Updated 4.25
The Ringer'sWeeklyTop 10

There’s a lot of TV out there. The Ringer wants to help: Every week, we’ll tell you the best and most urgent shows to stream so you can stay on top of the ever-expanding heap of Peak TV.

The Last of Us
Andor
The Rehearsal
The Studio
The Righteous Gemstones
Hacks
Your Friends & Neighbors
You
Black Mirror
The Pitt

Admittedly, many prior video game adaptations that weren’t as well tailored to TV to begin with have fallen prey to such self-sabotage. But the latest and greatest attempt to successfully translate a game to another on-screen medium sidestepped every potential pitfall, just like Joel and Ellie silently sneaking around one of the game’s (and show’s) fungal monstrosities. The critical—and soon, almost certainly, popular—acclaim generated by HBO’s The Last of Us should establish beyond any doubt that a live-action adaptation of a video game can be an award winner and a huge hit, announcing to an industry that’s already all-in on video game intellectual property that the so-called curse of video game movies and shows has been lifted. —Ben Lindbergh

Stream now on Max

When Andor begins, about five years before the events of Rogue One and Episode IV, the Empire has consolidated its control of the galaxy. It’s not just a dark time for the Rebellion; it’s a time so dark that there’s barely a Rebellion at all. Cassian has been fighting, running, and suffering from the tumult of a war-torn galaxy his whole life. He has little to lose—and, crucially, Disney has little to lose by letting him behave in questionable ways, because we already know from Rogue One what kind of man he is, and how and when he dies. Andor’s days on screen are numbered, as are (by choice) Tony Gilroy’s as a Star Wars auteur, so the Mouse might as well make the most of them and take what for Disney qualifies as a creative risk. —Ben Lindbergh


The first three episodes of Season 2 of Andor premiere on April 22.

Stream now on Disney+

The Rehearsal, a six-episode series, is the second product of an overall deal between Nathan Fielder and HBO, but the first in which Fielder appears in front of the camera. (Fielder is an executive producer on How to With John Wilson, the quirky, digressive docuseries that gives a softer edge to gonzo gimmickry.) The show is, in essence, a supersized version of Nathan for You’s “Finding Frances” dry run. In an effort to reduce the uncertainty of everyday life, Fielder has volunteers “rehearse” fraught interactions, from confessing a secret to confronting a sibling. Inevitably, Fielder finds himself drawn into the experiment as more than a neutral observer. Season 1 found him tackling (a bit too personally) the subject of parenthood and child rearing; Season 2 has him delving into a potentially even more urgent topic: air traffic accidents. We're sure things won't go off the rails. —Alison Herman


Season 2 of The Rehearsal premieres on April 20.

Stream now on Max

Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg have been working in Hollywood for a long time now. They have seen some shit. They have watched as the industry has changed and evolved; they were in the middle of the chaos during the Sony hack by North Korea; they tried to make a Green Hornet movie work. Now they’ve taken all of that experience and bottled it up into an inside-baseball Apple TV+ series. The Studio follows Matt Remick (Rogen), an awkward but well-meaning, film-loving exec who lands the top spot at a legacy movie studio—and quickly learns how at odds making art and keeping a job really are. In the hands of Rogen and Goldberg, the show is both melancholy about a lost golden age and deeply, optimistically devoted to keeping the cameras rolling; it features an incredible rolling list of famous people playing themselves, like a prestige-style Entourage; and wearing its influences (The Player, Birdman) on its sleeve, it is an ambitiously shot TV show. This is catnip for Film Twitter, but even if you don’t know that Catherine O’Hara is playing a charged-up version of Amy Pascal, The Studio will be hard to turn off. —Andrew Gruttadaro

Stream now on Apple TV+

The Righteous Gemstones is a comedy that used the premise of an over-the-top family of televangelists as an entry point and then spent its first season delving into family drama that’d make any prestige series blush—debauchery, blackmail, endless in-fighting. With a cast that includes Walton Goggins, Adam Devine, and a scene-stealing Edi Patterson in addition to John Goodman and Danny McBride, Season 1 painted a picture of a family so busy lining their own pockets that they lost their way. Now, Season 2 plans to go even deeper, exploring Eli Gemstone’s past and how it led him to becoming a megachurch mogul. —Alan Siegel

