‘All Her Fault’ and Every Other TV Show Coming To Peacock This Week
Here’s a friendly heads-up on the week’s incoming TV—spanning true-crime staples, reality favorites, and a mix of comedies and thrillers—along with quick rundowns of what each project is about and who’s involved behind and in front of the camera.
‘Mama June: Family Crisis’ (2017– )

This reality series follows June “Mama June” Shannon and the Shannon/Thompson family as they navigate health struggles, finances, legal issues, and evolving relationships, spun off from ‘Here Comes Honey Boo Boo.’ Regulars include June, Alana “Honey Boo Boo” Thompson, Lauryn “Pumpkin” Efird, and other family members, with Thinkfactory Media producing. The show’s longer arcs have explored June’s recovery and family custody questions, while recent storylines have centered on grief, co-parenting, and repairing trust. Executive producers include Adam Freeman, Adam Reed, Gina Rodriguez, Lauren P. Gellert, and others.
‘America’s Most Wanted: Missing Persons’ (2025– )

A companion event series to the long-running franchise, this iteration focuses on active missing-persons cases, aiming to generate viewer tips and new leads in coordination with law enforcement. Harris Faulkner serves as host, with executive producers including Juno Jakob and John Ferracane. The format profiles disappearances with timelines, interviews, and reconstructions designed to surface actionable information. It extends the franchise’s public-service mission by spotlighting unresolved cases that need national attention.
‘America’s Most Wanted’ (2021– )

The revived crime-fighting series continues profiling fugitives and unsolved cases, combining re-creations, expert analysis, and appeals for tips that can lead to arrests. John Walsh returned as host with his son Callahan Walsh as co-host, bringing the franchise’s signature call-to-action format into a modern studio and tech setup. Recent seasons have featured new investigations while maintaining the show’s emphasis on community assistance and law-enforcement partnerships. The franchise has also spawned digital extensions and specials that deepen case coverage.
‘St. Denis Medical’ (2024– )

This workplace mockumentary follows overworked doctors and nurses at an underfunded community hospital in Oregon, blending day-to-day medical chaos with deadpan humor. Created by Justin Spitzer and Eric Ledgin, the series stars Wendi McLendon-Covey, Allison Tolman, Josh Lawson, Kahyun Kim, Mekki Leeper, Kaliko Kauahi, and David Alan Grier. The single-camera comedy leans into staff politics, resource scarcity, and administrative gambits while patients keep the ER on a perpetual boil. Universal Television produces, with Spitzer and Ledgin among the executive producers.
‘Wife Swap: The Real Housewives Edition’ (2025– )

This crossover spins the classic role-swap format by pairing ‘Real Housewives’ personalities with households that challenge their routines, values, and family management styles. Episodes feature Housewives trading places to experience contrasting parenting approaches and relationship dynamics, often prompting self-reflection and change back home. Participants have included familiar Bravo figures, with new stories teased across the franchise slate. The series aims to mix humor with social observation rooted in the original ‘Wife Swap’ concept.
‘All Her Fault’ (2025)

Based on Andrea Mara’s bestselling novel, this mystery thriller follows Marissa Irvine, who arrives to collect her son from a playdate and discovers the child is missing—triggering a tense, twisty search. Created by Megan Gallagher and directed by filmmakers including Minkie Spiro and Kate Dennis, the series stars Sarah Snook alongside Dakota Fanning, Jake Lacy, Michael Peña, Sophia Lillis, Abby Elliott, Jay Ellis, Daniel Monks, and Thomas Cocquerel. The story shifts from a suburban misunderstanding into a widening web of secrets and competing versions of the truth. Universal International Studios and Carnival Films produce, with Gallagher, Snook, Nigel Marchant, and Gareth Neame among the executive producers.
‘Stumble’ (2025– )

A mockumentary comedy set in the pressure-cooker world of junior college cheerleading, the show chronicles athletes, coaches, and administrators doing whatever it takes to “make mat.” Created by writers Liz and Jeff Astrof with executive producer Monica Aldama (of ‘Cheer’), the ensemble includes Jenn Lyon, Taran Killam, Ryan Pinkston, Jarrett Austin Brown, Anissa Borrego, Arianna Davis, Taylor Dunbar, and Georgie Murphy, with Kristin Chenoweth recurring. The series plays competition stakes against everyday campus life, riffing on sports-doc tropes and workplace comedies. Production is by NBCUniversal, with Dana Honor also executive producing.
‘Happy’s Place’ (2024– )

This multi-camera sitcom stars Reba McEntire as Bobbie McAllister, who inherits her late father’s Knoxville bar and discovers she must co-own it with a newly found half-sister. The main cast features McEntire, Melissa Peterman, Belissa Escobedo, Rex Linn, Pablo Castelblanco, and Tokala Black Elk. Created by Kevin Abbott and Julie Abbott, the series centers on family, friendship, and small-business hijinks inside the neighborhood hangout, with episodes driven by staff camaraderie and sibling growing pains. Pamela Fryman, Kevin Abbott, Mindy Schultheis, Michael Hanel, and McEntire are among the executive producers.
What are you most excited to watch this week—drop your picks in the comments!


