‘The Summer I Turned Pretty’ Still Reigns Supreme as Amazon Prime’s Most-Watched Show: Here Is the Rest of the Top 10 for This Week
There is a lot to stream right now on Prime Video and this week’s top picks cover romance, action, faith, mystery, and fast cars. You will find returning favorites alongside brand new series, with stories that span beachside summers, covert ops, high school garages, and first century Galilee. Each entry below includes clear plot and cast details so you can jump in fast.
Each section notes the key actors and the creative team behind the show, plus a quick sense of what each story is about so you can decide what to watch next.
10. ‘The Chosen’ (2019– )

‘The Chosen’ is a multi-season historical drama about the life and ministry of Jesus of Nazareth told through the perspectives of people who met him. Jonathan Roumie plays Jesus with Shahar Isaac as Simon Peter, Elizabeth Tabish as Mary Magdalene, Paras Patel as Matthew, and Noah James as Andrew. The series begins with early encounters and callings and moves through familiar Gospel events with attention to daily life in first century Judea and Galilee.
Dallas Jenkins is the creator, principal writer, and director, working with writers Ryan Swanson and Tyler Thompson across the seasons. The production is by 5&2 Studios and features music by Dan Haseltine and Matthew S. Nelson. The series has expanded its distribution over time while maintaining its focus on character-driven storytelling drawn from biblical accounts.
9. ‘Motorheads’ (2025– )

‘Motorheads’ is a coming-of-age drama created by John A. Norris that follows siblings Zac and Caitlyn Torres after they move to Ironwood, Pennsylvania, a town obsessed with street racing. Michael Cimino plays Zac and Melissa Collazo plays Caitlyn, with Ryan Phillippe as their uncle Logan Maddox, a former racer who runs an auto shop. Uriah Shelton, Nathalie Kelley, and Nicolas Cantu round out the main cast. The story explores friendships, rivalries, and the rebuilding of cars that become symbols of identity and escape.
The show is produced by Amazon MGM Studios with executive producers that include John A. Norris, Neil Burger, and Jason Seagraves. Episodes feature direction by filmmakers such as Neil Burger, and the series mixes high school drama with racing set pieces while highlighting the culture of garages and back-road tracks.
8. ‘We Were Liars’ (2025)

Developed by Julie Plec and Carina Adly MacKenzie from E. Lockhart’s bestseller, ‘We Were Liars’ centers on Cadence Sinclair Eastman and her privileged family during summers on a private island when a traumatic event fractures memory and loyalty. Emily Alyn Lind stars as Cadence with Caitlin FitzGerald, Mamie Gummer, Candice King, Rahul Kohli, Shubham Maheshwari, Esther McGregor, Joseph Zada, and David Morse among the ensemble. The plot reveals the Sinclair family’s secrets through Cadence’s attempts to recover the truth.
Julie Plec and Carina Adly MacKenzie serve as showrunners, with Nzingha Stewart directing the first episode. The series is produced by Universal Television and Amazon MGM Studios. Composer Michael Suby scores the season, and the adaptation keeps the book’s twist-driven structure while expanding characters and timelines for television.
7. ‘Upload’ (2020–2025)

‘Upload’ comes from creator Greg Daniels and takes place in a near future where people choose a digital afterlife when they die. Robbie Amell plays Nathan Brown, whose consciousness is uploaded to a luxury virtual resort, and Andy Allo plays Nora Antony, the customer service rep who guides him while navigating her own life in the real world. Allegra Edwards plays Ingrid Kannerman, Zainab Johnson plays Aleesha, and Kevin Bigley plays Luke. The plot blends mystery with romance and satire as Nathan uncovers the truth behind his death and the business behind the tech.
The show is produced by Deedle Dee Productions, 3 Arts Entertainment, and Amazon Studios. Over its run, directors such as Jeffrey Blitz and Daina Reid helm episodes, with Daniels leading the writing staff. The final season concludes the arc of Nathan and Nora while returning to the corporate intrigue and world-building that defined earlier seasons.
6. ‘The Terminal List’ (2022– )

Based on Jack Carr’s novel, ‘The Terminal List’ stars Chris Pratt as Navy SEAL James Reece, who investigates the ambush of his platoon and a conspiracy that endangers his family. Constance Wu plays investigative journalist Katie Buranek, Taylor Kitsch plays former SEAL and CIA operative Ben Edwards, Riley Keough plays Lauren Reece, and Jeanne Tripplehorn appears as Lorraine Hartley. The season tracks Reece across multiple countries as he follows a trail of evidence and seeks accountability.
The series is created by David DiGilio with Antoine Fuqua among the executive producers and director of the opening episode. The production is by Amazon MGM Studios with a writers room led by DiGilio. Cinematography and stunt work emphasize grounded action, and the franchise now includes ‘The Terminal List: Dark Wolf’ as a companion prequel.
5. ‘Ballard’ (2025– )

