The Boys is one of those shows that draws up controversy with each of its successive seasons. Following a highly entertaining fourth season, filming for the upcoming The Boys season five is already underway.
From BBC and Amazon Prime to Netflix and Disney+, our top picks will keep you entertained throughout the week.
Another weekend, another batch of shows and movies to wile away the hours with. Today is the last day of January, so this is the first streaming guide of February, 2025. And there are definitely a few things worth checking out new to the myriad streaming services we all subscribe to these days.
Streaming” is The Fly’s weekly recap of the stories surrounding the biggest content streamers. Invest with Confidence: Follow
As January gives way to February, the month change-over brings more new movies and shows on Netflix, Prime Video and more of the best streaming services.
Max got plenty of afterglow from the big “Hacks” best comedy Emmy win this fall, but series producer Universal TV would appreciate some of that halo too. “Ted Lasso” is Apple TV+’s biggest hit, but give some credit to the company behind the show,
Critic Peter Travers reviews "Paradise," created by Dan Fogelman and starring Sterling K. Brown, Julianne Nicholson and James Marsden.
A new MCU show on Disney Plus, and the return of Netflix's thriller The Recruit are among this week's best streaming releases
Prime Video has given a series order to Sterling Point, a drama from My Old Ass writer-director Megan Park and LuckyChap (Barbie, Maid).
While promoting his new Hulu series "Paradise," Sterling K. Brown reflects on finally taking the No. 1 spot on the call sheet after years of superstition.
The new Hulu series, starring Sterling K. Brown, is exhilarating in all the right ways, even if it sometimes tips over into ridiculousness.
Sunny Hostin is calling out America’s “lack of empathy” in light of President Donald Trump ‘s deportation policies. With immigration authorities making roughly 1,000 arrests per day, Hostin reminded The View ‘s audience that “undocumented immigrants are much less likely to commit crimes than American citizens.”