Stream now on Max

There have been many, many shows about stand-up comics: stand-ups navigating single parenthood; stand-ups going through a divorce; stand-ups sharing petty gripes with their friends; stand-ups exploring gender norms in the late 1950s. What there hasn’t been is a show about a Mrs. Maisel–type comic in the jaded twilight of her career, not its scrappy beginning. Enter Hacks, the story of two difficult, defensive women who form an unlikely bond across the generational divide. Aging comic Deborah Vance (Jean Smart) has built a luxurious, if stagnant, life around a casino residency in Las Vegas. When the owner threatens to cut some of her dates, Deborah’s manager has the bright idea to kill two birds with one stone: Why not set her up with his other client Ava (Hannah Einbinder), an up-and-coming writer who’s now down-and-unhireable after a poorly worded tweet? It’s a match made in hell. Ava is a self-pitying narcissist who thinks her cancellation might be punishment for getting fingered at her uncle’s wake; Deborah is a hard-nosed veteran who doesn’t take kindly to professional advice from a millennial. —Alison Herman

Stream now on Max

What would you do if you were a wealthy hedge fund manager with a beautiful wife, a giant house, a country club membership—the works—until you suddenly lost it all? If your answer is “I’d start robbing all of my rich friends,” then congratulations: You are Andrew Cooper, Jon Hamm’s character in Your Friends & Neighbors. We’ve seen plenty of “eat the rich” television shows, but there aren’t too many where the rich devour one another, and therein lies the fun of Apple TV+’s latest class satire, bolstered by Hamm’s welcome return to a small-screen protagonist role and riotous performances from Amanda Peet and Olivia Munn. —Andrew Gruttadaro

Stream now on Apple TV+

In its first two seasons, You made its bones with a delightfully pulpy story about a serial stalker whose charming facade disguised literally murderous behavior. But the exploits of Penn Badgley’s Joe Goldberg and the lengths he had to go to hide them couldn’t last forever, and in Season 3, the show transformed from being about a man stalking prey to being about a man who found himself trapped in a committed relationship with a woman who could scheme just as well as he did. That ability to pivot in the name of sustainability was promising to see. Season 4 proved much of the same, and Season 5—the show's last—will look to end on a high note. —Andrew Gruttadaro

Stream now on Netflix

Interestingly, while creator Charlie Brooker has admitted to tinkering with ChatGPT in his free time—he asked the AI program to write an episode of Black Mirror, which turned out to be “shit”—the majority of recent Black Mirror is set in the past. It’s the kind of through line that would seem antithetical to the very nature of Black Mirror, but Brooker largely succeeds in subverting audience expectations without betraying the show’s core principles. All told, Black Mirror has gotten the software update it sorely needed —even as it spends most of its time in the analog era. —Miles Surrey

Stream now on Netflix

After multiple decades of exploration into the uncharted territories of television, we’re starting to return home and realize that some of the classics were classics for a reason. Case in point: The Pitt, a new medical procedural from ER alums John Wells, R. Scott Gemmill, and Joe Sachs, which also stars former ER cast member Noah Wyle. The Pitt isn’t an ER spinoff, to be clear, but the DNA is meant to be obvious, even with its new setting (Pittsburgh) and format (each of the miniseries’ 15 episodes covers one hour of a shift in a hospital’s trauma center). Expect to stay on the edge of your seat with this ER-by-way-of-24 drama—and to think to yourself, “Damn, maybe they knew what they were doing in the ’90s.” —Andrew Gruttadaro

Stream now on Max

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Wars
Updated 8/22
Streaming
Wars
Updated 8/22

Who's winning the Streaming Wars?

It’s been about a year and a half since The Ringer launched this Streaming Guide, and already so much has changed. In August of 2022, Netflix was losing ground to its competitors: HBO Max had proved to be a robust home for prestige television; Disney+ had come out of the gates with a bang off the strength of its Marvel and Star Wars properties; Prime Video was on the verge of unveiling a billion-dollar answer to Game of Thrones; Apple TV+ was making surprising inroads despite its relatively humble library. But if that time in the Streaming Wars was defined by rampant expansion, we have now entered a period of consolidation and purse-string tightening. With investors now prioritizing profitability over growth, and following a tumultuous 2023 in which there were multiple monthslong Hollywood work stoppages, the streaming industry has become much more treacherous for corporations to navigate. There are only a couple of haves and plenty of have-nots. 

