of Hospitality, to solve a series of murders. The inevitable uprising that follows sets the two of them on different sides of a violent conflict, before each eventually realizes they're just pawns of elites—same as it ever was. It's far less coy about its sci-fi setting than Paradise, but pays as a similarly apocalyptic political thriller. Stream Snowpiercer on Prime Video and Tubi.


Sugar (2024 – )

Sugar doesn't try to obscure or downplay its reliance on old-school Hollywood noir tropes: Its characters are driven to emulate the style of antiheroes of old, and clips from old movies even play alongside the action as a means of driving the point home. The central mystery sees detective John Sugar (Colin Farrell) summoned to the mansion of a rich movie producer (James Cromwell), whose granddaughter has gone missing. The first few episodes are intriguing, and  the premise is unique in that Sugar is kind of an anti-anti-hero—he's an actual nice guy in a world where he's expected to play the tough guy. The sixth episode, though, drops an absolutely wild, love-it-or-hate it plot twist that drives the remaining episode and, presumably, the forthcoming second season—and that's where it it heads into Paradise territory as a bit of sneaky, stealthy sci-fi. The show comes from writer Mark Protosevich (The Cell, I Am Legend) and is smartly directed by City of God's Fernando Meirelles, so it has style to spare. Stream Sugar on Apple TV.


Wayward Pines (2015 – 2016)

While we're talking high-concept sci-fi, let's head off to Wayward Pines, from whence you will never leave. Based on a trilogy of Blake Crouch novels, this one stars Matt Dillon as a secret service agent investigating the disappearances of two fellow agents in the Idaho town of Wayward Pines. Things go awry pretty much immediately, and he wakes up from a car accident to find one of the agents (Carla Gugino), who's also his ex, having settled down in the seemingly idyllic community—and 12 years older than when he last saw her only a few weeks ago. Even more dramatically, the local sheriff (Terrence Howard) enforces a strict "no one ever leaves" policy, on pain of having one's neck slit. The mysteries pile up from there. Stream Wayward Pines on Hulu and Disney+.


Fallout (2024 – )

In the world of Fallout, adapted from the video games, the aesthetic of the 1950s hung on for a lot longer than it did in our own, so plot similarities give way, in part, to a unique sense of style. The background is a little complicated, but not belabored within the show itself: It's 2296 on an Earth devastated two centuries earlier by a nuclear war between the United States and China. Lucy MacLean (Ella Purnell) emerges from the underground fallout shelter where she's lived her entire life in order to find her father, kidnapped by raiders. The aboveground wasteland is dominated by warring factions, each of which considers the others cults and believes that they alone know the correct way forward for mankind. Amid this conflict, the landscape is also overrun by ghouls, gulpers, and other wild radiation monsters, and Lucy seems to be just about the only human with any lingering belief in humanity. Stream Fallout on Prime Video.


The Silent Sea (2021)

Bae Doona (whom you'll know from everything from Cloud Atlas to Sense8 to Rebel Moon) stars in this twisty-turny sci-fi drama that starts on a dry, near-waterless Earth of the near-future, following a team of astronauts and scientists sent on a mission to an abandoned lunar base. They're tasked with retrieving a mysterious sample, and it soon becomes clear that the bureaucrats on Earth know a lot more about that sample than they’re telling. Suffice it to say that nothing goes particularly well—there are deaths, betrayals, and a deadly something that might be humanity's future, but might just as easily be its end. Stream The Silent Sea on Netflix.


Heavenly Delusion (Tengoku Daimakyō) (2023)

We follow two parallel narratives in this (deeply weird) post-apocalyptic anime: In one, a group of children live in a confined, sterile, closely monitored school environment, called "Heaven" and protected from what we quickly learn is the devastation outside; in the other, bodyguard Kiruko and their companion Maru travel across a devastated Japan. Those relatively straightforward dystopian strands soon give way to some wild twists and turns as the plot lines dovetail into a story involving gender and sexual politics as well as a whole lot of dark secrets. Stream Heavenly Delusion on Hulu.


Class of '09 (2023)

In much the same way that Paradise takes us to a sci-fi-inspired world for a political thriller, Class of '09 feels like a crime thriller until it doesn't: Brian Tyree Henry and Kate Mara star as a couple of FBI trainees in 2009 who we follow, concurrently, into two further timeframes: the present, circa 2023, and the future of 2034. The primary thread here is the development of artificial intelligence as a tool to predict crime, and the dangers inherent in targeting people who might only hypothetically commit crime. Prescient only a couple of years ago, the show feels impressively and alarmingly current in our AI-whether-you-like-it-or-not era. Stream Class of '09 on Disney+ and Hulu.


Severance (2022 – )

Late-stage capitalism encourages “work-life balance” while simultaneously making it impossible, and then makes us feel guilty about it. In Severance, biotechnology giant Lumon Industries has a solution: They split your consciousness between your life at work and your life outside of it. For our lead characters (among them, Adam Scott, Patricia Arquette, and Britt Lower) the work- and home-based consciousnesses grow apart to the point that they become different people. The show blends the conventions of office-based dark comedies with movies like Brazil and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, diving into the dangers of modern American-style totalitarian capitalism while providing a reminder that technology often promises to improve our lives while only making them worse. Stream Severance on Apple TV+.

10 Shows Like 'Beef' You Should Watch Next

8 May 2026 at 16:00

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Netflix's conflict-heavy anthology series Beef, from creator Lee Sung Jin, just concluded its second season, which saw wealthy country club managers Oscar Isaac and Carey Mulligan go head-to-head with the help, played by Cailee Spaeny and Charles Melton. That followed up a first season involving Steven Yeun and Ali Wong in a road-rage scenario that developed to operatic levels of chaos before the run of episodes was over. All dramatic, but also funny! Nothing wrong with a little conflict, as long as it's happening to other people.

Dead to Me (2019 – 2022)

Christina Applegate and Linda Cardellini make for an all-time-great TV pairing in this dark, twisty comedy about a couple of women who become united in tragedy—and lies. Applegate is Jen Harding, a realtor whose husband was killed in a hit-and-run incident; she's not dealing well, and takes a bit of inspiration from Cardellini's Judy, who has maintained a cheery disposition following her fiancé Steve's death from a heart attack—easier to do, given that Steve's still secretly alive. And then we discover that Judy has a storage unit with a car that looks suspiciously like the one that killed Jen's husband—and that's all just part of the first episode. The show only gets wilder from there—like Beef, but sneakier and more passive-aggressive. Stream Dead to Me on Netflix.


The Other Black Girl (2023)

Nella Rogers is an editorial assistant at the (fictional) Wagner Books, a major publisher in NYC. She's also the only Black woman working for the company, and is initially thrilled when Hazel-May McCall (Ashleigh Murray) is hired as on as a fellow editorial assistant and, well, the other Black girl. At first the quiet Nella and outspoken Hazel bond, but Nella begins receiving threatening notes, and advice from Hazel gets her in trouble. Is this a comedic show about two Black women who can't work together without conflict and competition? Or is there a deeper mystery? (It's very much the second one, FYI). Stream The Other Black Girl on Disney+ and Hulu.


Bad Sisters (2022 – 2024)

A pitch-perfect (and pitch-dark) comedy, the Irish import Bad Sisters picked up several well-deserved Emmy nominations in its first year. Writer and co-creator Sharon Horgan leads the cast as Eva Garvey, oldest of five sisters, including Grace (Anne-Marie Duff), who's married to John Paul, an abusive and isolating husband. When the dude winds up dead under rather suspicious circumstances, down-on-his-luck insurance investigator Tom (Brian Gleeson) starts poking his nose into things. We know the sisters definitely wanted John Paul dead, but did they actually do the deed? Tom's family business will go under if he has to pay out on the life insurance policy, so he's motivated to pin the (potential) crime on at least one of the women. Stream Bad Sisters on Apple TV.


The White Lotus (2021 — )

Another darkly comic, season-long anthology series, the similarities between our subject and White Lotus grew even stronger in the second season of Beef, which finds a couple of managers of a luxury country club in an ever-escalating tiff with the help. The opening episodes of Mike White's show, meanwhile, begins with a flash forward to the rather horrible outcomes that will be faced by at least some of the holiday makers traveling to one of the title's White Lotus resorts (each season being a distinct storyline and location, with the occasional recurring character). The first season's manager, Murray Bartlett’s Armond, makes clear to the staff that the ultra-wealthy guests are little more than overgrown children, and need to be coddled as such. At these very fancy resorts, at which people have paid absurd amounts of money to be pampered, competitiveness and general toxicity ensure that everyone’s going to have a miserable time, whatever the price. Like Beef, The White Lotus attracts A-list talent each outing. Stream The White Lotus on HBO Max.


Your Friends and Neighbors (2025 – )

In Your Friends & Neighbors, Jon Hamm plays Andrew "Coop" Cooper, a recently divorced, recently unemployed New York hedge fund manager. In an effort to keep up an illusion that nothing in his life has changed, he begins breaking into the homes of his wealthy neighbors to steal and sell their stuff, inadvertently catching on to their secrets as well. This dark comedy isn't exactly about how hard it is to be a once-rich white guy, but neither is it a pointed lesson in the downfalls toxic masculinity. Coop is an insider forced into the role of an outsider (playing an insider), offering him a unique perspective on the artifice at the center of a life based on flaunting wealth. Stream Your Friends and Neighbors on Apple TV.


Barry (2018 – 2023)

Bill Hader won a couple of Emmys for his performance as Barry Berkman, a depressed and anxious hitman who discovers a love of acting that leads him to look for a life beyond killing people, even though he's rather good at it, and keeps getting drawn back in. Barry's mentor and father figure in his quest to rebuild his life on the stage is the wildly eccentric Gene Cousineau (Henry Winkler, who also won an Emmy here), who's entirely supportive of Barry—until he learns of his protégé's double life. Stream Barry on HBO Max.


Fargo (2014 – 2024)

This season-by-season anthology crime drama finds us in the Midwest, mostly, blending crime drama, small town secrets, and healthy heaps of dark humor (if you're familiar with the Cohen Bros. movie that inspired the show, you'll know exactly what's meant by that). The quirky characters in the shifting cast are sometimes lovable, sometimes reprehensible, but they're consistently compelling—as with Beef, there's the sense that characters will get what's coming to them, while also making room for moments of surprising grace. Stream Fargo on Hulu.


How to Get to Heaven From Belfast (2026 – )

How to Get to Heaven comes from Irish playwright and Derry Girls creator Lisa McGee, though that earlier and justifiably beloved show will only moderately prepare you for the latest. Three high school friends from Belfast reunite after learning that their fourth bestie has died unexpectedly—except that maybe she didn't, a mixed blessing given that they all have secrets that they were hoping to bury. Now they're off to investigate the mystery of the maybe-murder, and find themselves immediately in way over their heads and in a complex web of lies, secrets, and old vendettas. The tone is all over the place in a way that somehow works, and has a beating heart beneath all the chaos. Stream How to Get to Heaven From Belfast on Netflix.


