All New Streaming Shows and Premieres to Catch This Week, Including ‘Only Murders in the Building’
Craving something new to watch? This week’s slate of streaming premieres is stacked with glossy thrillers, docuseries, reality twists, returning fan favorites, and a splash of animated fantasy. Whether you’re into true-crime deep dives, twisty psychological dramas, or high-stakes shapeshifter sagas, there’s a fresh title landing almost every day to plug straight into your queue.
Below, you’ll find all the notable streaming premieres for the week of Monday, September 8 through Sunday, September 14, including key cast-and-crew context, concise plot details, and exactly where and when each one arrives. Dates and platforms are noted inside each entry so you can jump in right when they drop.
‘The Crow Girl’ (2025–)

A dark crime thriller, ‘The Crow Girl’ follows DCI Jeanette Kilburn and eminent psychotherapist Dr. Sophia Craven as they join forces to pursue a killer targeting young men, an investigation that drags them into a harrowing web of historic abuse and murder. The series streams on Acorn TV on Monday, September 8.
Adapted from the bestselling novels by Erik Axl Sund, the show builds its case across multiple timelines while balancing police work with psychological profiling. The creative team translates the books’ unsettling tone to the screen with a serialized mystery that deepens episode by episode.
‘Only Murders in the Building’ (2021–)

The Arconia’s amateur sleuths—Charles, Oliver, and Mabel—tackle a brand-new case, blending comedy with a cleverly layered whodunit structure set in and around their storied Manhattan building. Season 5 begins streaming on Hulu on Tuesday, September 9.
Created by Steve Martin and John Hoffman, the series features a returning ensemble led by Steve Martin, Martin Short, and Selena Gomez, with guests dropping into the investigation as suspects, allies, and red herrings. The show’s case-of-the-season format keeps the puzzle front and center while evolving the trio’s podcasting antics.
‘Guts & Glory’ (2025–)

This unscripted competition pushes contestants through fully immersive horror scenarios where they must solve challenges under pressure while navigating booby-trapped sets and psychological scares. The series premieres on Shudder on Tuesday, September 9.
Each episode deploys cinematic practical effects, bespoke stunt design, and escalating “survive-the-night” objectives that test nerve and strategy. The format blends escape-room logic with genre setpieces, tracking team dynamics as players adapt—or panic.
‘Thirst Trap: The Fame. The Fantasy. The Fallout.’ (2025)

This docuseries charts how a viral TikTok lip-sync to Barry Manilow’s ‘Mandy’ propelled William White into sudden internet fame and the intense parasocial fandom that formed around him. It begins streaming on Paramount+ on Tuesday, September 9.
Across interviews and archival pulls, the episodes map the rise, the community that rallied behind the star, and the turbulent aftermath when online fantasy collides with offline reality. The production foregrounds digital culture’s feedback loops, from algorithmic boosts to backlash.
‘Love Is Blind: Brazil’ (2021–)

The Brazilian spinoff returns with singles dating and getting engaged sight unseen before facing real-world compatibility tests beyond the pods. New episodes arrive on Netflix starting Wednesday, September 10.
Filmed with the franchise’s signature structure—pods, reveals, cohabitation, and altar-day decisions—the season follows multiple couples as family dynamics, values, and everyday habits collide. The series continues to spotlight how commitment evolves when chemistry precedes first impressions.
‘The Girlfriend’ (2025)

Adapted from Michelle Frances’ novel, this psychological thriller follows Laura, a mother whose comfortable life unravels when her son brings home Cherry, a poised new girlfriend Laura suspects is a calculating social climber. The limited series premieres on Prime Video on Wednesday, September 10.
Told through shifting points of view, the narrative blurs paranoia and manipulation as class tensions rise and secrets surface. The production leans on a slow-burn structure, letting small betrayals and plausible deniability accumulate into high-stakes confrontation.
‘The Hardacres’ (2024–)

Set in 1890s Yorkshire, this period family saga follows the Hardacres’ dramatic move from a grim fish dock to a sprawling country estate, where money opens doors but entrenched hierarchies and rivals complicate their ascent. It begins streaming in North America on BritBox on Wednesday, September 10.
The series explores industry, inheritance, and social mobility across an ensemble of strivers, snobs, and schemers. Six episodes chart the family’s fortunes as they navigate business gambits, marriage prospects, and small-town gossip with big consequences.
‘Love Is Blind: France’ (2025–)

France joins the global phenomenon as singles meet in the pods, get engaged without seeing each other, and then test their relationships in the real world ahead of the altar. Season 1 launches on Netflix on Wednesday, September 10.
The format tracks couples through reveals, shared living, and family introductions, focusing on communication, conflict resolution, and compatibility under cameras. Cultural context and location choices add a distinctive flavor to the familiar experiment.
‘Tyler Perry’s Zatima’ (2022–)

Tyler Perry’s ‘Sistas’ spinoff continues the story of Fatima and Zac as career pressures, past entanglements, and family complications challenge their plans. Season 4 arrives on BET+ on Thursday, September 11.
Produced at Tyler Perry Studios, the relationship drama interweaves legal and financial subplots with the couple’s efforts to build trust. Returning characters and new adversaries push the arc toward bigger stakes and tougher choices.
‘Beauty in Black’ (2024–)

Kimmie fights for control in the face of elite power plays across the beauty industry and the criminal underworld, forcing risky alliances and bold moves. Season 2 starts on Netflix on Thursday, September 11.
Created by Tyler Perry, the series expands its ensemble with fresh antagonists and confidants as Kimmie confronts betrayal and opportunity. The new chapter leans into corporate intrigue, personal reinvention, and retaliation.
‘Wolf King’ (2025–)

This animated fantasy follows Drew Ferran, a commoner who discovers he’s the last scion of a royal werewolf line and the rightful heir to a fractured realm. Season 2 premieres on Netflix on Thursday, September 11.
Based on Curtis Jobling’s ‘Wereworld’ novels, the show deepens its creature-clan mythology with court politics, quest arcs, and shifting allegiances. The season builds out the world map while testing Drew’s leadership and loyalties.
‘Top End Bub’ (2025–)

A follow-up to ‘Top End Wedding’, this eight-part dramedy finds Indigenous lawyer Lauren and her baker husband Ned relocating from Adelaide to the Northern Territory to raise Lauren’s orphaned niece. The series premieres on Prime Video on Friday, September 12.
Created by Miranda Tapsell and Joshua Tyler, the show blends family comedy with heartfelt culture-and-community storytelling. Directors guide the season through workplace cases, domestic learning curves, and ceremonies that ground the family’s next chapter.
‘Beauty and the Bester’ (2025)

This true-crime docuseries examines the high-profile relationship between Dr. Nandipha Magudumana and convicted criminal Thabo Bester, tracing a sensational prison-break saga through investigations, court footage, and interviews. It premieres on Netflix on Friday, September 12.
Structured around key investigative milestones, the series reconstructs the timeline, media fallout, and legal ramifications with testimony from reporters, law-enforcement figures, and observers. Episodes spotlight how public perception shifts as new evidence emerges.
Tell us which non-sports, non-stand-up premiere you’re most excited to watch this week—share your picks in the comments!


