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16 New Shows to Watch This Weekend on Netflix, Max, Hulu, Prime Video, More

May 10, 2025 - Music

The steady stream of new shows continues in May with new series and returning favorites on Netflix, Peacock, Max and more. As always, there’s a lot to choose from, so which ones are worth your time and attention?

That’s a question and responsibility Watch With Us takes seriously. We’re here to recommend shows that will either enrich your life or leave a smile on your face. (And if you’re lucky, they’ll do both.)

Among the best shows to watch this weekend are a detective procedural with Natasha Lyonne, a travel docuseries featuring one of the best comedians living and a reality competition series that is guaranteed to leave you gagging in a good way.

Need more recommendations? Then check out Great Movies on Amazon Prime Video Right Now, Best Shows on Netflix Right Now, Best Shows on HBO and Max Right Now and Best Shows on Peacock Right Now.

Everyone’s favorite casino-worker-turned-amateur-sleuth is back on the case in Poker Face season 2. Actually, make that several cases as Charlie Cale (Natasha Lyonne) has to solve mysteries involving murderous quintuplets (all played by Wicked actress Cynthia Erivo), a missing funeral owner’s wife and a female mob boss who needs help finding a mole within her gang.

Much of what made season 1 so entertaining is present in season 2, including a still-terrific Lyonne as the sarcastic gumshoe, a cavalcade of unusual guest stars (John Mulaney, Haley Joel Osment and Katie Holmes all show up at some point), and a case-of-the-week plot structure that feels both retro and different from other mystery shows. Poker Face season 2 has 10 episodes; the first three are now streaming.

Have you ever felt the desire for Conan O’Brien to go away? Well, the famous comedian has, too, and he’s made a successful travel show out of fleeing America to visit other countries. While season 1 saw the late-night host venture to Norway, Thailand, Argentina and Ireland, season 2 begins with Conan herding sheep in New Zealand with Thor: Love and Thunder director Taika Waititi

Conan then joins Oscar-winning Javier Bardem in Spain, where the two visit a museum and paddle in a river before the 2025 Oscars host hits the ski slopes in Austria. No matter where he is, though, O’Brien retains the same zany humor and adventurous spirit that made him so famous in the first place.

Are you ready to go back to the Werk Room? It’s only been a couple of weeks since RuPaul’s Drag Race crowned its latest queen, but that won’t stop RuPaul and her Pit Stop crew from returning to TV with yet another edition of All Stars

This time around, the drag competition show adopts a tournament structure with 18 returning queens placed into three brackets, where they will compete before advancing to the semi-finals and then a final with the last three remaining competitors. Some notable contestants include Jorgeous, Ginger Minj, Aja, Bosco, Daya Betty, Olivia Lux and more. Expect gag-worthy runways, wig reveals and lip-syncs that will bring the house down.

What happens when the whole world changes overnight and you don’t know how it happened or why? That’s the central premise of The Eternaut, an outstanding new sci-fi series from Argentina that’s already one of Netflix’s most popular shows. Based on a popular 1950s graphic novel, the six-episode series begins with a beautiful but deadly snowfall that wipes out most of humanity.

The survivors are left to pick up the pieces, and that includes Juan Salvo (Ricardo Darín), who wants to find his missing daughter and ex-wife. But first, he’ll have to figure out a way to venture outside without touching the lethal snow. Will Juan find his family? And more importantly, will humanity’s survivors find answers to why this apocalyptic event happened in the first place?

The Eternaut is a riveting sci-fi show that finds new ways to explore its end-of-the-world scenario. At only six episodes, it doesn’t overstay its welcome, and provides just enough closure to end on a satisfying, if somewhat ambiguous, note.

In numerous movies and TV shows, the French are portrayed as excelling at three things: making food, having sex and fighting wars. In Carême, the lead character, Antoine Carême (Benjamin Voisin), engages in all three as one of the first celebrity chefs ever. (Gordon Ramsay has nothing on this guy.) Antoine’s skills in the kitchen are matched by his prowess in the bedrooms of the elite, which makes him the perfect spy for those with revolution in mind.

The eight-episode series plays fast and loose with history, but when a show is this sexy and fun, you don’t mind the slight exaggerations of fact. Voisin portrays Carême as a sort of punk rock chef, a Sid Vicious with a butter knife and an endless appetite for whatever pleases him. The show is somewhat similar to Sofia Coppola’s Marie Antoinette in that it emphasizes mood and style over substance, and it works incredibly well here. 