I Hate Suzie (2020 – 2022)

Popstar turned actress Suzie Pickles (Billie Piper) has just been hired for a new Disney series when she has, in the opening episode of I Hate Suzie, the worst day of her career: a compromising phone hack has left her exposed, literally and figuratively to the world. Support at home is in short supply given that the prominent penis in some of the pictures doesn't belong to her husband. Lucy Prebble and Piper resume a collaboration that began with The Secret Diary of a Call Girl and the highly acclaimed play The Effect for this dark, funny show about a woman on the verge of a breakdown. Piper is phenomenal, as always, playing a character whose bio is similar to her own—the whole world's out to get her, but early fame has left her both deeply vulnerable and wildly self-involved. Stream I Hate Suzie on HBO Max.


No Good Deed (2024)

I'm adding this one largely for the Lisa Kudrow of it all, but there's a similar vein of dark comedy here—plus, No Good Deed is a pretty great show that a lot of people missed. The setup sounds like a juicy crime thrillers: Kudrow is retired pianist Lydia; Ray Romano is her husband, Paul. The two are in rather tricky financial straits and need to sell their home without wanting to seem too desperate to prospective buyers—and also hide a secret involving a death a few years prior. For all that, it's a comedy, with a great supporting cast that includes Linda Cardellini, Luke Wilson, O-T Fagbenle, and Teyonah Parris. Stream No Good Deed on Netflix.

10 Shows Like 'For All Mankind' You Should Watch Next

28 April 2026 at 17:30

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Apple TV's sci-fi series For All Mankind starts with a tantalizing alt-history premise: What if Soviet space pioneer Sergei Korolev hadn’t died prematurely in 1966, but instead helped bring his country’s space program into full bloom, extending the space race indefinitely?

If America and the world had been forced to continue the space program, our past (and present) would look quite different—at least according to this show, which jumps across decades to imagine how that might have unfolded in an alternate past. (By the current fifth season, set in alt-2012, some humans are living off-planet in a Martian habitat.)

For All Mankind is both a great, generally hopeful alt-history narrative and a grounded, compelling science fiction show. As the penultimate season races toward its conclusion on Apple TV, here are 10 other ambitious shows that follow similarly winding paths.

The Man in the High Castle (2015 – 2019)

From the novel by Philip K. Dick (whose work has been the basis for Blade Runner, Total Recall, Minority Report, A Scanner Darkly, among many others), The Man in the High Castle is a political thriller set (mostly) in an alternate 1960s in which the Axis powers have won World War II, and in which the United States is split down the middle, with Japan governing the west and Germany overseeing the east. The title’s "man in the high castle" is a propaganda film (or is it?) that offers an alternate view that looks more like our our history books. As the show progresses through its four seasons, the parallels to our increasingly fascist-friendly world only grow. Stream The Man in the High Castle on Prime Video and Netflix.


The Right Stuff (2020)

A second stab at adapting the 1979 Tom Wolfe book, this series isn't about space exploration exactly, but about the weird, winding road it took to get there. The show starts in 1959 with the selection of the seven pilots best suited for America's fledgling space program, individuals who brought sterling qualifications along with the butch and photogenic vibe needed to sell a multi-billion dollar program to 1960s Americans. With impeccable period style, it's at least as much about the building of a mythology as it is about the space race itself. Buy The Right Stuff from Prime Video.


From the Earth to the Moon (1998)

Call this the alt-history to the alt-history of For All Mankind (OK, that's just "history"). This prestige miniseries dramatizes the real events of the space program, starting roughly with the Freedom 7 Mercury flight in 1961 and rocketing along to humanity's most recent moon landing with Apollo 17, just over a decade later. Largely an anthology, this docu-drama intersperses personal stories (the penultimate episode follows the wives and families of several astronauts) with more traditional mission drama. Executive producer Tom Hanks introduces most of the episodes, leading an all-star 1990s cast. Stream From the Earth to the Moon on HBO Max.


Battlestar Galactica (2003 – 2009)

Not a perfect match for For All Mankind in either vibe or setting, there's nevertheless an intellectual and philosophical depth between that show and this one (worth noting that both share a creator in Ronald D. Moore). The Cylons, intelligent machines who have rebelled against their human masters, are inspired by their growing religious convictions to violently break free from their creators. Humanity is reduced to a population of just tens of thousands, and while the show dives into existential questions with surprising depth, we’re never allowed to forget that we’re seeing humankind more than decimated, surviving on a handful of rickety spaceships in search of a legendary world called "Earth." The oppressed become the oppressors, and while we mostly follow the human characters, the series never takes a hard stand on either side's moral superiority. Buy Battlestar Galactica from Prime Video or stream it on Pluto TV and Paramount+ starting May 1.


1983 (2018)

Sure, we've all wondered what would have happened if we hadn't slow-walked our way through the space program following the moon landing, but the real alt-history question is, what if the communist Polish People’s Republic had never fallen? This political thriller is largely set in 2003, twenty years after a series of bombings ended the hope for an end to the Cold War, which still continues behind an extant Iron Curtain. In this vision of Poland, digital surveillance is ever-present; art is censored; and personal behavior and sexual morality are restricted both legally and by means of a submissive population (the similarities to our allegedly more enlightened post-communist era are not incidental; they're the point). Law student Kajetan (Maciej Musiał) and national police investigator Anatol (Robert Więckiewicz) are thrown together in a web of conspiracy that might well result in a revolution. Stream 1983 on Netflix.


The Expanse (2015 – 2022)

Set in a somewhat near-ish future, The Expanse (based on the book series by James S.A. Corey) imagines a colonized solar system into which we’ve carried all of our old familiar problems, and then some: Earth sits at the historical and cultural center of things, while Mars colonists, by virtue of having to survive in a challenging environment, have developed technological and military superiority, and folks living in "the Belt" have had to scrabble to survive. Greed, fear, and shortsightedness make conflict nearly inevitable, even if the series isn’t quite as cynical as it at first appears. The Expanse shares with For All Mankind a practical view of human progress that never entirely gives way to cynicism; they also share a creative voice in executive producer (and frequent Ronald D. Moore collaborator) Naren Shankar. Stream The Expanse on Prime Video.


The Plot Against America (2020)

Another dark turn down an alternate path in American history, The Plot Against America asks, what if Charles Lindbergh had succeeded in his bid for political power in the 1930s, bringing to bear his vision of an America that followed in the footsteps of Nazi Germany by halting the “the infiltration of inferior blood” (by which he meant, mostly, Jewish people). Adapted from the book by Philip Roth, the series bends history, depicting Lindbergh's successful campaign for the American presidency against Franklin D. Roosevelt, which ultimately keeps the U.S. out of World War II—which results in things at home growing increasingly dangerous for the Jewish family at the show's center. Morgan Spector, Zoe Kazan, Winona Ryder, and John Turturro star. Stream The Plot Against America on HBO Max.


Manhattan (2014 – 2015)

A loose, but still convincing, exploration of the Manhattan Project, this mostly true story nevertheless feels of a piece with For All Mankind in its look at a critical moment in human history—as well as for its impeccable period vibes. John Benjamin Hickey stars as the scientist Dr. Frank Winter, a composite of several real life figures, with Olivia Williams playing botanist (and Frank's wife), Liza. J. Robert Oppenheimer (played here by Daniel London) lurks in the background, with the show focusing mostly on the relentless drive of the scientists who developed technology that, for better and worse, would prove to be foundational to the space program. Stream Manhattan on Prime Video.


Watchmen (2019)

This may seem like a stretch, but for my money, Watchmen stands with For All Mankind as an all-time-great alternate history, even if this one is a bit more fantastical, imagining the impacts of Jim Crow-era racial violence on a world that saw a rise of fascist superheroes in the 1980s. A standalone follow-up to the groundbreaking graphic novel by Alan Moore, Dave Gibbons, and John Higgins, this series begins in an alternate Tulsa, Oklahoma, in a world where super-powered vigilantes exist but have been outlawed. Regina King plays Angela Abar, a modern cop whose grandparents were killed during the real-life Tulsa race massacre, an event that echoes throughout the series—it's a dystopia that doesn't look all that much different from our own, with masked police operating on the edges of the law, and overtly racist organizations that hold increasing political sway. Stream Watchmen on HBO Max.


The First (2018)

Set in 2031, The First follows a hypothetical first crewed mission to Mars in the aftermath of a disaster that almost ended the whole effort. Inspired heavily by the real-life history that serves as a starting point for For All Mankind, this show follows the astronauts, their families, the ground crew, and even the tech CEOs who serve to put us on the rocky road to the red planet. Given that making it to 2031 is feeling a little optimistic at this moment, it might well end up looking like alt-history in just a few short years. Stream The First on Hulu.

10 Shows Like 'You' to Watch Next

23 April 2026 at 15:00

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Sometimes we love to hate serial killers, and sometimes we just kinda love 'em—a charming, sexy killer seems to be a contrast that's too juicy and entertaining for us to pass up. Late-stage capitalism, the climate crisis, and the insurance industry are far more likely to kill us, which is probably why we'd rather face the statistically less-likely threat of a cute and cunning murderer like Penn Badgley's Joe Goldberg in You, which came to a planned conclusion after five seasons in 2025. But he's not the only one! Here, we're on the hunt for series leads who are at least morally ambiguous, if not downright evil.

The Fall (2013 – 2016)

Jamie Dornan's sexy young serial killer Paul Spector isn't the protagonist of The Fall, strictly speaking, but he co-leads with Gillian Anderson's police Superintendent DSU Stella Gibson across all three seasons of this crime drama. Much like Joe, Paul is, outwardly, a normal guy, and a family man, whom you might not suspect of being a stalker and a serial killer of professional women in Belfast. DSU Gibson is sent from London to help with a stalled investigation that leads her on a hunt for the clever Spector through physical dangers, mind-fuckery, and bureaucratic complications. Stream The Fall on Peacock and Prime Video.


Chloe (2022)

Erin Doherty is Becky Green, a complete nobody (at least in her own mind), who becomes obsessed with her estranged childhood friend Chloe, who died, seemingly, by suicide. Lonely Becky comes up with a completely new identity with which to infiltrate Chloe's friend group, finding her life far more fulfilling than back when she was boring ol' Becky—even kicking off an affair with Chloe's widowed husband. Turns out, though, that there was more to Chloe's life and death than most people knew, and husband Elliot might just be keeping some secrets. Stream Chloe on Prime Video.


Ripley (2024)

The Patricia Highsmith Tom Ripley novels have an impressive record of successful adaptations going back to the '50s, from René Clément's Purple Noon to Anthony Minghella's The Talented Mr. Ripley—which itself inspired Tommy Wiseau's cult "classic" The Room. Andrew Scott is perfectly cast in this series that doesn't reinvent the narrative, but gives it room to breathe over eight hours of deliberately paced neo-noir, in sumptuous monochrome, as poor, orphaned, but ambitious, Tom ingratiates himself with the wealthy Dickie Greenleaf (Johnny Flynn) and his girlfriend, Marge (Dakota Fanning). His obsession with the good life soon becomes indistinguishable from his obsession with Marge and Dickie themselves, his studied nonchalance always ready to give way to everything boiling under the surface. Stream Ripley on Netflix.