HBO Max doesn’t even exist anymore—its parent company, Warner Bros. Discovery, merged its subsidiaries to create Max, a service that showcases The Sopranos alongside Dr. Pimple Popper (and often jettisons popular series at a moment’s notice for tax write-off reasons, but that’s a whole other story). Amazon’s bet on The Rings of Power (and other expensive gambits like Citadel) flopped given its cost. Disney+ is in a free fall as general interest in superhero IP wanes, and a permanent merging with its sister service, Hulu, seems all but inevitable. Paramount+ (With Showtime) has failed to make a true dent in the market, but guess what! Apparently, there may soon come a time when Warner Bros. Discovery and Paramount are one and the same. Meanwhile, amid all of this backtracking and hurried corporate maneuvering, there’s Netflix. If the past 18 months have proved anything, it’s that the cracks Netflix was starting to show were temporary, and that it’s the only company built to survive the Streaming Wars. Netflix has such an outsized advantage in subscriber numbers, and in the learned behavior of those subscribers, that it can turn Suits—a show that went off the air in 2019, and that was already streaming on Peacock!—into the show of the summer. It matters less what is on Netflix than that it’s on Netflix, a truth that even Netflix’s competitors have begun to accept: After years of studios snatching back IP for their own services, those same studios are now licensing to Netflix again, since it’s more or less the only platform where a show can find a considerable audience. If there were a white flag in the Streaming Wars, everyone would be waving it right now. And after years of disruption and chaos, we seem primed to return to some form of the cable model that was disrupted in the first place. The future is Netflix—and a whole bunch of bundles. 

But until that brave new world materializes, there will still be fluctuations between these competing streaming services. There will still be the all-important question of which services are worth paying for, especially as each one institutes ad tiers and steep price hikes so you can avoid watching commercials. (I told you cable TV was coming back!) And so we at The Ringer will continue to explain what the Streaming Wars mean for you, the viewer. As we’ve done since August 2022, every week, we’ll use a proprietary formula to determine how the biggest players in the Streaming Wars stack up against one another—and more importantly, which ones are worth your hard-earned cash. The Ringer’s Streaming Wars formula takes five different factors into account:

  • A streaming service’s quality of TV content (and not just original content)
  • A service’s buzz or hype (Did it have a good week?)
  • A service’s level of prestige (Does it win awards?)
  • A service’s utility as an app (Does it make TV watching better?)
  • The average cost of a service

Plugging these metrics into our formula—while giving particular weight to quality of content and buzz—produces a Streaming Wars score. The services with higher Streaming Wars scores are not only prevailing at the moment, but also the ones most worth paying for. Knowing which streaming services are on top can feel downright impossible. And things are only getting messier. Hopefully this guide can make it a little easier and bring you back to the days when watching TV was so much simpler.

#1 Netflix102.60

It's Netflix's world. We're all just living in it.

Remember a few years ago when everyone started writing those “We MUST Appreciate LeBron James While We Still Can” articles because LeBron’s dominance had been so consistent that it had begun to seem casual? Well, you could say that Netflix is now in the LeBron zone. This year has done nothing to dissuade the notion that Netflix is winning the Streaming Wars. The company added 9.33 million subscribers in Q1, a number well above expectations, and also saw a 15 percent jump in revenue year over year—but at the same time, its supremacy is so well-cemented that this all feels like business as usual. Meanwhile, other streamers have made leaps that feel more notable relative to their more paltry market shares. We all know that Netflix is dominating, but it is dominance by inertia more than anything. The streamer can turn a series into a sensation unlike any other, and it’s continued to do so in 2024 with everything from Griselda to Baby Reindeer to The Gentlemen to Season 6 of Love Is Blind—yet on the other hand, the one Netflix series that felt primed to become a sensation in 2024, 3 Body Problem, mostly came and went. Is that strange? Yes. Does it matter? Not really! Netflix can rest easy knowing that it has the command of the most eyeballs—and it clearly couldn’t care less about which shows those eyeballs turn toward. —Andrew Gruttadaro

#2 Hulu100.08

Regardless of where you watch it, Hulu has the hits.

