
25 Most Popular TV Shows Right Now: What to Watch on Streaming
Want to know what popular and new TV shows this week are keeping watchers glued to the screen and Rotten Tomatoes users engaged on the site? Here are the current top 25 series!
The battle of the streamers is back on, and this week, Prime Video takes the lead with its new drama Off Campus. Apple TV+’s Widow’s Bay is still holding on at No. 2, and coming in at No. 3 is Netflix’s Legends, starring Tom Burke.
Click on each show for reviews and trailers, where to watch, and how to cast your own ratings vote. Check back weekly for the latest updates to the charts. (And also check out the most popular movies out right now!)
93%
90%
Critics Consensus: Off Campus thrives on titillation and the deliberate excavation of relationship dynamics in a whirlwind romance novel adaptation that genuinely cares for the genre and all its pleasurable trappings.
Starring: Ella Bright, Belmont Cameli, Mika Abdalla, Antonio Cipriano
97%
91%
Critics Consensus: Katie Dippold successfully continues to invest in eccentricity with this outlandish horror-comedy that stokes the genre's well-worn tropes to winning effect, bringing scares, laughs, and a game cast.
Starring: Matthew Rhys, Kate O'Flynn, Stephen Root, Kingston Rumi Southwick
96%
85%
Critics Consensus: Legends gets the basics of the crime genre right, bringing in clear-cut drama to a daringly real tale and imbuing its narrative with the right balance of respect and spectacle.
Starring: Tom Burke, Steve Coogan, Hayley Squires, Tom Hughes
92%
57%
Critics Consensus: Fleshing out William Golding's text with thoughtful observations about boyhood and sharpened by a uniformly terrific troupe of child actors, this retelling of Lord of the Flies seizes the conch shell and commands attention.
Starring: Winston Sawyers, Lox Pratt, David McKenna, Isaac Talbut
92%
52%
Critics Consensus: The Boys stays true to its form and completes its mission with ample panache, narrative pay-off, and an excess of blood and guts to deviously glorious effect.
Starring: Karl Urban, Jack Quaid, Antony Starr, Erin Moriarty
88%
81%
Critics Consensus: Dutton Ranch takes what its predecessor perfected and carries the mantle well in a new town with the same well-worn trappings, perfectly dusted and ripe for entertaining.
Starring: Kelly Reilly, Cole Hauser, Ed Harris, Annette Bening
40%
40%
Critics Consensus: Euphoria returns with less than the sum of its parts in a disjointed cavalcade of forced narratives that leave its talented cast stranded in the wind.
Starring: Zendaya, Maude Apatow, Angus Cloud, Eric Dane
100%
76%
Critics Consensus: Devil May Cry emboldens its second season by capitalizing on familial drama that further motivates the wondrously crafted action set pieces to stunning effect.
Starring: Johnny Yong Bosch, Scout Taylor-Compton, Hoon Lee, Kevin Conroy
97%
78%
Critics Consensus: Rich in character and dramatic antics, Margo's Got Money Troubles succeeds because of its attention to emotional detail, authentic performances, and brilliant storytelling.
Starring: Elle Fanning, Michelle Pfeiffer, Nick Offerman, Nicole Kidman
89%
59%
Critics Consensus: Beef pairs its second season with winning performers and a crackling sense of ingenuity in a saga that Lee Sung Jin perfectly anchors through his mastery of class satire and the unexpected modes of human nature.
Synopsis: A young couple witnesses an alarming fight between their boss and his wife, triggering chess moves of favors and coercion in the elitist world of... View Full Synopsis
Starring: Oscar Isaac, Carey Mulligan, Charles Melton, Cailee Spaeny
62%
76%
Critics Consensus: M.I.A. is revenge-crime thriller 101, delivering just enough action and intrigue to carry out a binge-worthy evening.
Starring: Shannon Gisela, Cary Elwes, Danay Garcia, Brittany Adebumola
89%
64%
Critics Consensus: Continuing to peek through the satirical façade of socialite life, Your Friends & Neighbors' second season digs itself into a deeper and richer character hole, where Hamm, Munn, and Marsden make like bandits and steal the show.
Starring: Jon Hamm, Amanda Peet, Hoon Lee, Olivia Munn
63%
34%
Critics Consensus: Closing out the series with a serviceable final entry, Good Omens crafts a heartfelt goodbye thanks in part to David Tennant and Michael Sheen's unwavering performances.
Starring: Michael Sheen, David Tennant, Sam Taylor Buck, Doon Mackichan
77%
80%
Critics Consensus: Richard Gadd delivers a broodingly bleak sophomore effort that dares to plumb the depths of toxic masculinity and repression in a complex and unsettling tale that makes for unsettlingly good TV.
Starring: Jamie Bell, Richard Gadd, Neve McIntosh, Charlie de Melo
89%
74%
Critics Consensus: Rooster nestles in with humor and heart thanks to Steve Carell's soothing performance and Danielle Deadwyler's exuberant support, leading Bill Lawrence's kind-spirited, good-time new series to lovely heights.
Starring: Steve Carell, Lauren Tsai, Scott MacArthur, Danielle Deadwyler
61%
64%
Critics Consensus: Man on Fire mostly punches above its weight in a television adaptation that touches on new emotional and action-packed heights, despite its narrative pitfalls, thanks to the devoted and unflinching performance by Yahya Abdul-Mateen II.
Starring: Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, Billy Blanco Jr., Alex Ozerov-Meyer, Martín Peralta
90%
40%
Critics Consensus: With smart storytelling, high ambition, and enough tension to keep viewers glued to their screen, For All Mankind remains one of television's most compelling sci-fi sagas.
Starring: Joel Kinnaman, Wrenn Schmidt, Coral Peña, Krys Marshall
86%
86%
Critics Consensus: Daredevil: Born Again imbues its second season with rich substance thanks to devilishly good performances, punchier narrative momentum, and well-timed themes befitting this daring crusader.
Starring: Charlie Cox, Vincent D'Onofrio, Elden Henson, Deborah Ann Woll
98%
93%
Critics Consensus: An inspired look into the depths of an iconic character, Maul once again proves that through kinetic, vibrant, and engaging animation the Star Wars saga can continue in masterful spades.
Starring: Sam Witwer, Gideon Adlon, Wagner Moura, Richard Ayoade