Dexter (2006 – 2013)

The show that dares to ask: What if a serial killer were kind of a nice guy who mostly wants to be helpful? Michael C. Hall stars as Dexter Morgan, a Miami-based forensic technician with bloody, murderous impulses. Fortunately (usually), he's learned to focus those impulses on dismembering baddies rather than the more sympathetic innocents who typically wind up in the crosshairs of this type of killer (looking at you, Joe Goldberg). So lovable is our Dexter that he led eight seasons of this show, popping up again in New Blood, Original Sin, and the ongoing Dexter: Resurrection. Stream Dexter on Paramount+.


Hannibal (2013 - 2015)

By 2013, it really felt as though we'd seen more than enough of Hannibal Lecter and co., a series of Silence of the Lambs spin-offs and sequels having become increasingly tiresome. Still, producer Bryan Fuller went back to the source material here, once again adapting Thomas Harris's first Lecter novel with grand, operatic style and a visual flair unmatched on network television (you're still unlikely to find more gorgeously constructed scenes of carnage). What's more, the deeper, sexier relationship between the Doctor (Mads Mikkelsen) and profiler Will Graham (Hugh Dancy) adds some brilliant subtext as the two work together to hunt serial killers. It ended a bit too early, but the three seasons still make for a satisfying meal. Stream Hannibal on Prime Video.


The Glory (2022)

There are at least a couple of different levels to The Glory, a justifiably well-received South Korean import, rather remarkably holding together despite some wild shifts in tone. Most obviously, it's a revenge drama, with a relatively simple set-up: Song Hye-kyo plays Moon Dong-eun, an elementary school homeroom teacher who's playing a very, very long game: her school bullies are grown up now, and their kids (some of them, anyway) are now in Dong-eun's care. Right where she wants them. Smartly, the show makes clear the extent of the past violence faced by Dong-eun (much of it hard to watch), and the resulting post-traumatic stress that's consumed her life. The parents of her tormentors were all far too wealthy for the girls to face any consequences for their actions, so Dong-eun feels like she has no choice. It could have been a revenge fantasy, or a straight horror show about a woman carrying out a questionable revenge, but, while it's hard to get behind Dong-eun, it's also hard to condemn her completely. Stream The Glory on Netflix.


Candy (2022)

The real-life Candy Montgomery has been portrayed by Barbara Hershey, Jessica Biel in this Hulu miniseries and, just a year later, by Elizabeth Olsen over on HBO Max. Jessica Biel is so good here, though, that this one earns enough extra points to rise to the top of the Candy heap. In 1980, Montgomery was accused of murdering her neighbor, Betty Gore (Melanie Lynskey), following the woman's affair with Candy's husband, Allan (Pablo Schreiber). And with an axe, no less. Was it cold-blooded murder, self-defense, or a surprising combination of both? Stream Candy on Hulu.


Bates Motel (2013 – 2017)

Freddie Highmore stars here as Norman Bates, the Robert Bloch character based on Ed Gein, with Vera Farmiga as his mother Norma in her pre-dessicated-corpse days. Like a lot of media spun-off from Alfred Hitchcock's seminal Psycho, it's better than it has any right to be, with impressively compelling character development and several surprises, even if we already know more or less where it's all heading. Stream Bates Motel on Prime Video.


The Devil’s Hour (2022 – )

Jessica Raine (Call the Midwife) joins Peter Capaldi (The Thick of It, Doctor Who) for a slightly convoluted but haunting series that throws in just about every horror trope that you can think of while still managing to ground things in the two lead performances. Raine plays a social worker whose life is coming apart on almost every level: She’s caring for her aging mother, her marriage is ending, her son is withdrawn, and she wakes up at exactly 3:33 a.m. every morning. She’s as convincing in the role as Capaldi is absolutely terrifying as a criminal linked to multiple killings (sometimes revealed in flashbacks) who can, seemingly, "remember" the future—shades of Silence of the Lambs, but with supernatural overtones. Stream The Devil's Hour on Prime Video.


The Creep Tapes (2024 – )

Swinging back around from some of these more morally ambiguous (or at least potentially helpful) protagonists to a pure (charismatic) baddie, The Creep Tapes picks up from the two Patrick Brice-directed Creep found footage films, with writer/star Mark Duplass returning to the role of Josef, or Peachfuzz, or whatever the hell he's calling himself at any given time. Nearly an anthology, the show finds the charming, funny, forlorn-looking lead giving generally well-meaning people reasons to come and interview him on film, such that they tend to wind up documenting their own deaths. The show maintains the movies' sense of humor, as well as the constant conviction that we'd very likely be taken in by this compellingly manipulative sad-sack. Stream The Creep Tapes on Shudder.

What's New on Netflix in May 2026

22 April 2026 at 16:30

Netflix's May slate is heavy on sports and comedy, including live events and documentaries in both categories. The streaming service will carry the full lineup of F1 Canadian GP weekend events, starting with spring qualifying on May 22 and ending with the race on May 24. Netflix will also host its first live MMA broadcast—Ronda Rousey vs. Gina Carano—on May 16.

Ahead of the 2026 World Cup this summer, there are also a handful of soccer documentaries: USA 94: Brazil's Return to Glory (May 7) covers Brazil's World Cup run, while The Bus: A French Football Mutiny (May 13) looks at the controversy surrounding France's 2010 bid. Several football-focused Untold UK episodes are dropping in May as well. Finally, Rafa (May 29) is a documentary series about Rafael Nadal's tennis career and final season.

On the comedy side, competition series Funny AF with Kevin Hart will wrap up live on May 5. Also live is The Roast of Kevin Hart, airing on May 11 as part of the Netflix Is A Joke Festival. Wanda Sykes has a new standup hour (Legacy, May 19), and the month wraps up with AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Eddie Murphy (May 31), a ceremony honoring the comedian's life and work.

Other highlights in May are the debut of Mating Season (May 22), a new adult animated comedy series from Big Mouth creator Nick Kroll about love, sex, and relationships in the animal world; and Ladies First (May 22), a comedy film starring Sacha Baron Cohen and Rosamund Pike. Tina Fey's comedy series The Four Seasons (May 28), in which she stars alongside Steve Carell, also returns for a second season.

Here's everything else coming to Netflix in May, and everything that's leaving.

What's coming to Netflix in May 2026

Available soon

Available May 1

  • Glory—Netflix Series

  • My Dearest Señorita—Netflix Film

  • Son-In-Law—Netflix Film

  • Swapped—Netflix Family

  • 13 Going on 30

  • 48 Hrs.

  • Airport

  • Airport '77

  • Airport 1975

  • Bad News Bears

  • The Boss

  • The Breakfast Club

  • Burn After Reading

  • Den of Thieves

  • Domestic Disturbance

  • Eat Pray Love

  • Fried Green Tomatoes

  • Green Book

  • Hitch

  • Home

  • Jennifer's Body

  • Jumanji

  • Jumping the Broom

  • La Brea: Seasons 1-3

  • The Land Before Time

  • Meet the Parents

  • Meet the Fockers

  • Little Fockers

  • National Lampoon's Animal House

  • Ouija

  • Ouija: Origin of Evil

  • Pretty Woman

  • The Proposal

  • Schindler's List

  • Starship Troopers

  • Trainwreck

  • Under the Skin

  • Veronica Mars

  • Waterworld

Available May 4

Available May 5

Available May 6

Available May 7

Available May 8

Available May 10

Available May 11

Available May 12

Available May 13

Available May 14

Available May 15

Available May 16

Available May 18

  • Abraham Lincoln: Season 1

  • FDR: Season 1

  • Grant: Season 1

  • The Great War

  • Law and Order: Season 23-24

  • Navy SEALs: America's Secret Warriors : Seasons 1-2

  • Nope

  • Theodore Roosevelt: Season 1

  • Thomas Jefferson: Season 1

  • Washington: Season 1

Available May 19

Available May 20

Available May 21

Available May 22

  • Canada: Sprint Qualifying—Netflix Live Event

  • F1 Canadian Grand Prix: Practice 1—Netflix Live Event

  • Gabby's Dollhouse: The Movie

  • Ladies First—Netflix Film

  • Mating Season—Netflix Series

Available May 23

  • F1 Canadian Grand Prix: Qualifying—Netflix Live Event

  • F1 Canadian Grand Prix: Sprint—Netflix Live Event

Available May 24

  • F1 Canadian Grand Prix: Race—Netflix Live Event

Available May 26

Available May 27

Available May 28

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  • K-Pops!

Available May 31

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What's leaving Netflix in May 2026

Leaving May 1

  • Blue Mountain State: Seasons 1-3

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  • Dirty John: Betty Broderick

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10 Shows Like 'Rooster' You Should Watch Next

21 April 2026 at 17:00

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As the world outside of our streaming boxes has gotten nastier, we've seen an uptick in the population of amiable goofballs within them, with comfort shows like Ted Lasso and Schitt's Creek having set the template. Rooster's Greg Russo (Steve Carell) isn't exactly one of this crowd; his world is falling apart around him rather precipitously in the opening episodes of the HBO series, but the vibe is far less dour. It's a show about a likable, well-meaning character who struggles to maintain his principles and outlook when faced with a world that's more than happy to throw mud in his face.

If that's something you need more of in your life, here are 10 other shows about characters whose failures are relatable, and whose successes are inspiring. Here's to the losers.


Lucky Hank (2023)

Bob Odenkirk hopped directly from Better Call Saul to this academic satire, starring as Hank Devereaux, Jr., a creative writing teacher at a tiny college in Pennsylvania. As the show starts, he's humiliated by a student, publicly mocks his school in a way that nearly gets him tossed, has to deal with his more successful father, and comes to believe that his wife is having an affair. His life only gets more chaotic from there. Mireille Enos (The Killing) co-stars in this short-lived, but still really good, comedy of middle-aged ennui. Buy Lucky Hank from Prime Video or Apple TV.


A Man on the Inside (2024 – )

Another amiable and well-loved TV celebrity stars in this lightly satirical comedy that's a bit more plot-oriented than a typical sitcom. Ted Danson plays Charles Nieuwendyk, a hapless retired professor and recent widower who listens to his daughter's plea that he find something to keep him occupied. He answers an ad from a private investigator looking for someone to go undercover by moving into a retirement community in San Francisco in hopes of discovering who's been stealing the residents' jewelry. As he comes to care about the people he's investigating (and lying to), his job only gets harder. Start at the beginning, but I'll direct your attention toward the second season, co-starring Danson's real-life wife Mary Steenburgen, and set at a small liberal arts college not at all unlike Rooster's Ludlow. Stream A Man on the Inside on Netflix.


The Chair (2021)

Sandra Oh stars in this comedy-drama as Dr. Ji-Yoon Kim, the newly appointed chair of the English department at fictional Pembroke University. The first woman to hold the job, she struggles to balance the significance of the role with a budding relationship and her challenging daughter. This ambitious series only lasted one season, but got great reviews and went a bit deeper than Rooster in its satire of modern academia. Stream The Chair on Netflix.


