‘Black Rabbit’ Is Netflix’s Most-Watched Show of the Week: Here Is the Rest of the Top 10
It’s been a busy week on Netflix in the United States, with fresh limited series, buzzy returning seasons, and even live-sports–adjacent entertainment all jostling for attention. From true-crime deep dives and prestige thrillers to family baking fare and early-learning staples, there’s a little of everything rising up the chart.
Below, we’re counting down the 10 titles viewers are pressing play on right now. For each pick you’ll find clear, need-to-know details—what it’s about, who’s involved, how many episodes to expect, and when/where new installments are landing—so you can decide what to add to your queue next.
10. ‘Mafia: Most Wanted’ (2025)

This three-part docuseries investigates the rise and reach of the Calabrian ’Ndrangheta, tracing how a family-based criminal network expanded from southern Italy into hotspots like Toronto and beyond. It combines investigators’ accounts, archival footage, and rare insider perspectives to explain how the syndicate’s clan structure, or ’ndrine, helped it evade infiltration for decades.
Episodes also unpack major police operations and landmark trials that have recently dented the group’s power, putting high-profile arrests and convictions in context with the organization’s global drug-trafficking, extortion, and money-laundering enterprises. If you’ve followed organized-crime cases in Europe and North America over the past few years, you’ll recognize several headline investigations featured here.
9. ‘Ms. Rachel’ Season 1 (2025– )

Netflix hosts curated compilations of the educator’s popular early-learning videos, with additional batches rolling out to cover skills like phonemic awareness, early vocabulary, counting, and first reading. Designed around speech-language best practices, each episode pairs slow, responsive pacing with songs and interactive prompts to support toddlers’ and preschoolers’ language development.
New episodes have been added in waves, so parents will see the catalog grow over time; Netflix’s set organizes the material by developmental focus to make it easier to choose what fits a child’s stage. Content is built from short, repeatable segments—ideal for reinforcing sounds, gestures, and early word combinations in a consistent routine.
8. ‘Ms. Rachel’ Season 2 (2025– )

A second compilation on Netflix groups later-stage lessons that emphasize phonics, simple sentence building, and social-emotional cues. The format remains consistent—call-and-response songs, clear articulation, and high-contrast visuals—aimed at helping kids practice sound production, imitation, and turn-taking.
Because these Netflix collections are curated from a wider library, runtimes and themes can vary by episode drop. Expect periodic updates that bundle fresh segments around specific learning goals, giving caregivers a straightforward way to pick content for targeted practice.
7. ‘Beauty and the Bester’ (2025)

This limited series examines a sensational prison-escape scandal that begins with a suspicious fire and a presumed death, then widens into a multi-agency investigation. Across its installments, the show reconstructs key events and introduces investigators, insiders, and media figures who helped piece together the timeline of the breakout and the alleged cover-ups.
Episode guides highlight turning points—autopsy revelations, manhunts, and legal developments—that reshaped the case. The structure moves sequentially through the probe, framing each new detail with what it meant for prosecutors and the public narrative at the time.
6. ‘The Great British Baking Show’ (2010– )

The newest collection on Netflix features a fresh tentful of bakers taking on weekly Signature, Technical, and Showstopper challenges under the watch of judges Paul Hollywood and Prue Leith. Episodes are rolling out on a weekly cadence after a September 5 premiere, mirroring the U.K. broadcast schedule so U.S. viewers can follow along close to real time.
As usual, themes range from classic biscuits and breads to patisserie and elaborate celebration bakes. The collection format on Netflix groups the season’s run into a single “Collection 13,” making it simple to track contestants’ progress from Week 1 through the finale.
5. ‘Adolescence’ (2025)

A tightly told British limited series, this drama centers on a 13-year-old accused of murdering a classmate, then follows the ripple effects on the boy’s parents, his therapist, and the lead detective. Created by Jack Thorne with Stephen Graham among the creative leads, it examines how bias, media pressure, and fragmented memories complicate the search for truth.
Netflix lists it as a single-season story, with a defined episode count and conclusion. Cast includes Stephen Graham, Ashley Walters, and Erin Doherty; each episode peels back a different vantage point—family, clinical, and procedural—to test competing narratives against the case evidence.
4. ‘Raw’ (1993– )

WWE’s flagship weekly show is now available on Netflix in the U.S., with episodes labeled by air date and location—for example, the September 15, 2025 installment out of Springfield, Massachusetts. Listings include runtime and match cards, so fans can jump straight to the latest fallout from premium live events or ongoing title feuds.
Performance-wise, the series has been charting strongly on Netflix since its 2025 U.S. debut, with recent episodes maintaining multi-million-view totals even amid sports-season competition. Rankings fluctuate by week, but the show has stayed prominent in U.S. and global lists as Netflix integrates weekly sports-entertainment into its catalog.
3. ‘Wednesday’ (2022– )

All eight episodes of the new season are streaming, continuing the story of Nevermore Academy’s most unflappable student with returning stars Jenna Ortega, Catherine Zeta-Jones, and others. Netflix confirms the season drop and provides trailers, photos, and post-premiere details, making it easy to catch up without hunting for outside updates.
Creative leads Alfred Gough and Miles Millar return alongside director/EP Tim Burton for key installments. The season structure mirrors the first—with a contained arc across eight chapters—so viewers can binge straight through or pace it over a few nights.
2. ‘Beauty in Black’ (2024– )

Tyler Perry’s drama set in Chicago’s beauty-industry world returned with Season 2, Part 1 premiering on September 11, 2025, and additional episodes expected in a later Part 2. Netflix’s episode list confirms the two-part rollout, while coverage outlines the show’s evolving power struggle as Kimmie steps into a leadership role within the Bellarie empire.
Although the story is set in Chicago, production is primarily based in Atlanta, including stages at Tyler Perry Studios, which helps explain the show’s quick turnarounds between parts. Viewers can stream the full first season and the first half of Season 2 now; Part 2 timing has been discussed but not officially dated.
1. ‘Black Rabbit’ (2025)

This eight-episode Netflix thriller from creators Zach Baylin and Kate Susman stars Jude Law and Jason Bateman as estranged brothers pulled into New York’s criminal underworld. It premiered on September 18, 2025, and lists a single-season run with episodes in the 44–68 minute range. Credits include Danny Bensi and Saunder Jurriaans on music and cinematographers Igor Martinović and Peter Konczal.
The series is produced by Aggregate Films and Riff Raff Entertainment with both leads serving as executive producers, and it features a supporting cast that includes Cleopatra Coleman, Ṣọpẹ́ Dìrísù, Amaka Okafor, Troy Kotsur, and more. Coverage around the launch has highlighted the headlining duo and the show’s limited-series format.
Tell us what you’re watching first—and why—in the comments below!


