‘Only Murders in the Building’ and All the Other TV Shows Coming to Hulu This Week
A fresh mix of quiz shows, true-crime docuseries, reality favorites, and anime is landing between Monday, September 8 and Sunday, September 14. Below, you’ll find what’s arriving each day, along with quick primers on the stories, casts, and creative teams behind each title so you can jump in without missing a beat.
Dates are noted inside each entry so you can plan your queue. Titles span everything from long-running staples like ‘Jeopardy!’ and ‘Wheel of Fortune’ to newer series such as ‘Tracker’ and ‘Botched Bariatrics,’ plus fan-favorite anime including ‘Himouto! Umaru-chan’ and ‘Insomniacs After School.’
‘Jeopardy!’ (1984)

The long-running American quiz show created by Merv Griffin marks the week on Tuesday, September 9. The show’s clue-and-response format features the Jeopardy!, Double Jeopardy!, and Final Jeopardy! rounds, with Daily Doubles and category boards spanning history, science, literature, and pop culture. Ken Jennings serves as host, Johnny Gilbert is the announcer, and Michael Davies leads the current production team as executive producer.
Production is based at Sony Pictures Studios on the Alex Trebek Stage, and the franchise has spawned champions’ events and themed tournaments over the decades. Episodes maintain the series’ core structure, with contestants competing across two initial boards and a final wagered clue to determine the day’s winner.
‘Only Murders in the Building’ (2021)

This mystery-comedy figures into the week on Tuesday, September 9. Created by Steve Martin and John Hoffman, it follows three neighbors—Charles-Haden Savage (Steve Martin), Oliver Putnam (Martin Short), and Mabel Mora (Selena Gomez)—who investigate murders connected to their Upper West Side building, ‘The Arconia,’ while turning each case into a podcast. The series blends investigation with show-business threads from Oliver’s directing past and Charles’s former TV career.
Executive producers include Martin, Short, Gomez, Hoffman, Dan Fogelman, Jess Rosenthal, and Jamie Babbit, with music by Siddhartha Khosla. Episodes across the run feature guest stars tied to the building’s lore and the trio’s personal histories, with mysteries structured around evidence reveals, apartment-set stakeouts, and on-mic confessions.
‘Wheel of Fortune’ (1983)

The word-puzzle staple factors into the lineup on Tuesday, September 9. Created by Merv Griffin, the show centers on contestants solving hidden-letter phrases as they spin a prize wheel and risk penalties like Bankrupt or Lose a Turn. Ryan Seacrest hosts the current era, Vanna White reveals letters on the puzzle board, and Jim Thornton serves as announcer.
Rounds typically include Toss-Up puzzles, the main gameplay with wedges and prizes, a Prize Puzzle within the second round, and a Bonus Round in which the finalist works through a final phrase with limited letters and time. Contestants accumulate cash and prizes by solving puzzles before their opponents and avoiding high-risk wedges.
‘I Survived…’ (2008)

Episodes figure into the week on Wednesday, September 10. This documentary series presents first-person accounts of people who endured life-threatening ordeals—kidnappings, assaults, crashes, disasters, and wilderness incidents—told directly by survivors without dramatic re-enactments. The format interweaves multiple stories per episode, using archival photos, simple graphics, and on-screen timelines for context.
Originally associated with The Biography Channel and Lifetime Movie Network, the series emphasizes chronology, decisions made under duress, and the investigative or rescue steps that followed. Interviews are filmed in a straightforward style that keeps the focus on the narrators and the factual details of each case.
‘Oceanfront Property Hunt’ (2025)

Episodes are set for Wednesday, September 10. This real-estate series follows buyers and agents as they search for coastal homes, tour multiple listings, compare budgets, and navigate inspections and offers. Each installment examines shoreline trade-offs such as erosion, storm exposure, insurance costs, commute challenges, and the benefits of living near beaches and boardwalks.
The house-hunt format highlights local neighborhoods and community resources while walking through floor plans, renovation potential, and financing considerations. Clients weigh wish-lists—views, walkability, outdoor space—against practical constraints, concluding with a final choice among the featured properties.
‘Court Cam’ (2019)