Ted Lasso (2020 – )

Loveable goof Ted Lasso stole our hearts back in 2020, and there's a largely unexpected revival on the horizon years after the end of its original three-season run. Jason Sudeikis plays the title character, an American college football coach, hired by owner Rebecca Welton (Hannah Waddingham) to coach her Richmond football club (soccer to us Americans), despite his lack of any experience with the sport. She won the team in a messy divorce, and figures that Ted will ruin the franchise that her ex loved so much. With everything and (nearly) everyone against him, he nonetheless wins the team over with his relentless, occasionally ridiculous good-natured optimism. Stream Ted Lasso on Apple TV.


Dear White People (2017 – 2021)

Adapted and extending the 2014 movie, this show takes us to a (fictional) Ivy League school for a comedy-drama that takes on campus life and politics from a rather different perspective than that of Rooster. Logan Browning leads the ensemble cast as Sam White, who kind-of inadvertently starts the titular radio show following a racially charged incident on campus. Far from the screed that some bad faith YouTubers seem to find in the show, it's never shy about confronting the complicated and occasionally silly contradictions of campus activism, with each episode approaching life at Winchester University from a different character's perspective. Stream Dear White People on Netflix.


Shrinking (2023 – )

A fun, funny, occasionally serious dramedy (Rooster vibe-match here), Shrinking stars Jason Segal as cognitive behavioral therapist Jimmy Laird, who's been in a depression spiral since the death of his wife a year before the show opens. When he tries to get through a workday following a night of partying, he loses it on a whiny patient—which is not exactly standard procedure. But Jimmy finds himself invigorated, nonetheless, and telling people what he really thinks becomes his new thing, with mixed results. Jessica Williams plays fellow therapist Gaby Evans, perpetually upbeat despite her recent divorce, while Harrison Ford is clearly having a great time playing Jimmy's crusty boss and mentor. Michael J. Fox joined the cast for the recently completed third season, and it's been renewed for a fourth. Stream Shrinking on Apple TV.


Abbott Elementary (2021 – )

Very quickly establishing itself as one of the great workplace mockumentaries, Quinta Brunson's Abbott Elementary does a workplace comedy like The Office one better in portraying its cast of (mostly) well-meaning characters running up against an American educational system that doesn't always reward good intentions. Stream Abbott Elementary on Hulu and HBO Max.


Somebody Somewhere (2022 – 2024)

Bridget Everett stars as Sam Miller, who struggles to find her new direction after moving back to her hometown to care for her dying sister (don't worry: there's plenty of comedy in the drama, and it's not as heavy as it sounds). She's solidly middle-aged and starting over, kinda—making new friends in a familiar environment where she has to confront the past and the future alike. Luckily, her love of singing, and a community of goofy oddballs, are there to help. It's another story of a person of a certain age, trying to rebuild their life following an upheaval. Stream Somebody Somewhere on HBO Max.


Chad Powers (2025 – )

One minute, Russ Holliday (series star and co-creator Glen Powell) is the biggest name in collegiate football, with a future that couldn't be brighter. The next, he's fumbled a touchdown and later shoved a fan into a cancer patient using a wheelchair. Not great! Eight years later, he's looking for a comeback and so, with shades of Mrs. Doubtfire, he reinvents himself via prosthetics and a wig as the title's Chad Powers, a charmingly naive athlete who signs on to the football team at a tiny Georgia college. It's a goofy premise, but Powell's performance sells it, and the show becomes more engaging as Russ/Chad is forced to ask himself whether this new persona is a con, or the person he'd like to be. Stream Chad Powers on Hulu.


Mr. Corman (2021)

Joseph Gordon-Levitt stars as yet another middle-aged (definitions of which vary wildly on TV and IRL) teacher making a new start of it. Once focused on life as the lead of indie electronica band, Josh Corman been at a loss since he broke up with his fiancée and one-time bandmate, Megan. Plagued by crippling anxiety (relatable!), he's now a public school teacher trying to figure out his life. The show dramatizes Josh's inner struggle via animated sequences and song-and-dance numbers, adding a bit of extra color to its depiction of middle-aged ennui. Stream Mr. Corman on Apple TV.

10 Shows Like 'The White Lotus' You Should Watch Next

8 April 2026 at 20:00

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The next season of HBO salacious, schadenfreude-rich dramedy The White Lotus doesn't premiere until October, so you'll need to wait months yet to witness the antics of an all-new all-star cast (Helena Bonham Carter! Heather Graham! Rosie Perez! Sandra Bernhard!) as they travel to paradise and encounter murder, mystery, and the inevitable consequences of their own greed. In the meantime, here are 10 more shows about wealthy people getting their comeuppances (or not) in lush locales.

The Perfect Couple (2024)

Though the cast includes names like Nicole Kidman, Liev Schreiber, and Dakota Fanning, the real star of The Perfect Couple is Donna Lynne Champlin as Nikki Henry, a police detective who has no idea what she's getting into when she shows up in a wealthy Massachusetts island community to investigate a dead body on a beach. The beach is attached to a lavish mansion playing host to a society wedding involving some of the most self-satisfied rich people you'll ever encountered on television. Kidman plays novelist Greer Garrison Winbury, the mother of the groom. She has nothing but icy disdain for her future daughter-in-law, who has committed the cardinal sin of having grown up not-rich. As in The White Lotus, the murder exposes the secrets and the fault lines in a seemingly "perfect" family. Stream The Perfect Couple on Netflix.


The Resort (2022)

Starring Christin Milioti and William Jackson Harper (The Good Place). this one plays a bit like a romantic drama take on White Lotus—the set-up and setting are similar, but it's much more about relationships than social status. A couple celebrating their tenth anniversary arrives at a luxury Yucatan resort, but things aren't as happy as they seem on the surface. Their marriage is quietly crumbling, but a young woman who went missing 15 years earlier might be the thing to bring them back together. The mystery has threads that catch on the pair's own secrets, as well as the shady history of the the resort itself; eventually, things travel into even weirder territory than what we've yet encountered on The White Lotus. Stream The Resort on Peacock.


Nine Perfect Strangers (2021 – )

It's Nicole Kidman again, this time as Masha Dmitrichenko, overseer of up the posh wellness resort Tranquillum House. The nine strangers of the title (each season has a different all-star cast—sound familiar?) show up hoping for a little healing, but get much more than they bargained for from the mostly well-intentioned, but shady and mysterious Masha. She's secretly drugging them, for one thing, and her therapy regimen includes things like digging your own grave. It's pretty bonkers, but nobody ever said that personal growth would be easy. Stream Nine Perfect Strangers on Hulu.


The Comeback (2005  – )

Though it's significantly less murder-y and generally much funnier than The White Lotus, this is another show about clueless rich people moving through life amiably enough while only occasionally realizing how fragile their self-worth is when tied solely to money and status. Lisa Kudrow is brilliant as actress-of-a-certain-age Valerie Cherish, who has plotted one comeback after another over the course of three seasons released across two decades. Her utter shamelessness in her quest for greater fame is simultaneously admirable and embarrassing, even as the show makes clear that women face different burdens in the effort to maintain relevance. It's cringe comedy par excellence. Stream The Comeback on HBO Max.


Big Little Lies (2017 – )

Much as with The White Lotus, part of the thrill of Big Little Lies is in watching some very rich, very attractive, very white (mostly) ladies facing tough times in beautiful locales (in this case, Monterey, California). And as on The White Lotus, any threat to the status quo can lead to big drama, as at least as much as small differences in perceived wealth. In season one, five women (played by Nicole Kidman, Reese Witherspoon, Shailene Woodley, Laura Dern, and Zoë Kravitz) become involved in a murder investigation connected to a school fundraiser that threatens to bring all of their private dirt out into the open—and there are secrets aplenty to uncover. Stream Big Little Lies on HBO Max.


Billions (2016 – 2023)

Billions doesn’t have quite the bite of White Lotus, but it’s still plenty of fun, with Paul Giamatti playing rather ruthless U.S. attorney Chuck Rhoades (based in part on the real-life Preet Bharara), who is working to bring down shady hedge fund manager Bobby Axelrod (Damian Lewis). The tone is that of a darkly comic soap opera, and it stays fresh over seven seasons by playing off the contrast between Axelrod's willingness to use all the money and power at his disposal to stay on top and out of jail, and Rhoades' willingness to resort to shady, not-entirely-legal tactics to reel in his big fish. Stream Billions on Paramount+ and Prime Video.


Enlightened (2011 – 2013)

Before The White Lotus, Mike White co-created (with star Laura Dern) this beloved, if short-lived, comedy-drama about a middle-aged woman who experiences a complete mental breakdown following a demotion at the job to which she's devoted her life. Following a two-month stay in an holistic treatment facility, Dern's Amy Jellicoe becomes determined to approach life with a new perspective, focusing on meditation and positive change at work and at home. The results are mixed, but there's also a rather beautiful sense that while change is absurd and difficult, but also entirely possible (in that, it's perhaps a lot less cynical than White's subsequent series). Stream Enlightened on HBO Max.


Mine (2021)

South Korean TV creators have no problem criticizing the ultra-wealthy, particularly the plutocratic chaebol families who control huge portions of the country’s economy. Mine targets the women who are jockeying for control of the massive, fictional Hyowon Group from within their family’s outrageously opulent (and extremely photogenic) residential compound. The plans of two increasingly powerful women who married into the family, Hi-soo and Seo-hyun, are thrown into disarray when the new housemaid begins a romantic relationship with one of the family’s male heirs, while a new tutor seems ready to expose old family secrets. It's a Dynasty-style soap opera, but one that isn't particularly besotted by its wealthy characters, and with a self-awareness that leads to moments of dark comedy as various family members crawl over one another in pursuit of power. Stream Mine on Netflix.


The Prisoner (1967 – 1968)

You want a show with a beautiful setting that confronts issues of identity and authoritarianism in a capitalist context? Fifty years on, The Prisoner remains one of television’s most starkly realized dystopias—and it's set in a candy-colored, pop-art-inspired village that actually looks like a pretty great place to relax. Creator/director Patrick McGoohan plays Number Six, who has resigned from his government job over a matter of conscience. Apparently knowing too much, he’s rendered unconscious and taken to the remote, inescapable “Village,” which is full of others with numbers and no names. The Village has all the comforts and conveniences one could want, and most are perfectly content there—but rebellious Number Six can’t appreciate luxurious surroundings that look to him like a gilded cage. This surreal, psychedelic series builds to a wild conclusion as the mystery of where he really is and why plays out, and makes as good an argument against the soul-crushing impacts of consumer culture and conformity as anything ever on TV. Stream The Prisoner on Prime Video and Tubi.


Your Friends and Neighbors (2025 – )

In Your Friends & Neighbors, Jon Hamm plays Andrew "Coop" Cooper, a recently divorced, recently unemployed New York hedge fund manager. In an effort to keep up an illusion that nothing in his life has changed, he begins breaking into the homes of his wealthy neighbors to steal and sell their stuff, inadvertently catching on to their secrets as well. This dark comedy isn't exactly about how hard it is to be a once-rich white guy, but neither is it a pointed lesson in the downfalls toxic masculinity—Coop is an insider forced into the role of an outsider (playing an insider), offering him a unique perspective on the artifice at the center of a life based on flaunting wealth. Stream Your Friends and Neighbors on Apple TV.