Hulu may now be fully under the umbrella of Disney, but it very much retains a reputation of its own thanks to yet another subsidiary: FX. The network’s premiere of Shogun received more than 9 million views across Hulu, Disney+, and Star+ in its first six days, making it Disney’s best worldwide debut for a non-Marvel or non–Star Wars show. Whether the majority of those viewers came from Hulu’s native app or the new Disney+ combo hub is mostly irrelevant—Shogun is branded as an “FX on Hulu” production, a feather in the streamer’s cap given the show’s universal acclaim. 

In the wake of Shogun’s run, Hulu is holding itself over with well-received series like Under the Bridge, and it has plenty of goodwill left over from recently concluded shows such as Fargo and Ryan Murphy’s Feud: Capote Vs. the Swans. But the next big moment for the streamer will undoubtedly come in June, when Season 3 of The Bear premieres. Hulu will hope its consistently robust catalog—along with a recently rolled out password-sharing crackdown—will be a boon to its subscriber count. —Aric Jenkins

#3 Max98.41

Reinforcements are coming for Max.

When we last checked in on Max, the discussion was rooted more in the news surrounding the mega sports streaming app from Warner Bros. Discovery, ESPN, and Fox, which is said to be debuting this fall. As we head into the summer of 2024, the conversation is more about the hits that rise above the content clutter. Say what you will about how it ended, but there were at least five weeks in which the timeline tuned in to True Detective: Night Country. Meanwhile, Curb Your Enthusiasm came to a close in April, leaving HBO without another guaranteed eyeball grabber. But reinforcements for the loss of Larry David are on the way: Hacks returns for its third season soon, bringing some critically acclaimed comedy back to the regular rotation, and the summer will see the returns of House of the Dragon and another critical darling, Industry. A dynamic second season from those dragons could put Max in a stellar position for now, but WBD will need more series—such as ID’s Quiet on Set or Max originals such as Tokyo Vice and Conan O’Brien Must Go—to take off so the app doesn’t feel like it’s being held up by whatever HBO banger is currently on, or whatever NBA highlights we missed from the night before. —khal

#4 Apple TV+92.03

Science fiction? Historical drama? Apple TV+ is a master of genre.

It’s been well-established that Apple is a reliable hub for science fiction, what with hits such as Silo, Foundation, For All Mankind, and, of course, Severance (finally returning later this year). Now, the service has captivated history buffs with series like Masters of the Air, Manhunt, and Franklin—not to mention original films such as Napoleon and Killers of the Flower Moon. Apple doesn’t produce a ton of original content, but when it does, it knows how to find an audience. Subscribers can find samplings of other genres in between—neo-noirs (Sugar), 30-minute comedies (Loot), and prestige period series (Palm Royale). Up next, in June: a legal thriller, Presumed Innocent, starring Jake Gyllenhaal in his first major television role. —Aric Jenkins

#5 Prime88.33

Prime Video can’t miss (right now).

Prime Video has had a knockout year thus far. The streamer kicked off 2024 with a pretty drastic addition to its content strategy: commercials. In order to escape the barrage of advertisements, subscribers must now opt into Prime’s “new” ad-free plan, which rolled out in late January and costs an additional $3 per month. The benefits are already showing: Amazon has earned $11.8 billion in ad revenue during Q1—a 24 percent bump from the same time last year—in part because of the implementation of streaming TV advertising. Morgan Stanley forecasts the move will net Amazon more than $3 billion in revenue this year alone, with the potential to reach upwards of $7 billion come 2026. Despite the price hike, Prime’s audience stuck around and showed up in a big way for its TV slate. Donald Glover’s Mr. & Mrs. Smith set the tone in February when it dropped all eight episodes at once and clocked more than 964 million minutes watched in its first three days. Video game adaptation Fallout followed suit and attracted more than 65 million viewers in a little bit more than two weeks on the service, making it the second-most-watched Prime title ever, behind only The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power. And that’s not all! Road House, the Jake Gyllenhaal–led remake of the 1989 classic, became Prime’s most successful streaming film debut ever upon its release.

