
Okuto Nakamura is just a boy, standing in front of another boy, asking him to love him (or maybe just to be his friend, for starters).

The six-part documentary follows Ramsay and his family in the lead-up to the launch of his new dining venture in the heart of London.

It’s first date time! Squeeeeeee!

If last week’s episode was an appetizer, “Crabtastic Rampage!” is the whole damn meal.

You and I Are Polar Opposites captures that first-time love in such a cutesy, starry-eyed way that you can’t help but smile and reminisce.

Set twenty years after The Legend of Vox Machina, The Mighty Nein takes us further east, to the continent of Wildemount.

Selling Sunset S9 is an emotionally charged one for sure, whether it’s pushing hurt feelings or heartfelt bonding to the forefront for maximum effect.

When Edge Meets Exhaustion

MHA may be coming to an end, but it’s not going out without a fight.

Let’s Play is a feel-good anime for gamers and rom-com fans alike; the two worlds pair together nicely to make for a fun yet soothing watch.

Fit For TV: The Reality of The Biggest Loser is a three-part documentary that puts the hugely successful competition series under the microscope.

One of the many questions you might be asking yourself upon diving into this series: Can’t the humans stop them? Well, it’s time to find out.

Solo Camping for Two is a cute adventure under the stars sprinkled with a pinch of comedy, some delicious campfire cooking, and a whole lotta heart.

Nyaight of the Living Cat is about to be your new favorite apocalypse anime.

New Saga comes out swinging and doesn’t let its sword fall until every last drop of blood has been spilled, setting up the stakes—and the sacrifices the humans must make.

The Waterfront has twists and tension on deck, but it’s not all smooth sailing towards the golden hall of truly gritty Netflix dramas.

Vol. 4 is presented by Tim Miller and David Fincher, with Jennifer Yuh Nelson returning as supervising director—to say it’s a winning team is an understatement.

“Takeoff” really does take off—right in the middle of the last episode’s cliffhanger.

Taking it to the Streetz!!

Can Arthur make up for the sins of his old life as King Grey and discover what family really means to him?

Buckle up and get ready for action!

Within 10 minutes of this first opener, I was reminded of why I loved the series in the first place.

Halfway through the first episode, To Be Hero X starts cooking. Y’all better come get you some of these fractured heroes

“The Rebirth of the King” asks some fun questions and you can already tell ‘The Beginning After the End’ is gonna have a helluva time answering them.

Was there ever a period in your life where everything fit precisely where it was supposed to? Welcome to the struggle that is the life of Uka Ishimori

Anyway, I’m Falling in Love with You. is a sugar-sweet high school anime where Mizuho has to deal with the pitfalls (and advantages) of being surrounded by cute boys.

Queer Eye heads to the bright lights of Las Vegas this season, kicking off with the vivacious showgirl-turned-seamstress Paula.

If scandal’s your thing, Selling the OC S3 delivers.

The devil works hard but the casting directors work harder, pulling in players from across America for the biggest personality smorgasbord yet.

Why has Queer Eye always got us crying at the club?

Wilderness opens with Taylor Swift’s sinfully iconic “Look What You Made Me Do”, setting the tone for what this series wants to be.

I think we all know by now that Nailed It! is supremely unserious (I mean, just look at the name of this spinoff).

In “Sowing the Seeds” we meet Michael, a young Black man who’s leading his community in sustainable farming, and deserves all the love he gives out.