10 Shows Like 'The Handmaid's Tale' and 'The Testaments' You Should Watch Next

7 April 2026 at 17:00

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While I'd never presume to speak for her, I suspect that Margaret Atwood would be perfectly happy to be a little less hot right now, if only it meant that her works of fiction, always prescient, weren't so alarmingly present. Written in 1985, The Handmaid's Tale feels closer than ever, and its 2019 sequel, The Testaments, now has a much-anticipated adaptation of its own. While Handmaid saw a generation of women coming to grips with an oppressive Christian nationalist regime consolidating its power, The Testaments finds a later generation of young women who've never known any different; for whom this is all perfectly normal. Which feels rather real. Stream The Handmaid's Tale and The Testaments on Hulu, and then check out these other fascist dystopias.

Alias Grace (2017)

It’s the other big Margaret Atwood novel adaptation (existing well in the shadow of the bigger, buzzier Handmaid’s Tale), but this miniseries is every bit as biting and well-crafted. It’s based on the true story of a poor Irish immigrant found guilty of a double homicide in 1843 under somewhat mysterious circumstances, and following a life of trauma. Years later, a psychiatrist comes to examine her and explores her past and the circumstances that might (just might) have driven a disenfranchised and powerless girl to murder. Stream Alias Grace on Netflix.


Pluribus (2025 – )

In some ways, this is a bit of an anti-Handmaid's Tale, with Pluribus leaning toward dark comedy, but we remain in a fascist dystopia in this show from Breaking Bad's Vince Gilligan, albeit of a different variety. Rhea Seehorn plays Carol Sturka, a fantasy romance author and general grouch who becomes one of only 13 people on the planet immune to the "Joining," an alien virus that transforms the rest of humanity into a peaceful, perky, and perpetually content hive mind. Carol refuses to surrender her miserableness in the face of a loss of identity, fighting instead to restore humanity to its admittedly cruddy ways. Thrilling, heartbreaking, and oddly funny, the show manages to address big questions about what it means to be human, but also, more specifically, suggests that even women who don't quite have their shit together deserve freedom of thought and bodily autonomy. Stream Pluribus on Apple TV.


3% (2016 – 2020)

It would be tempting to see this as a metaphor for the American dream but, of course, it’s a Brazilian show, and it’s not as though inequality was invented in the United States—we’re just particularly good at it. In 3%, the impoverished young Inlanders have one shot at success: completing “The Process,” a series of interviews, puzzles, and escape rooms designed to test their worthiness to join a futuristic offshore utopia. Most fail, and many don’t survive, leaving a success rate of ... 3%. This is very much Hunger Games territory in terms of its themes, but the show has a darker, more adult edge. Stream 3% on Netflix.


Watchmen (2019)

A standalone sequel to the groundbreaking Alan Moore, Dave Gibbons, and John Higgins graphic novel from the '80s (one that ignores the point-missing Zack Snyder movie), this series plays in the sandbox of that book (arguably the wellspring of all modern superhero deconstruction) while advancing its themes. In an alternate Tulsa, Oklahoma, in a world where super-powered vigilantes exist but have been outlawed, the series starts, dramatically, with a depiction of the real-life massacre and destruction of Tulsa's Black Wall Street by white residents in 1921. Regina King plays Angela Abar, a modern cop whose grandparents were killed during those attacks, an event that echoes throughout the series—it's a dystopia that doesn't look all that much different from our own, with masked police operating on the edges of the law, and overtly racist organizations that hold increasing political sway. Generational trauma is at issue here, and, like The Handmaid's Tale, it's a show that looks more depressingly prescient with each passing year. Stream Watchmen on HBO Max.


The Man in the High Castle (2015 – 2019)

From a novel by Philip K. Dick (whose work has been the basis for Blade Runner, Total Recall, Minority Report, A Scanner Darkly, among many others), The Man in the High Castle takes place in an alternate history in which the Axis powers won World War II, and in which the United States is split down the middle; Japan governing the west and Germany the east. The title’s man in the high castle offers an alternate view, though, one in which the Allies actually won, with the potential to rally opposition to the Axis rulers. As the show progresses through its four seasons, the parallels to our increasingly Nazi-friendly world only grow. Stream The Man in the High Castle on Prime Video and Netflix.


Mrs. America (2020)

Though fictionalized, Mrs. America dramatizes the ‘70s-era fight over the Equal Rights Amendment, the moment being, simultaneously, a high and low point in the hope for equity and autonomy. Cate Blanchett plays activist Phyllis Schlafly, who lead the fight against the (once) broadly popular proposed amendment, weaponizing the ERA by tying it to radical and pro-choice feminists, homosexuals, desegregationists, and other maligned groups. She was at the forefront of the broad conservative cultural shift that was very much in full swing when Atwood was writing Handmaid, and it’s not a bad time to take a close look at the people who made basic equality sound radical—a reminder that misogyny is not nearly only the province of white men. This is one hell of a supporting cast as well, including Rose Byrne, Uzo Aduba, and Elizabeth Banks. Stream Mrs. America on Hulu.


Mask Girl (2023)

Kim Mo-mi (Lee Han-byeol, initially), the Mask Girl of the title, is a uniquely complicated woman in this twisty-turny K-drama, one that borders on the experimental in its shifting-perspective format. Mo-mi always wanted to be a K-Pop idol, but it was always made clear to her that she's not nearly pretty enough for that kind of stardom. So, in order to fill that void, she's got a side hustle: On top of her boring office job, she puts on a blonde wig and a mask to perform as a camgirl for anonymous men. It's a means to express herself creatively and sexually with a level of control—until a mistake causes her to lose that control, a co-worker discovers her secret life, and desperation leads to murder. It's a thoroughly twisty thriller with a dark sense of humor, but one that never forgets that Mo-mi's increasingly disturbing actions are fueled by a culture that sees her as plain, and therefore as merely incidental. Stream Mask Girl on Netflix.


Kindred (2022)

Adapted from the essential 1979 novel by Atwood contemporary Octavia Butler, Kindred sees Dana James (Mallori Johnson) pulled back through time to antebellum plantation in Maryland. Having just moved to Los Angeles in 2016 (that year being no accident), Dana finds herself repeatedly transported even as her white neighbors are concerned about the new Black woman on the block. It's not nearly as effective as the book (which should be required reading), granted, but, like the book, it makes clear that the corrupting influence of American slavery has infected everything it has touched, then and now, and that Black women bear an even greater part of that burden. Stream Kindred on Hulu.


Leila (2019)

Plenty will seem familiar here: Adapted from the Prayaag Akbar novel, Leila finds Shalini (Huma Qureshi) living in a segregated India of the 2040s, one in which water and clean air have increasingly become luxuries. For all of that, Shalini and her family are doing better than most, until they're attacked for their interfaith marriage—husband Rizwaan is killed, their daughter is kidnapped, and Shalini is sent to a re-education center alongside other women who are seen as sinners or otherwise unclean. There's the possibility of taking what's referred to as a Purity Test, but not for women with "mixed blood" like Leila. It's a future where women are held to strict but shifting moral standards, dissent is ruthlessly put down, education that's not religious is dismissed, and the environment is increasingly precarious. Couldn't happen here, of course. Stream Leila on Netflix.


Shining Girls (2022)

Handmaid's Tale lead Elisabeth Moss stars in this other sci-fi story from an acclaimed novel (in this case by Lauren Beukes). Moss plays Kirby Mazrachi, an archivist at the Chicago Sun-Times who was attacked and left for dead years ago. She still suffers from the trauma of the event, a legacy which becomes even more complicated when she finds reality shifting around her, and comes across a woman who was murdered, with wounds nearly identical to those that almost killed Kirby. She becomes determined to find the killer, even as the number of female victims grow. It's significant that she's an archivist and not a cop: Kirby isn't content to see these women as bodies, or as merely victims, but is determined that their stories are told. Best not to give to much more away here, except to say that there's a other significant clue in the title, referring as it does to women who stand out in a culture that doesn't always reward that kind of thing. Stream Shining Girls on Apple TV.

10 Shows Like 'Young Sherlock' You Should Watch Next

3 April 2026 at 17:00

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Sherlock Holmes is only recently in the public domain (at least in full), and hoo boy, are creators going to make the most of it—there are at least three major Doyle-adjacent works streaming in 2026, and I'm probably missing a couple. Not that IP was ever much of a barrier, as evidenced by the hundreds of films, books, porn parodies, etc. released in the near-century since Arthur Conan Doyle's death. Which is all to say that Holmes is pretty resilient as a character, and, while I wouldn't have said that we need a zippy, Guy Ritchie Sherlock prequel—Young Sherlock is unique, and quite a bit of fun. It's stretching the character to nearly his breaking point, for sure, but maintaining at least a reasonable bit of respect for the canon, with a well-cast lead in Hero Fiennes Tiffin alongside Dónal Finn as Moriarty.

Here are some other entertainingly stylish period (mostly) dramas for your post-Young Sherlock viewing enjoyment.

The Artful Dodger (2023)

Artful Dodger serves as a sequel to Oliver Twist, finding Jack Dawkins (Thomas Brodie-Sangster of Queen's Gambit and Wolf Hall) having made a life for himself as a surgeon following a prison escape: Turns out those nimble fingers are good for more than just picking pockets. It's all going great until his old mentor Fagin (David Thewlis) shows up on his doorstep, using their history to nudge Jack back into helping out with criminal endeavors. Thewlis and Brodie-Sangster are well-matched in the surprising and funny series that sees Jack torn between his roguish impulses and his desire to go straight. Stream The Artful Dodger on Hulu.


The Irregulars (2021)

What sounded like a desperately unnecessary Sherlock Holmes pastiche involving the Baker Street Irregulars (led here by Bad Sisters' Thaddea Graham) layered an unexpected exploration of grief into the dark supernatural mystery at its core. Here, Watson (Royce Pierreson) hires the damaged but resourceful urchins to aid in cases involving occult activity, as well as to help track down an aging, and missing, Sherlock. Holmes angle aside, the show works as a darker, Victorian-era Stranger Things. It was canceled before its time, but comes to a reasonably satisfying conclusion. Stream The Irregulars on Netflix.


Murdoch Mysteries (2008 – )

Kicking off in 1895, the show follows Detective William Murdoch (Yannick Bisson) of the Toronto Constabulary as he and his team solve Upper Canada's most baffling crimes. The chemistry between the leads has powered the show through 19 seasons (and counting), as has the show's whimsical attitude toward historical accuracy, throwing in real-life figures and innovations into a mix that just as readily includes technology that borders on steampunk. A bit cozier, perhaps, than Young Sherlock, but sometimes that's the perfect vibe. Stream Murdoch Mysteries on Tubi.


A Thousand Blows (2025 – )

A spiritual follow-up to Peaky Blinders from that show's creator, this one goes back a bit further, to the 1880s, during which an all-female crime syndicate is running London's East End. True story! Erin Doherty stars as Mary Carr, leader of the Forty Elephants crew, specializing in shoplifting and confidence schemes. In A Thousand Blows, Mary and her gang come up against Stephen Graham's Henry "Sugar" Goodson (another real-world antihero), running an illicit bare-knuckle boxing organization. Coming between them is Hezekiah Moscow (Malachi Kirby), a recently arrived Jamaican immigrant who introduces us to this gritty world and its competing factions. Stream A Thousand Blows on Hulu.