Prime is winning in the arena of live sports as well. This year, Amazon has deepened its ties with the NFL even more by acquiring exclusive rights to stream a playoff game next season, aping a move that worked wonders for Peacock. For those keeping count, Amazon now has the rights to Thursday Night Football and a postseason game, with a high possibility that the NFL also runs back another branded Black Friday game. There are also reports that Amazon reached an early agreement with the NBA to stream basketball games in the near future. Not too shabby, Bezos. —Kai Grady 

#6 Disney+83.05

Disney+ needs help. Backup is on its way.

The years of leaning on IP are over. Now it’s time to consolidate power. The streamer built by superheroes and Star Wars saw its status diminish throughout 2023, as Marvel’s stranglehold on pop culture dissipated to reveal that Disney+ didn’t have much else to offer. But Disney and its CEO, Bob Iger—fresh off of winning a proxy battle—are too big to not have a backup plan, and the early months of the Mouse’s year were defined by major moves. The highlights are aplenty: plans to create a “games and entertainment universe” with partner and Fortnite developer Epic Games; the acquisition of Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour concert film; a sports-focused streaming bundle featuring offerings from Disney, Warner Bros., and Fox; the launch of a different sports streaming app focused on ESPN; and a plan set for June 2024 to crack down on password sharing. Disney+ has also found its way to some non-Marvel hits this year, from the aforementioned Taylor Swift doc to Percy Jackson and the Olympians to the acclaimed  X-Men ’97. But the larger point is that its parent company is beginning to throw its weight around, turning the Streaming Wars into a battle that goes down not on television screens, but in the boardroom. —Andrew Gruttadaro

#7 Peacock70.23

Peacock has a consistency problem.

It’s been an unusual four months for Peacock this year, full of record-breaking highs and extended slumps. The NBCUniversal-owned service kicked off 2024 on an uncharacteristic heater, led by its exclusive “broadcast” of the Dolphins-Chiefs playoff game in mid-January. That game, which averaged 23 million viewers on Peacock, became the most-streamed event in U.S. history, so it’s no surprise that Peacock already decided to go back to the football well and renew its partnership with the NFL for next year. Also in January, the much-maligned streaming service broke through on the television front with the premiere of a (quasi-)original series, Ted. No question benefiting from the massive NFL audience, the Seth MacFarlane–led prequel became Peacock’s most-watched original title ever through its first three days available. In a similar vein, The Traitors (U.S.) returned for its second season, and its premiere quickly became the most-watched reality series season debut in the history of the streamer, rounding out maybe its most competitive stretch in the Streaming Wars since it launched four years ago.

Fast-forward to today, and Peacock is in the midst of yet another lull. However, there is a significant lifeline on the horizon that might save the streamer from itself: the Paris Olympics. And NBC knows this: The media conglomerate recently announced a $2 price hike across all subscription tiers, which will go into effect for new users just in time for the Summer Games. We’ll see if being the streaming home for one of the largest international events in live sports helps springboard the rest of its offerings. —Kai Grady

#8 Paramount+68.18

Paramount+ may be an impossible mission.

During its nine-minute Q1 earnings call at the end of April 2024, Paramount announced that it halved its streaming loss from Q1 of 2023, which brings the amount lost to $286 million. The call, which also announced a shift in Paramount’s CEO, highlighted the success of adding Showtime to the app and the benefits of being the one that was streaming the Super Bowl. But that call also ended with the playing of the theme song to Mission: Impossible, which is quite fitting because, uh, now what? The theory that the CBS Sports division could be the key to keeping Paramount+ afloat sounds promising, but it isn’t in line with how the world is operating (especially considering some of Paramount’s competitors are working on a sports streaming app that could become a serious threat). Being the place where you can view Bob Marley: One Love or A Quiet Place: Day One helps, but once those two hours are over and there’s no game on, will everyone be tapping into Knuckles? What if Twisted Metal, Star Trek, and the bevy of Taylor Sheridan projects aren’t enough either? Paramount+ may be destined to occupy last place until the new CEO (or the next one, or the next one) figures out how to build the app up. —khal

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MOVIES

Rewatchables

Wayne's World

The '90s comedy classic is streaming now on Paramount+.