‘Ballard’ is a police procedural set in Los Angeles that follows LAPD Detective Renée Ballard, played by Maggie Q, as she takes charge of a new Cold Case Unit within Robbery Homicide Division. The unit tackles long-dormant homicides with limited resources and a volunteer crew. The main cast includes Courtney Taylor as Samira Parker, Michael Mosley as Ted Rawls, Rebecca Field as Colleen Hatteras, Victoria Moroles as Martina Castro, Amy Hill as Tutu, and John Carroll Lynch as Thomas Laffont. The series connects to the Bosch universe and features appearances by characters such as Harry Bosch.
The show is developed by Michael Alaimo and Kendall Sherwood from Michael Connelly’s Renée Ballard novels, with Connelly as executive producer. Production companies include Hieronymus Pictures and Fabel Entertainment for Amazon MGM Studios, and the season features directors like Jet Wilkinson and Sarah Boyd. The premise blends stand-alone cold cases with an overarching corruption storyline inside the department.
4. ‘Countdown’ (2025– )

Created and written by Derek Haas, ‘Countdown’ stars Jensen Ackles as LAPD detective Mark Meachum who is pulled into a covert multi-agency task force after a shocking public killing. The team includes Jessica Camacho as DEA agent Amber Oliveras, Violett Beane as FBI agent Evan Shepherd, Elliot Knight as Keyonte Bell, Uli Latukefu as Luke Finau, and Eric Dane as task force lead Nathan Blythe. The plot follows high-risk investigations where each case unfolds under intense time pressure.
The series is produced by Amazon MGM Studios with Derek Haas as showrunner. Directors across the season include Jonathan Brown, Avi Youabian, Lisa Robinson, and others. The writing staff centers on Haas, and episodes build a larger conspiracy around domestic and international threats that intersect with Los Angeles.
3. ‘Butterfly’ (2025– )

‘Butterfly’ is a spy thriller led by Daniel Dae Kim as David Jung, a former U.S. intelligence operative living in South Korea whose past catches up with him. Reina Hardesty plays Rebecca Jung, David’s estranged daughter who now works as an assassin, and Piper Perabo appears as Juno Lund, the head of a shadowy organization called Caddis. The story tracks father and daughter across Seoul and beyond as they fight to survive the very network David once helped build.
The show is created by Ken Woodruff and Steph Cha and is based on the Boom Studios graphic novel created by Arash Amel and written by Marguerite Bennett. Woodruff serves as showrunner. Directors on the season include Kitao Sakurai, Jinmin Kim, and Jann Turner, and production is a collaboration between 3AD and Amazon MGM Studios with filming in South Korea and the United States.
2. ‘The Terminal List: Dark Wolf’ (2025– )

This prequel expands the world of ‘The Terminal List’ and focuses on Ben Edwards before the events of the original series. Taylor Kitsch returns as Ben, charting his path from Navy SEAL to CIA special operations and the moral tradeoffs that come with covert work. Chris Pratt appears as James Reece, and the cast features Tom Hopper, Luke Hemsworth, Robert Wisdom, Jared Shaw, and Rona-Lee Shimon. The plot follows missions that pull Ben deeper into black ops as loyalties are tested.
The series is developed by David DiGilio and author Jack Carr, with executive producers that include Taylor Kitsch and Chris Pratt. It is produced by Amazon MGM Studios and continues the franchise’s emphasis on military authenticity through veteran consultants and tactical-focused filmmaking.
1. ‘The Summer I Turned Pretty’ (2022–2025)

The series is created by Jenny Han and adapts her YA novel trilogy about Isabel “Belly” Conklin and the Fisher brothers at Cousins Beach. Lola Tung plays Belly, with Christopher Briney as Conrad Fisher and Gavin Casalegno as Jeremiah Fisher. Supporting roles include Sean Kaufman as Steven Conklin, Jackie Chung as Laurel Park, and Rachel Blanchard as Susannah Fisher. The show follows the love triangle at the center of Belly’s coming of age, along with family grief, friendship, and the rituals of summers spent at the same beach house.
Production is by Amazon MGM Studios with Jenny Han leading the writers room across seasons. Directors vary by episode, and the ensemble expands across the run with additions like Kyra Sedgwick and Elsie Fisher. The show’s final season continues Belly’s story with new locations and characters while staying rooted in the relationships introduced in season one.
Share your own top pick from this list in the comments and tell us what you are watching next.