Vienna Blood (2019 – 2024)

Vienna Blood creator and writer Steve Thompson was a screenwriter for the Benedict Cumberbatch Sherlock series, as well as for the Young Sherlock series in question, so it perhaps makes perfect sense that this Edwardian-era crime procedural has Holmes in its DNA. Matthew Beard plays Doctor Max Liebermann, a student of Sigmund Freud who's recruited, early on, by police detective Oskar Reinhardt (Jürgen Maurer) to offer up some psychological insight to the investigation of several grisly murders. Liebermann makes brilliant deductions about character traits just as Holmes does with physical evidence, just with a bit more action and serial murder. Stream Vienna Blood on PBS Passport or buy it from Prime Video.


Death Comes to Pemberley (2013)

This isn't a sexy, action-packed update to Pride and Prejudice, but puts a bit of a spin on the source genre much as Young Sherlock does. Adapted from the novel by P. D. James, one of the 20th century's most accomplished crime novelists, Pemberley finds us several years after the events of the Austen novel. Darcy (Matthew Rhys) and Lizzie (Anna Maxwell Martin) remain contentedly, if not always blissfully, married, and have arranged one of those balls for which Pemberley is famous. On the way there, Lizzie's sister and her husband George Wickham are traveling with Captain Denny. Wickham and Denny have a fight, disappear into the woods, and Denny turns up dead. Lizzie doesn't have time to get bored in her giant house—not when there's a murder to solve. Stream Death Comes to Pemberley on PBS Passport or buy it from Prime Video.


Perry Mason (2020 – 2022)

Speaking of Matthew Rhys, there's this addictive odd duck of a show that takes the Perry Mason of print, film, and television, and places him in a dark and gritty Depression-era prequel. Rhys is fabulous, naturally, as a brilliant but hard-living defense lawyer, going through a divorce while still facing trauma from the Great War. He's hired to investigate the case of a kidnapped and mutilated child, one which ends up having ties to crooked cops, local business leaders, and politicians in 1932 LA. Juliet Rylance co-stars as no-nonsense legal secretary Della Street and Tatiana Maslany as a creepy evangelist. Stream Perry Mason on HBO Max.


Monsieur Spade (2024)

An original drama from Scott Frank (The Queen's Gambit) and Tom Fontana (Homicide, Oz), Monsieur Spade finds Hammett's Sam Spade, of The Maltese Falcon fame, living a quiet life in retirement in the South of France. It's all going well for the rumpled former detective—until six nuns are brutally murdered at a nearby convent, the same convent that's been home to Sam's ward for some time. Naturally, he finds his past has caught up with him, and is forced to surrender his idyllic life in order to help uncover the complex mystery that endangers his (very few) loved ones. Clive Owen is great as the rumpled, emphysemic detective, and the story feels like a fitting sequel to the original novel. Stream Monsieur Spade on Prime Video and AMC+.


The Gentlemen (2024 – )

Theo James plays army officer and Eddie Horniman (a name mentioned as often as possible), heir to the Horniman estate (there it is again) who, upon the death of his father, is named the Duke of Halstead. He learns that dad was tied to various criminal enterprises, and that his scouse brother is millions of pounds in debt to a drug dealer. What else is the dapper, military-trained Duke to do but learn to navigate the violent underworld while looking cool? Stream The Gentlemen on Netflix.


Sherlock & Daughter (2025 – )

Even if the setup is removed from anything in the Doyle canon, this CW production offers up, probably, the most lit-accurate Holmes in the form of David Thewlis. He's broody, persnickety, and emotionally distant, which makes for all the more effective a contrast when Amelia Rojas (Blu Hunt) shows up on his doorstep following the death of her mother and a harrowing journey from California. With the real possibility that Sherlock is her father, she teams up with him to investigate an international criminal cartel and, hopefully, to find out what happened to her mother. The clever Amelia quickly takes the place of the missing Watson, though the show doesn't shy away from the challenges an Indigenous American young woman would face in Victorian London. Stream Sherlock & Daughter on HBO Max.

10 Shows Like 'The Comeback' You Should Watch Next

26 March 2026 at 16:00

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Valerie Cherish is back, and not a moment too soon. Twenty years after a modestly rated but absolutely brilliant first season, mega-cringe Hollywood satire The Comeback has returned to HBO for one more painfully embarrassing season (complimentary) Co-created by and starring Lisa Kudrow, it's the hilarious, dark, and occasionally moving story of a C-list celebrity determined to stay in the limelight at whatever cost.

Valerie Cherish—clueless, egotistical, and all-too-human—is one of TV's indelible characters, simultaneously a victim of ageism, misogyny, and celebrity culture, and also a woman who doesn't care about any of that provided she can find a way to scrabble to the top. Likewise, these 10 shows spotlight women (mostly) of a certain age navigating career challenges with...mixed results.

Hacks (2021 – )

On the surface, Valerie Cherish and Deborah Vance don't have all that much in common, but they often feel like two sides of a coin in the ways in which they battle, and concede to, the pressures of being a woman in modern show business. Hacks finds 25-year-old writer Ava (Hannah Einbinder) struggling to get her career back one track after getting cancelled over a tweet. She reluctantly takes a job with Deborah Vance (Jean Smart), a comedy trailblazer who remains popular with an older Vegas crown, but whose career is largely on autopilot. They're an entirely mismatched pair, but their chemistry is ultimately explosive, with Jean Smart doing some of the best work of her incredible career as the often deeply unlikeable Vance, and Einbinder more than holding her own in return. It's funny, bitchy, and surprisingly moving when it wants to be. Stream Hacks on HBO Max.


Girls5eva (2021 – 2024)

The premise is very much about a comeback: A very ‘90s group (Sara Bareilles, Busy Philipps, Paula Pell, and Renée Elise Goldsberry) who made it big very briefly with exactly one hit song gets its own shot at a career resurgence (they’re Girls5eva because they expected to be in the game “longer than 4 ever”—turned out, not so much; also there used to be a fifth member, but she died in a tragic infinity pool accident). After an up-and-coming rapper samples one of their old hits, the band reunites to try to find new relevancy in the 2020s. It doesn't go great! Tina Fey is one of the executive producers, and the (very fun) '90s-inspired original music was composed and written for the show by the creators. Stream Girls5Eva on Peacock and Netflix.


Veep (2012 – 2019)

There's a sweet vulnerability to Valerie Cherish absent from pretty much anyone in Veep, but the air of cringeworthy desperation hangs heavy over both shows. Veep asks: What if the very worst people imaginable had control of all the levers of power in America? What would that be like? In the highly satirical and in no way politically relevant series, Julia Louis-Dreyfus brilliantly plays Vice President Selina Meyer: part icon, part worst-case-scenario for the feminist dream. The supporting cast consists almost entirely of entitled rich people climbing over each other for infinitesimal extra bits of power while trying to appear as folk heroes to the rubes (us voters). It’s one of the funniest shows ever on TV, with the nastiest put-downs...if you can handle the fact that history has overtaken it in favor of a reality that's even more absurd. Stream Veep on HBO Max.


The Studio (2025 – )

Industry exec Matt Remick (Comeback vet Seth Rogen) loves movies, and when he signs on for a high-profile role at the fictional Continental Studios, he feels like his time has come. He aims to make a real difference in returning an increasingly IP-driven movie industry to its creative roots.—until about a minute into his new job, when the CEO (Bryan Cranston) reveals his first order of business will be marketing the Kool-Aid Man Movie. Hollywood satires of yore have focused on the industry as one that eats people up and spits them out, but the spin here is that Remick yearns for those good old days, much as Valerie can never quite seem to move forward. The late Catherine O'Hara, Ike Barinholtz, Chase Sui Wonders (Bodies Bodies Bodies), and Kathryn Hahn also star, and like The Comeback, the show boasts a long list of celebrity cameos. Stream The Studio on Apple TV+.


Enlightened (2011 – 2013)

Before The White Lotus, Mike White co-created (with star Laura Dern) this beloved, if short-lived, comedy-drama about a middle-aged woman who has a complete mental breakdown following a demotion at the job to which she's devoted her life. Following a two-month stay in an holistic treatment facility, Dern's Amy Jellicoe becomes determined to approach life with a new perspective, focusing on meditation and positive change at work and at home. The results are mixed, but there's also a rather beautiful sense that change is absurd and difficult, but also entirely possible. Stream Enlightened on HBO Max.


No Good Deed (2024)

I'm adding this one largely for the Lisa Kudrow of it all, but there's a similar vein of dark comedy here—plus, No Good Deed is a pretty great show that a lot of people missed. The setup sounds like a juicy crime thrillers: Kudrow is retired pianist Lydia; Ray Romano is her husband, Paul. The two are in rather tricky financial straits and need to sell their home without wanting to seem too desperate to prospective buyers—and also hide a secret involving a death a few years prior. For all that, it's very much a comedy, with a great supporting cast that includes Linda Cardellini, Luke Wilson, O-T Fagbenle, and Teyonah Parris. Stream No Good Deed on Netflix.


Younger (2015 – 2021)

Rather than a young woman seeking to make a name for herself, Younger follows Liza Miller (Sutton Foster), a recently divorced woman in her 40s who finds that age is a barrier to reentering the publishing industry she left years earlier. After a compliment convinces her that she could pass for a younger woman, she lies that she's just 26 (must be nice) in order to land an entry-level job. Misadventures ensue. Think of it as a story of coming-of-age, again. Stream Younger on Netflix.


Hot in Cleveland (2010 – 2015)

In contrast to The Comeback's reality TV style and structure, this is very much a traditional three-camera sitcom, albeit one with a stacked cast of legends, though it approaches the challenges of being a middle-aged woman in entertainment in many of the same ways. Writer Melanie (Valerie Bertinelli), beautician Joy (Jane Leeves), and soap diva Victoria (Wendie Malick) wind up spending a wild night in Cleveland after a plane to Paris is diverted, discovering in the process that, while they're seen as over-the-hill back in Los Angeles, they're all Ohio 10s—though the sassy caretaker of their house, Elka (Betty White), might not agree. Stream Hot in Cleveland on Paramount+.


Grace and Frankie (2015 – 2022)

Close female friendships are hard to come by for the driven, slightly clueless Valerie, a woman focused on staying on top. Jane Fonda's Grace, a cosmetics mogul, isn't much different at the start, but she finds a different path when she makes a truce with her arch-nemesis Frankie (Lily Tomlin), a quirky artist with whom she has nothing in common—other than the fact that their husbands left them for one another. (Valerie might take some notes.) Stream Grace and Frankie on Netflix.