You’d think this miniseries is about the life of famous novelist Jane Austen, but it’s actually about her sister, Cassandra. She’s noteworthy primarily due to her burning most of her sister’s letters after her death. Why did she do it? And what could possibly be in those letters that led Cassandra to commit such an uncharacteristically extreme act?

Those are the central questions that Miss Austen, the new four-part miniseries that debuts on PBS on May 4, seeks to answer. As Cassandra, Bodyguard actress Keeley Hawes portrays a woman determined to protect her sister’s legacy, even if it means destroying evidence of her sibling’s genius. The series flashes back to the sisters’ early childhood and traces the evolution of their relationship through young adulthood. Miss Austen is part costume drama, part mystery, but it’s always entertaining, and Hawkes is terrific as the fiercely protective Cassandra. 

The world of competitive ballet has been the inspiration for lots of great movies like 1977’s The Turning Point, 2000’s Center Stage and 2010’s Black Swan. It’s now the subject of the new eight-episode Amazon Prime Video series Étoile, which stars Charlotte Gainsbourg and Luke Kirby as the heads of competing French and American ballet companies who agree to swap their top dancers to save their jobs.

Things don’t go according to plan as clashing egos, secret backstage romances and inter-office politics threaten to end the ambitious experiment before it ever really begins. Gilmore Girls and Marvelous Mrs. Maisel masterminds Amy Sherman-Palladino and Daniel Palladino created Étoile, so expect a lot of witty banter and random pop culture references between the pirouettes and heartbreaks. The show is breezy and fun, and gives the talented French actress Gainsbourg a rare lead role in an American TV series. 

All good things must come to an end, even shows about charming serial killers who seem to get away with everything. For You’s Joe Goldberg (Penn Badgley), it looks like he won’t live to slay another day as the popular Netflix series is ending after its current season.

Season 5 is set three years after the last season and sees Joe return to his old stomping grounds in New York City. He’s still with Kate (Charlotte Lockwood), and he’s regained custody of his son Henry (Frankie DeMaio). But Kate’s extended family doesn’t care much for Joe or his desire for their money, which reawakens his killer instincts. 

Who will stop Joe’s latest murder spree? And who is the mysterious Bronte (Madeline Brewer), who seems to have a connection to Joe’s past? You can find out now by streaming all of You season 5’s episodes on Netflix.

It’s been three years since Andor first premiered, but fans can relax now that the second and final season has finally premiered. (The end of Andor will lead directly into the beginning of Rogue One.) This season picks up one year after the events of last season’s jaw-dropping finale, with Maarva’s death (Fiona Shaw) and Cassian’s (Diego Luna) breathless escape into space. Cassian is still fighting Rebel troops while Mon Mothma (Genevieve O’Reilly) engages in covert diplomatic battles in the political realm. Ben Mendelsohn joins the cast this season, reprising his Rogue One role as Orson Krennic, and Adria Arjona returns as Cassian’s partner-in-arms, Bix Caleen.

Season 2 is structured in four three-episode parts released weekly. Episodes 1, 2 and 3 are available to watch now, while episodes 4, 5 and 6 will be out on April 29, episodes 7, 8 and 9 will be released on May 6 and episodes 10, 11 and 12 will stream on May 13. Season 2 promises to be just as good — if not better — than season 1, making Andor one of the best Star Wars stories ever told.

Nathan Fielder is television’s reigning prince of weird. The Canadian comedian got his start writing for Important Things with Demetri Martin before headlining his own successful Comedy Central series, Nathan For You. He received widespread critical acclaim for his HBO show The Rehearsal, a strange docuseries where Fielder, who plays himself, helps strangers rehearse for potentially upsetting situations by building elaborate sets and hiring actors to rehearse them before it actually happens.

It’s been three years since that first season came out, and Fielder — who made another splash opposite Emma Stone in last year’s sublimely bizarre The Curse on Showtime — is back with another round of increasingly awkward staged encounters with strangers who don’t quite know what’s real and what’s fake. Season 2 is six episodes long, and a new episode streams every Sunday until May 25. 

It seems like one female English author is responsible for supporting the British television industry. No, not J.K. Rowling — it’s Agatha Christie. The legendary mystery novelist wrote so many famous books that hardly a year goes by without a new adaptation being available to watch.

The latest is Agatha Christie’s Towards Zero, a three-episode series that adapts the 1944 novel of the same name. Oscar winner Anjelica Huston stars as Lady Tressilian, a rich widow who invites some guests to her seaside property for a house party. When an old family friend is found murdered, suspicion naturally falls on the party’s guests, which include a disgraced tennis star (Oliver Jackson-Cohen) and his new wife (Mimi Keene). Inspector Leach (Matthew Rhys) has his hands full, and he will have to act quickly before the murderer strikes again.

