Rachel Accurso, the beloved children’s YouTube star, announced a deal with the streaming service, broadening her audience and making it even easier to find her content.
The Six Triple Eight, which is a Tyler Perry movie about the only troop of Black women to serve in Europe during World War II, is officially the filmmaker’s biggest Netflix debut. Per Variety, the movie has had over 52.4 million views across its first month on the platform, and it remains on Netflix’s global top 10 for the fourth week in a row.
While all eyes may be on one returning series, Netflix actually has a few new shows (and one movie) hitting its platform this week that you may want to watch.
Netflix has been the streaming home of The Walking Dead for years, so it’s appropriate that the show’s most prominent spinoff, The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live, finally made its Netflix debut this week. And to no one’s great surprise, it’s now one of the most popular shows on Netflix.
How to watch: Always Be My Maybe is now streaming on Netflix. Chronicling the true story of late comedian Rudy Ray Moore — also known as Dolemite — this Eddie Murphy vehicle is worth every minute of viewing.
Netflix, David Lynch and Ted Sarandos
Netflix buffs dying for a romantic fix akin to Virgin River have struck gold with an equally swoon-worthy series that's been creating quite the buzz. Called Hometown Cha-Cha-Cha, this show's major twist is its South Korean roots, setting it miles apart from the all-American backdrop of Virgin River.
Nordic noir, also known as Scandinavian noir, has been a popular genre since the 1990s, but it’s the streaming boom of the 2010s that really helped make it an international favorite. Gritty investigative thrillers,
Greta Gerwig gets her wish
Catherine Ayers plays Nia in Harlan Coben's latest book adaptation Missing You. The thriller follows a detective as she uncovers the truth about her fiance's disappearance. But Ayers, engrossed by Luke Littler's historic first victory, found herself watching the darts instead.
Ma stars Octavia Spencer as a lonely woman who decides to befriend a couple of teenagers - and then she starts to torment them.
Diaz, who just came out of a 10-year retirement from acting in Netflix's "Back in Action," recently revealed to Access Hollywood that she'd be open to returning for a sequel to the 1994 comedy "The Mask" as long as Jim Carrey is involved.