Call My Agent! (2015 – 2020)

International sensation Call My Agent! shifts its focus between four talent agents at a prestigious firm who are forced to take the reins following the sudden death of the agency founder, all of them getting a second chance in mid-career—or beyond. The cast is lead by Camille Cottin as Andréa Martel, while Liliane Rovère's Arlette Azéma is in her '80s. They navigate their messy personal lives while catering to the needs of their real celebrity clients (Juliette Binoche, Monica Bellucci, Isabelle Huppert, and Sigourney Weaver are just some of the name guest stars playing faintly exaggerated versions of themselves). It's soapy, addictive showbiz fun, a dishy delight even if you know not a lick of French. Stream Call My Agent! on Netflix.

What's New on Netflix in April 2026

25 March 2026 at 16:16

Netflix's April lineup is packed with something for everyone. There are new installments of reality series Million Dollar Secret (April 15), Netflix's answer to NBC's The Traitors, and Temptation Island (April 10). Comedy series Running Point (April 23) also returns for a second season, with Kate Hudson starring as the president of her family's pro basketball franchise.

Big Mistakes (April 9) is a new crime comedy series created by Dan Levy, who stars alongside Taylor Ortega as one of a pair of siblings who get blackmailed into participating in organized crime. And Kevin Hart has a new comedy competition series: Funny AF with Kevin Hart (April 20) incorporates real-time audience voting to find the next stand-up comedy star.

The new film Apex (April 24) is an action thriller starring Charlize Theron as a grieving woman in the Australian wilderness being hunted down by Taron Egerton. Finally, the April documentary slate is long: there's This is a Gardening Show (April 22), narrated by Zach Galifianakis, and A Gorilla Story: Told by David Attenborough (April 17), as well as the musical docs Noah Kahan: Out of Body (April 13) and Lainey Wilson: Keepin' Country Cool (April 22). Trust Me: The False Prophet (April 8) is a true crime series that looks at Warren Jeffs's FLDS sect in Utah. Netflix is also dropping a handful of episodes of its Untold sports docuseries.

Here's everything else coming to Netflix in April, and everything that's leaving.

What's coming to Netflix in April 2026

Available soon

Available April 1

  • Eat Pray Bark—Netflix Film

  • The Giant Falls—Netflix Film

  • It Takes a Village—Netflix Film

  • Love on the Spectrum: Season 4—Netflix Series

  • Sarah Millican: Late Bloomer—Netflix Comedy Special

  • The Age of Adaline

  • Along Came Polly

  • American Gangster

  • Atonement

  • Bohemian Rhapsody

  • Everest

  • Happy's Place: Season 1

  • Hotel Transylvania 2

  • Kindergarten Cop

  • Lucy

  • Madagascar

  • Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted

  • Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa

  • Mission: Impossible

  • Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol

  • Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation

  • Mission: Impossible II

  • Mission: Impossible III

  • Money Talks

  • Penguins of Madagascar: The Movie

  • Smokey and the Bandit

  • Smokey and the Bandit II

  • St. Denis Medical: Season 1

  • The Wiz

Available April 2

Available April 3

Available April 7

Available April 8

Available April 9

Available April 10

Available April 11

Available April 12

Available April 13

  • America: Our Defining Hours

  • American Godfathers: The Five Families

  • The Booze, Bets and Sex That Built America

  • Halloween Ends

  • The Men Who Built America: Frontiersmen

  • Noah Kahan: Out of Body—Netflix Documentary

Available April 14

Available April 15

Available April 16

Available April 17

Available April 18

  • Denial

  • We Are All Trying Here—Netflix Series

Available April 19

  • Him

Available April 20

Available April 21

Available April 22

Available April 23

Available April 24

Available April 26

Available April 27

Available April 29

Available April 30

What's leaving Netflix in April 2026

Leaving April 1

  • The American President

  • Best in Show

  • Best in Show

  • Big Momma's House

  • Big Momma's House 2

  • The Bucket List

  • Cheaper by the Dozen

  • Cheaper by the Dozen 2

  • Crazy, Stupid, Love.

  • District 9

  • Dr. Seuss' The Cat in the Hat

  • Dr. Seuss' The Lorax

  • Ford v. Ferrari

  • Free Solo

  • Friends with Benefits

  • Ghosts of Mississippi

  • Kicking & Screaming

  • Man on Fire

  • Misery

  • Molly's Game

  • Only the Brave

  • Pineapple Express

  • Pitch Perfect

  • Pitch Perfect 2

  • Rio

  • Rio 2

  • Rumor Has It...

  • Zero Dark Thirty

Leaving April 7

  • Queen of the South: Seasons 1-5

Leaving April 16

  • Van Helsing: Seasons 1-5

Leaving April 17

  • Black Sails: Seasons 1-4

Leaving April 21

  • Casino Royale

  • Diamonds Are Forever

  • Die Another Day

  • Dr. No

  • For Your Eyes Only

  • From Russia with Love

  • GoldenEye

  • Goldfinger

  • The Man with the Golden Gun

  • Never Say Never Again

  • No Time to Die

  • Octopussy

  • On Her Majesty's Secret Service

  • Quantum of Solace

  • Skyfall

  • Spectre

  • The Spy Who Loved Me

  • Tomorrow Never Dies

  • The World Is Not Enough

  • You Only Live Twice

10 Shows Like 'Call the Midwife' You Should Watch Next

24 March 2026 at 18:00

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In its 15th season, unlikely phenomenon Call the Midwife hasn't slowed down: Season 16 is already confirmed, as are a feature film and a WWII-era prequel series. Plenty of babies still need to be born, it would seem.

Initially set in 1957, with the current plots entering the 1970s, the show takes place in and around Poplar, London, one of the city's most desperately poor districts. As the National Health Service is born, secular trained midwives team up with the nuns of Nonnatus House, a nursing convent that had been in the business of providing medical care to the area's poor for decades. Though occasionally veering into schmaltz, the show's melodrama is generally well-earned, often dealing frankly with issues of women's health that other shows are still too timid to broach. If you've already plowed through all the available episodes, here are 10 more series with similar themes.

The Bletchley Circle (2012 – 2014)

Starting, like Call the Midwife, in the, mid-1950s, this series follows the women (mostly) who worked at the Bletchley Park estate during World War II. The workforce was charged operating cryptographic machinery and translating documents—essential code-breaking work that was largely forgotten by history, buried under heavy classification. This show isn't exactly about those events, though, instead focusing on a group of four women who reunite several years later to use their skills to hunt a serial killer. It's a juicy way to connect with the real story of women who served the war effort with a juicy plot, and the verisimilitude is legit—the show draws contrasts between the women's lives during wartime and their more domestic expectations once it was all over. Stream The Bletchley Circle on Peacock and Prime Video.


All Creatures Great and Small (2020 – )

An update of a venerable British franchise based on a series of autobiographical novels from writer James Herriot, All Creatures takes us back to the rural Yorkshire Dales of the 1930s and '40s (as the series progresses into World War II and beyond), with a Scottish vet (Nicholas Ralph) moving to the small farming town of Darrowby to take up a job as a veterinary assistant. Animals are in jeopardy on a weekly basis, but the big-hearted show only rarely goes for the gut punch—favoring instead lots of baby cows and cameos from local pampered Pekinese Tricki Woo. Anna Madeley's housekeeper Audrey Hall and Rachel Shenton's farmer Helen keep the often-struggling practice together. It's not quite the human drama of Call the Midwife, though it does deal with some real challenges of the era. Stream All Creatures Great and Small on Prime Video and PBS.


Land Girls (2009 – 2011)

Stepping back a few years into World War II proper, the subject here is another less-well-remembered bit of history: The Women's Land Army, and the "Land Girls" who signed up to learn about farming and agriculture in order to replace male farmworkers who'd gone off to fight. Here, four very different women, with very different reasons for signing up, arrive at the farm on the Hoxley estate in order to serve their country, but also to figure out what they want out of life. Like the best shows of its kind, Land Girls also deals with issues contemporary to women of the era, as in the very first episode when the women are confronted by segregation among the American soldiers with whom they come into contact. Stream Land Girls on PBS or buy it from Prime Video.


Grantchester (2014 – )

In 1950s and '60s Cambridgeshire, Robson Green plays overworked, cynical WWII-veteran police detective Geordie Keating, while James Norton, Tom Brittney, and Rishi Nair (in succession) play well-meaning but occasionally straying local priests who help solve the inevitable string of murders. While generally adhering to the cozy mystery-of-the-week format, the show occasionally dives into heavy relationship drama as well as some real-world drama, often involving Al Weaver's curate Leonard Finch, who struggles with the clerical and legal ramifications of being gay. Stream Grantchester on Netflix and PBS.


Virgin River (2019 – )

It's not late 20th century London, but rather contemporary Northern California, but we still get some of Call the Midwife's life-affirming charm alongside modern midwifery. Virgin River stars Alexandra Breckenridge as Mel, a nurse practitioner and midwife who finds unexpected complications when she moves to the title Northern California town on a one-year contract. That was seven romantic seasons ago, s you have years' worth of high-end comfort viewing to enjoy. Stream Virgin River on Netflix.


Cable Girls (2017 – 2020)

Whatever the genre, there's a recurring theme across many of these shows, and it as to do with women leaving familiar settings and taking on roles and responsibilities in field that are either altogether new, or new to women. Set in 1928, this Spanish import finds four women from different backgrounds seeking employment at a telecommunications company in Madrid. Ángeles is an experienced switchboard operator with kids to feed, Carlota is a society gal looking to get out from under her controlling family, Marga's looking for an adventure, and Lidia has been forced into a criminal enterprise. The show blends empowering history with enough telenovela-style twists to propel it through five seasons. Stream Cable Girls on Netflix.


The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (2017 – 2023)

One of Prime’s first and buzziest original series, this comedy-drama from Amy Sherman-Palladino (Gilmore Girls) follows Midge Maisel (Rachel Brosnahan), a New York housewife of the late 1950s who discovers a talent for stand-up comedy. Inspired by the real-life careers of comedians like Totie Fields and Joan Rivers, the show is both warm and funny, with great performances and dialogue; it also achieves something rare in being a show about comedy that’s actually funny. A New York housewife striking out to become a stand up might not pair up exactly with London midwifery, but Maisel and Midwife share the exhilarating feeling of women broadening their own horizons in the middle of the last century. Stream The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel on Prime Video.


The Crimson Field (2014)

Perhaps inspired by Call the Midwife itself, The Crimson Field goes back a bit further into the 20th century: specifically, a fictional World War I field hospital on the French coast. Oona Chaplin star as Kitty Trevelyan, a somewhat surly (sassy, even) new nurse, joined by several other mostly-upper-class women who are entirely new to both the realities of war, and to being told what to do. It's a particularly glossy period drama, for better and for worse (a WWI medical drama could have done with a bit more grit), but it's a very watchable window into history, with some fabulous performances. Stream The Crimson Field on Prime Video and Tubi.


The Hour (2011 – 2012)

With a rather brilliant cast and impeccable period style, The Hour charts the rise of a (fictional) BBC current affairs program, led by women and premiering in the middle of the 1956 Suez Crisis—a challenge in itself, as the government isn't particularly keen to have its missteps reported on (luckily, such censorship could never happen today). Producer Bel Rowley (Romola Garai) chooses war correspondent Lix Storm (the great Anna Chancellor) as foreign correspondent alongside less-accomplished anchor, Hector Madden (Dominic West), while scrappy reporter Freddie Lyon (Ben Whislaw) is desperate to get onboard. There are spies, murder, and plenty of then-current affairs spread across the show's two seasons. Stream The Hour on Tubi.