New installments register on Wednesday, September 10. Hosted and executive-produced by Dan Abrams, this series compiles real courtroom footage—from arraignments and hearings to verdicts and sentencings—captured by fixed cameras and security video. Interviews with judges, attorneys, reporters, and participants supply case context and legal perspective.
Produced in association with Law & Crime Productions, episodes are organized by incident, including outbursts, unusual rulings, and rare proceedings. Follow-ups often document outcomes after viral moments, outlining charges, sentencing ranges, and policy notes where relevant.
‘Himouto! Umaru-chan’ (2015–2017)

Episodes are part of Friday, September 12. Based on the manga by Sankaku Head and produced by Doga Kobo, this slice-of-life comedy follows Umaru Doma, a model student outside who turns into a junk-food-loving homebody around her older brother, Taihei. The TV adaptation is directed by Masahiko Ohta with series composition by Takashi Aoshima, character designs by Aya Takano, and music by Yasuhiro Misawa.
The voice cast includes Aimi Tanaka as Umaru and Kenji Nojima as Taihei, with Akari Kageyama as Nana Ebina, Haruka Shiraishi as Kirie Motoba, and Nao Toyama as Sylphynford Tachibana. The run encompasses the original season and the follow-up ‘Himouto! Umaru-chan R,’ featuring short gags, school-life arcs, and sibling-bond episodes.
‘Insomniacs After School’ (2023)

Look for it on Friday, September 12. Adapted from Makoto Ojiro’s manga and produced by Liden Films, this coming-of-age story follows Ganta Nakami and Isaki Magari, two students who bond over insomnia and quietly revive their school’s astronomy club to claim a refuge in the old observatory. The series is directed by Yuki Ikeda with scripts by Rintaro Ikeda, character designs by Yuki Fukuda, and music by Yuki Hayashi.
Gen Sato voices Ganta and Konomi Tamura voices Isaki, with classmates and club advisers rounding out the ensemble. Episodes weave night-sky photography and stargazing projects into personal arcs about family expectations, health challenges, and the search for a place to belong.
‘Death by Fame’ (2023)

Episodes turn up on Saturday, September 13. This docuseries examines crimes entangled with celebrity and the entertainment industry—cases involving aspiring performers, agents, producers, and online influencers—through interviews, court records, and archival footage. The show traces relationships and timelines while outlining investigative steps that led to arrests and prosecutions.
Produced by Ample Entertainment, episodes typically focus on a single case, moving from early ambitions and industry connections to incidents, evidence, and courtroom outcomes. The structure emphasizes how publicity, power, and access shape the circumstances surrounding each crime.
‘Botched Bariatrics’ (2024)

Installments are slated for Saturday, September 13. This medical docuseries follows patients facing severe complications after weight-loss surgery and the specialists who attempt to repair the damage. Cases include strictures, leaks, malnutrition, and complex reconstructions requiring staged operations and multidisciplinary care.
Featured physicians have included bariatric surgeons such as Dr. Charlotte Hodges and Dr. Yasir Khan, with teams explaining imaging, operative planning, and post-op monitoring. Episodes document consultations and revisions in detail, from nutritional stabilization and risk counseling to surgical technique and recovery milestones.
‘Tracker’ (2024)

Chapters are on Saturday, September 13. Developed by Ben H. Winters and based on Jeffery Deaver’s novel ‘The Never Game,’ this action drama stars Justin Hartley as Colter Shaw, a survivalist who travels the United States solving cases for reward money. The main cast includes Robin Weigert and Abby McEnany as Teddi and Velma Bruin, Eric Graise as tech specialist Bobby Exley, and Fiona Rene as attorney Reenie Greene.
Executive producers include Ken Olin, Justin Hartley, and Ben H. Winters, with music by Tyler Bates and Joanne Higginbottom. Episodes film across rugged locations and follow case-of-the-week investigations threaded with Shaw’s family backstory and recurring antagonists.
‘Murder Under the Friday Night Lights’ (2022)

Episodes join the week on Saturday, September 13. This series investigates homicide cases that shatter high-school-football communities, combining interviews with law enforcement, families, and reporters with case files and location photography. Stories examine how crimes ripple through towns bonded by Friday-night traditions.
Each episode reconstructs events from initial disappearance or discovery through investigative leads, suspect timelines, and prosecutorial outcomes. The show contextualizes booster culture, stadium rituals, and school institutions while tracing the impact on players, coaches, and local supporters.
Share what you’re watching first—and which episodes you recommend—in the comments!