Listen to Bill Simmons and Kyle Brandt break it down on
Art Imitates Life
Conclave
New to Streaming
Heat
Best Picture
Anora
New to Streaming
Wicked
Rewatchables
Wayne's World
Art Imitates Life
Conclave
New to Streaming
Heat
Best Picture
Anora
New to Streaming
Wicked

In hindsight, Wayne’s World doesn’t feel innovative. Based on a Saturday Night Live sketch of the same name, the film tells the story of Wayne Campbell (Mike Myers) and Garth Algar (Dana Carvey), two underemployed 20-something friends who host a public-access television show from Wayne’s parents’ basement. But through the unique language of the script (to repeat: “Schwing!”), meta-jokes (“Contract or no, I will not bow to any sponsor,” Wayne says while holding a slice of Pizza Hut pizza and smizing at the camera), dozens of pop culture references (everything from Scanners to Laverne & Shirley), an iconic soundtrack (Queen, Jimi Hendrix), a punk rock director in Penelope Spheeris, and most of all, the performances of Myers and Carvey, the movie was groundbreaking. Wayne’s World proclaimed that “everything in culture was worthy of satire and parody,” says Kurt Fuller, who plays the TV director Russell in the movie. —Alan Siegel

Stream now on Paramount+

After a pope dies, more than 100 of the Catholic Church’s most prominent cardinals convene to deliberate over and elect a new one. They call it a conclave. The movie of the same name turns this act of succession into a political thriller full of intrigue, twists, underhanded dealings, and backstabbing as these holy men from around the world attempt to whip the papacy in the direction of their own philosophical leanings. You never really think of church as a place of breathtaking drama, but that’s the joy of Conclave, and why it’s become such an internet mainstay since premiering in the fall of 2024. Though the sight of Ralph Fiennes, Stanley Tucci, John Lithgow, and Isabella Rossellini in non-secular garb is responsible for that as well. —Andrew Gruttadaro

Stream now on Prime

Like no other Hollywood filmmaker of his vintage, Michael Mann is entrenched as an existentialist. The life-and-death stakes in his films are partially a by-product of the crime movie genre, with its lethal rituals of violence and reprisal. But in lieu of weightless escapism, the Chicago-born director pursues a sense of gravitas that bypasses melodrama for something more ephemeral. At his best—and a case can be made that Heat is Mann at his best—Mann’s movies feel cosmic. If Mann’s great theme is compulsion to live dangerously, he’s hardly shy about contemplating the consequences. —Adam Nayman

Stream now on Netflix

Ani (Mikey Madison) is a young Uzbek American stripper whose enthusiasm for her daily bump-and-grind is waning; one night at the club, she’s called in to translate for a deep-pocketed, Russian-speaking male client, Ivan (a.k.a. Vanya; played by Mark Eydelshteyn), who likes to make it rain wherever he goes and acts as if Spring Breakers were an educational documentary. 

As it turns out, Vanya isn’t just a callow rich kid maxing out platinum credit cards: He’s the only son of easily googled ex-Soviet oligarchs whose willingness to let their progeny run wild in America has its limits. When Vanya first suggests that Ani go from being his private dancer to his wife, she goes from skeptical to susceptible in a hurry. The happily ever after is short-lived, however: No sooner have they started playing house in Vanya’s palatial NYC love nest than reality comes (literally) crashing through the door. —Adam Nayman

Stream now on Hulu

Why wouldn’t we adapt the Wicked musical into a feature film, which is itself an adaptation of the 1995 novel Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West, which is a prequel to the 1939 Wizard of Oz movie, which is, of course, an adaptation of the 1900 children’s fantasy novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. … That is just the right amount of time between original IP and a musical film spinoff: 124 years. But given its popularity among anyone who’s ever sported a character shoe in a high school production of Arsenic and Old Lace, I’m shocked it’s taken this long for Wicked to finally make it to the silver screen. The sounds of “Defying Gravity” and “Popular” have become ubiquitous earworms, even beyond theater nerds. —Jodi Walker

Stream now on Peacock