London Hospital (2006 – 2009)

Particularly in its early seasons, Call the Midwife highlighted the challenges of practicing medicine in the poorest areas of London in a time before medical standards were what they are today. London Hospital could almost serve as prequel, set among the nurses and in the Receiving Room of the real-life Royal London Hospital during the early years of the 20th century. Each episode is based, however loosely, on real-life cases taken from nurses' logs and diaries, and the episodes present each incident with the pacing of a modern medical drama, eschewing period-show gloss. Broken up into three groups of episodes set in 1906, 1907, and 1909, we're faced with the challenges of early anesthesia, a world before antibiotics, and innovations in X-ray technology without a full understanding of the dangers of radiation. Rent London Hospital from Apple TV+.

15 Shows Like 'Dark' You Should Watch Next

27 February 2026 at 17:00

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Dark began as a mystery involving a missing child and evolved, over its three seasons, into a wildly complex narrative: a time travel-driven story that explores dark family secrets over the course of several generations. Youth may be a sort of protection in some horror stories, but not here, not even a little tiny bit. No one is safe from the show's emotions threats, nor from literally being killed. Dark gets twistier and more compelling throughout its three seasons and, miracle of miracles, ends on its own terms and on a highly satisfying note. There's nothing quite like it out there, which is a big part of the appeal, but it's certainly not the only show with a smart, mature tone and compellingly twisty mysteries. Stream Dark on Netflix and then check out these other smart and spooky shows.

Wayward Pines (2015 – 2016)

Based on a trilogy of Blake Crouch novels, the show, initially, stars Matt Dillon as a Secret Service agent investigating the disappearances of two fellow agents in the Idaho town of Wayward Pines. Things go awry pretty much immediately, and he wakes up from a car accident to find one of the agents (Carla Gugino), who's also his ex, having settled down in the seemingly idyllic community—and she's 12 years older than when he last saw her a few weeks ago. Even more dramatically, the local sheriff (Terrence Howard) enforces a strict "no one ever leaves" policy, on pain of having one's neck slit. The mysteries pile up from there. Stream Wayward Pines on Hulu.


From (2022 – )

Here we travel to The Town (we never get a name—definitely a red flag), from which no one can ever leave. The residents and visitors aren't metaphorically trapped, but literally so, and are beset by creatures come from the woods and kill anyone found outside after dark. The Matthews family learn all about this firsthand when they roll into town in their RV and find themselves trapped alongside the local sheriff (Harold Perrineau)—just as the sun's going down. The show's monsters aren't just mindlessly hungry, they're cunning and sadistic, and more than capable of killing residents in impressively gory ways. It's very much a supernatural spin on the "small towns ain't what they seem" vibe. Stream From on MGM+ or buy it from Prime Video.


12 Monkeys (2015 – 2018)

Though the series at first felt like a pointless retread of the Terry Gilliam film (and of La Jetée, on which that was based), the series eventually began to luxuriate in its extended timeline and use it to ruminate on ideas of free will versus predetermination, even while throwing in plenty of action and mystery. Well before the end of the first season, the show found its sometimes-confusing (but always heady) groove. It’s sort of a pre-apocalypse story, with time travelers from a pretty rotten future sent back into the past to seek out and stop the release of a virus that will ultimately kill seven billion humans, and that’s expected to continue to mutate and eventually wipe out everyone left. Stream 12 Monkeys on Prime Video.


1899 (2022)

The steamship Kerberos is headed to New York City from Southampton in the UK, full of immigrants ready to start a new life. Sounds inspirational, except for that portentously named ship—and the fact that the series comes from Jantje Friese and Baran bo Odar of Dark fame. The passengers soon discover that the boat isn't just a boat, but includes portals to other locations and seemingly even other times. The unplanned ending (the show was cancelled) answers some questions while raising many others. Still: a bit of spooky fun on a boat. Stream 1899 on Netflix.


Twin Peaks (1990 – 1991, 2017)

With all due respect to every other "small towns are weird" show, including Dark, I'm not sure that there's any finer example of the form than than this addictive bit of weirdness from David Lynch and Mark Frost. Teens and adults in the deceptively quiet Twin Peaks face tragedy accompanied by supernatural threats from outside of our normal space and time. I think? The mysteries here aren't really meant to be solved as much as pondered with an eye toward nebulous existential dread (and if that's not your idea of fun, I'm not sure what you're doing here). Kyle MacLachlan plays FBI Special Agent Dale Cooper, who arrives in the title town to investigate the murder of teenager homecoming queen Laura Palmer (Sheryl Lee), precipitating a (very) long night of the soul as Cooper uncovers secrets and mysteries among the town's delightfully, and often disturbingly, weird residents. As good as the original is, the anti-nostalgic followup series is a triumph. Stream Twin Peaks on Paramount+.


Signal (2016 – )

Blending police procedural, mystery, and science fiction, this K-drama remains one of the most-watched dramas in South Korean TV history—enough that a second season is coming after a wait of nearly 10 years. Police profiler Park Hae-young (Lee Je-hoon) finds a discarded walkie-talkie that connects him with Detective Lee Jae-han (Cho Jin-woong), who disappeared in 2000 but who is able to communicate from an earlier time. The two detectives are able to work together, across time, to solve a very cold case—but soon discover that there are disturbing consequences in the present when they fiddle with time. Stream Signal on Netflix.


Curon (2020)

Set near the real-life Lago di Resia in northern Italy, the show was inspired by the lake's singular view: the bell tower of a 14th century chapel rising above the water, the only visible remains of a village submerged by a dam in the 1950s. That eerie setting is home to Anna Raina (Valeria Bilello); it was, anyway, until she fled while pregnant with her twin daughters following her mother's tragic and mysterious death. The twins are now teenagers, and the three of them have returned—except nobody seems to want them around. They come to learn that Anna's been having dreams about her mother's death in which she's the killer, and then she herself disappears. It all ties back to that lake and the creepy bell tower. Stream Curon on Netflix.


Fringe (2008 – 2013)

We don't talk nearly enough about Fringe, a smart sci-fi/crime procedural that served as a true successor to the X-Files (and that wrapped more satisfyingly than that show ever did, even given multiple tries). Starting out as a kind of weird-mystery-of-the-week thing with Anna Torv as FBI Agent Olivia Dunham, Joshua Jackson as civilian consultant Peter and John Noble as his science-guy dad, Walter, straight out of a mental institution. It soon becomes clear that the odd occurrences they've been investigating are all linked to potentially universe-ending incursions across time and space, and that Walter has dark secrets that are both personal and existentially profound. Stream Fringe on Hulu.


Archive 81 (2022)

A clever and spooky horror noir that gets a mixed recommendation only because of Netflix's tendency to cancel shows after a single season. Archive 81 stars Mamoudou Athie as archivist Dan, hired to restore some old tapes from the 1990s. What follows involves a demonic cult, Lovecraftian horrors, and a jazz-age demon cult. It builds an impressive horror mythology that it only barely had a chance to develop. And yet! We love a spooky tape moment. Stream Archive 81 on Netflix.


Channel Zero (2016 – 2018)

A mind-bending and occasionally gruesome expansion of various online creepypastas, Nick Antosca's series takes the form of four season-long storylines. While the tone is far from juvenile, the vibe here is childhood-nightmares-come-to-life: The show's first season anticipates I Saw the TV Glow with a story about a half-remembered TV series linked to the disappearances of several children; another finds a couple of sisters dealing with cannibals and a mysterious staircase in the middle of the woods, while the last has a newlywed couple finding a mysterious door that unlocks childhood anxieties (and a freaky clown). The most Dark-like (perhaps) is the second season, which sees a group of friends trapped in a tourist-attraction haunted house that exits into a disturbing alternate reality. It's all smart and genuinely freaky, existential dread blending with memorable visuals such as a child made entirely of human teeth. Stream Channel Zero on Shudder and AMC+ or buy it from Prime Video.


Feria: The Darkest Light (2022)

Dark deeds and supernatural forces from the past haunt multiple generations—this time, in 1995 Andalusia. This import finds teenage sisters Sofia and Eva caught in a nightmare when their parents go missing while being implicated in a cult ritual that's left 23 people dead, including a woman who'd been missing for years. Tying back to 1975 and, implicitly, the fall of Francisco Franco, Feria shatters this small town's sense of community and security while calling into question the value of the organizations—including government and church—that everyone holds dear. Kids getting caught up in generational cycles of violence and shame is an extremely recognizable vibe. Stream Feria on Netflix.


Tales From the Loop (2020)

A gorgeous-looking anthology, Tales From the Loop takes place in the small town of Mercer, Ohio—a town that happens to sit upon the titular Loop, a physics lab exploring mysteries for which science has no answers. Each episode offers the story of a person or family in the town impacted by the work of the Loop, in slow-burning stories about the intersection of technology and human existence. It’s based on a conceptual art book by artist Simon Stålenhag, and successfully ports over that book’s striking look and feel. Stream Tales from the Loop on Prime Video.


The OA (2016 – 2019)

The unclassifiable sci-fi/mystery series stars Brit Marling as Prairie Johnson (Brit Marling), a woman who returns after a seven-year disappearance, proclaiming herself to be the “original angel”; aiding her case is the fact that she has the ability to see, though she was previously blind. She assembles a group of young people to help her in a mission to save others who've been lost, which she can only do by opening a portal to another dimension. The critically acclaimed show was unceremoniously cancelled after two seasons, which hasn't stopped people talking about the show and its mysteries. Stream The OA on Netflix.


The Leftovers (2014 – 2017)

The premise of The Leftovers is brilliantly subdued: Around 2% of the world's population disappears without explanation, and it's enough to upend just about everything. Politics have adapted to the new normal, religions have collapsed and reformed, and families have had to make peace with the inexplicable loss of loved ones. The first season revolves around the Garvey family. led by Kevin (Justin Theroux), a sheriff whose wife (Amy Brenneman) left him to join a cult, while subsequent seasons broaden the scope to bring in other characters in other locations. Showrunner Damon Lindelof also co-created Lost, and the two series share some similarities (including a relatively grim tone), but where Lost spun out of control, The Leftovers recognizes that complex plotting and the search for answers is really the point. Stream The Leftovers on HBO Max.


Gravity Falls (2012 – 2016)

Finally, a little something for the kids, who also deserve a spooky mystery or two. (I say "kids," but this is genuinely pretty fun for all ages.) The much-loved, if relatively short-lived, animated series follows twin siblings Mabel and Dipper Pines (Kristen Schaal and Jason Ritter) sent to spend the summer with their great uncle (aka "Grunkle") Stan (voiced by show creator Alex Hirsch). While helping Stan run his mystery-themed tourist shack, the kids run into a series of supernatural mysteries, many related to the show's ultimate antagonist, dream demon Bill Cipher. The show's finale was similarly a blockbuster—the highest rated telecast in the history of Disney XD, as a matter of fact. Not terrifying, perhaps, but genuinely clever. Stream Gravity Falls on Disney+.

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