Towards Zero is a faithful adaptation that changes just enough to make the series feel modern without being too stodgy. Huston has fun playing an aristocratic bitch while Rhys is solid as the show’s designated detective. 

Who knew the zombie genre had some life left in it? After years of mediocre Walking Dead sequels, spinoffs and ripoffs, TV audiences fell back in love with the undead, or in this case, “the infected,” in early 2023 with The Last of Us. The first season was a fairly faithful adaptation of the 2013 Naughty Dog game, telling the story of outbreak survivors Joel (Pedro Pascal) and Ellie (Bella Ramsey) as they cross a postapocalyptic United States.

Season 2 appears to be adapting only part of The Last of Us Part II, with Ellie now in her late teens and Joel still as world-weary as ever. Some major new characters this season include Isabela Merced as Ellie’s love interest Dina, Catherine O’Hara as Joel’s therapist and Kaitlyn Dever as the soldier Abby. The latter plays a pretty big role in the game, and it will be interesting to see how the series interprets the divisive character. Season 2 starts streaming on April 13, with weekly episodes every Sunday until May 25.

Andrew “Coop” Cooper (Jon Hamm) has it all: a nice house in the country, a fancy car, two kids in private school and an amicable relationship with his ex-wife, Mel (Amanda Peet). But all that is threatened when he loses his job, and his savings won’t sustain his luxurious lifestyle for more than six months. Jobless and desperate, Coop decides to steal from the rich — his friends and neighbors — to give to himself. How long can Coop keep selling chic Chanel handbags and stolen jewels on the black market before someone finds out?

Your Friends & Neighbors has an intriguing hook, but what makes the show so watchable is what it does with it. The show works best as a social satire of the wealthy class, who are oblivious to one of their own stealing from them. As Coop, Hamm has his best role since Mad Men’s Don Draper. Like Don, Coop is amoral and reckless, even if his intentions are good. Your Friends & Neighbors is nine episodes long and streams a new installment every Friday until May 30. 

One of the best comedies around is Hacks, HBO’s hit series about the combative relationship between a veteran comedian and her Gen Z writer. Deborah Vance (Jean Smart) has been a successful stand-up for decades, but her jokes have become too routine and irrelevant. Enter Ava Daniels (Hannah Einbinder), who has a quick wit and her pulse on the zeitgeist. The two women don’t really like each other, but they need to team up to succeed in a business that’s often cruel and unforgiving.

Season 3 ended on a bit of a cliffhanger with Ava blackmailing Deborah to land the head writer job that her boss had promised her. The fragile friendship the two forged all last season is now destroyed, so what happens when they have to work together to make Deborah’s new late show a hit? Hacks season 4, which begins streaming its 10-episode season on April 10 through May 29, promises new developments in that complicated relationship, plus appearances by Jimmy Kimmel and Carol Burnett as themselves.

Since its debut in 2011, the sci-fi series Black Mirror has captured the imaginations of millions of Netflix subscribers. It’s also haunted them with its bleak and sometimes prophetic look at humanity’s near future. The rise of AI, the increasing dominance of social media in pop culture, the possibility of a digital afterlife — Black Mirror usually did it first or, if not, covered those topics better than any show around.

Season 7 promises more of the same, with two of its seven episodes sequels to earlier stories in its run: “USS Callister: Into Infinity,” which is a follow-up to season 4’s much-acclaimed “USS Callister,” and “Plaything,” which features Will Poulter’s Cameron from the show’s only full-length movie, Bandersnatch. Other episodes feature Paul Giamatti, Issa Rae, Awkwafina, Rashida Jones and Emma Corrin. All episodes are now available to stream.

Molly (Michelle Williams) is stuck in a boring marriage with Steven (Jay Duplass), who won’t have sex with her. When Molly finds out she has terminal breast cancer, she kicks Steven out and moves in with her best friend Nikki (Jenny Slate). She has one simple goal before she dies — to explore her sexuality and sleep with as many people as possible.

This premise sounds absurd, but it’s based on a popular podcast, also called “Dying for Sex,” which documented creator/author Molly Kochan’s sexual journey after her cancer diagnosis. The Hulu adaptation is largely faithful to the podcast’s playful black humor, and Williams showcases an adventurous spirit as the liberated Molly.

Dying for Sex is a dark comedy that’s equal parts bitter and sweet, but it’s often very funny and graphic without being raunchy.


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