‘And Just Like That…’ Leads HBO Max’s Most-Watched List for Fourth Week in a Row; Here Are the Nine Other Shows that Top the List
From prestige dramas to pulpy true crime and reality-TV escapism, HBO Max’s most-watched slate this week proves there’s something for every mood. The lineup blends buzzy originals with library favorites and docuseries that spark group chats, Sunday-night rituals, and can’t-look-away binges.
Below, we count down the week’s top titles from ten to one. Expect opulent period intrigue, locker-room mic’d-up moments, heartfelt celebrity storytelling, and a wave of surveillance-era mysteries. If you’ve been wondering what to queue up next, start here.
10. ’90 Day: Hunt For Love’ (2025)

The latest entry in the ever-expanding franchise drops familiar singles and fresh faces into a tropical pressure cooker, where chemistry, history, and hard truths collide. It’s irresistibly watchable thanks to candid confessions, chaotic mixers, and the thrill of second chances.
For viewers who crave romantic high stakes without the fairy-tale filter, this delivers. Expect shifting alliances, unexpected pairings, and the kind of cliffhangers that make “just one more episode” feel inevitable.
9. ‘See No Evil’ (2015)

This true-crime staple rebuilds investigations through the unblinking eye of surveillance footage, turning everyday spaces—parking lots, storefronts, subway platforms—into pivotal witnesses. Each case unfurls like a puzzle where a single camera angle can change everything.
Fans of methodical, step-by-step reveals will find the show’s structure satisfying. It’s less about shock and more about the meticulous grind of detection, making every uncovered timestamp feel like a breakthrough.
8. ‘Last Week Tonight with John Oliver’ (2014)

A sharp, satirical deep-dive into the headlines, this weekly series dissects complex topics with wit and receipts. The main story format keeps things focused while quick-hit segments pack in extra jokes and jolts of catharsis.
It’s perfect for anyone who likes their current events with punchlines and perspective. Come for the laughs; stay for the oddly memorable explainers that make complicated issues easier to talk about the next day.
7. ‘A Killer Among Friends’ (2025)

This docuseries probes cases where the line between friendship and betrayal dissolves under the weight of devastating crime. Interviews and archival materials weave together intimate portraits of trust broken and communities changed.
What sets it apart is the emotional center—grief, guilt, and the gnawing question of how well we ever really know the people closest to us. It’s haunting, empathetic, and built for discussion.
6. ‘Billy Joel: And So It Goes’ (2025)

A career-spanning portrait of the beloved musician, this two-part chronicle moves beyond the greatest hits to explore craft, resilience, and the stories behind the songs. Personal archives and candid reflections give it a lived-in, backstage warmth.
For music documentary fans, it’s a front-row seat to the push-pull between private life and public legend. The performances feel intimate; the anecdotes linger long after the credits.
5. ‘The Yogurt Shop Murders’ (2025)

A sensitive, carefully constructed look at a notorious cold case, this series centers the people most affected while tracing twists in the investigation. It balances reconstruction with restraint, prioritizing memory, aftermath, and the human cost.
True-crime fatigue fades here thanks to a compassionate approach and thoughtful storytelling choices. It’s gripping without veering into exploitation, making space for reflection as much as revelation.
4. ‘Back to the Frontier’ (2025)

Part social experiment, part survival saga, this series asks modern families to trade convenience for grit by living like nineteenth-century pioneers. The result is equal parts hardship, humor, and unexpected self-discovery.
Viewers who love experiential reality will be hooked by the daily resourcefulness and shifting group dynamics. It’s about learning to do more with less—and finding out what “less” really means.
3. ‘Hard Knocks’ (2001)

The crown jewel of behind-the-scenes sports storytelling puts you inside camp as pros fight for roster spots and chemistry. Mic’d practices, position-room strategy, and raw locker-room moments deliver authentic stakes.
Even casual fans get swept up in the personalities and pressure. It’s the rare sports doc that makes the grind feel cinematic, turning preseason into appointment viewing.
2. ‘The Gilded Age’ (2022)

A lavish, character-rich drama of ambition and etiquette wars, this series revels in drawing-room barbs and grand staircases. Beneath the finery, it’s a story of social maneuvering, new money versus old, and the costs of claiming a seat at the table.
It scratches the itch for sumptuous world-building while keeping hearts in the balance. Expect rivalries to simmer, romances to complicate alliances, and fortunes to tilt with a single invitation.
1. ‘And Just Like That…’ (2021)

The beloved quartet’s next chapter explores friendships, reinventions, and the messiness of midlife with candor and sparkle. It blends familiar rhythms with new faces and modern dilemmas, inviting longtime fans to reunite and newcomers to settle right in.
The appeal is as much about conversation as it is about plot—the fashion, the foibles, the hard-won wisdom. It’s comfort viewing with bite, and this week’s most-watched for a reason.
Share your own top picks from the list—and what you think should climb the rankings next week—in the comments.


