‘Peacemaker’ Continues to Top HBO Max’s Most-Watched Shows List This Week As Well: Here Are the Remaining Top 10 Shows
There’s a little bit of everything topping HBO Max right now—superhero mayhem, animated sci-fi, late-night politics, headline-grabbing true crime, and reality TV staples you can binge in one sitting. If you’re deciding what to play next, this week’s mix makes it easy to hop genres without leaving the app.
Below you’ll find quick, useful snapshots for each title—what it’s about, who’s in it, and who’s behind the camera—so you can zero in on the shows that match your mood. We’re counting down from 10 to 1, following the list you provided.
10. ‘Welcome to Plathville’ (2019– )

‘Welcome to Plathville’ follows the Plath family—parents Kim and Barry and their nine children—as they navigate faith, independence, marriages, and estrangements from their roots in rural Georgia and beyond. Core family members include Ethan, Micah, Moriah, Lydia, Hosanna, Isaac, Amber, Cassia, and Mercy, with storylines spanning careers, relationships, and changing family dynamics.
A TLC production, the series blends verité filming with cast-led confessionals, documenting moves, weddings, and separations. Over multiple seasons it expands settings from the family farm to new homes and cities as the adult children build lives of their own.
9. ’90 Day: Hunt For Love’ (2025)

’90 Day: Hunt For Love’ brings familiar singles from the ’90 Day’ universe to a resort setting in Tulum, Mexico, where they meet, date, and decide whether to pursue second-chance relationships. The format mixes group get-togethers, one-on-one dates, and surprise arrivals that test chemistry and commitment.
Developed under the broader ’90 Day’ franchise, episodes track shifting alliances and new pairings while revisiting cast histories from earlier installments. The production leans on franchise crews and the established interview-and-verité style to follow cast choices in real time.
8. ‘The Yogurt Shop Murders’ (2025)

‘The Yogurt Shop Murders’ re-examines the 1991 Austin, Texas case in which four teenage girls were killed at an ‘I Can’t Believe It’s Yogurt!’ shop. The series combines archival footage with new interviews to lay out the timeline, the initial prosecutions, overturned convictions, and the developments that kept the case in public view for decades.
Across its episodes, the documentary speaks with family members, investigators, legal experts, and journalists to unpack evidentiary disputes and forensic questions. It centers the victims’ stories while tracing how the investigation evolved and why the case remains significant to the Austin community.
7. ’90 Day Fiancé: Happily Ever After?’ (2016– )

’90 Day Fiancé: Happily Ever After?’ revisits couples from ’90 Day Fiancé’ after weddings, focusing on how marriages handle culture shock, family conflict, finances, relocations, and immigration steps. Familiar pairs over the years have included Loren & Alexei and Elizabeth & Andrei, among others, returning for extended arcs.
Produced by Sharp Entertainment, each season intercuts multiple couples per episode, building narratives around reconciliations, separations, and milestones like births, moves, or career shifts. The franchise format blends home-life scenes with interviews that capture how plans on paper meet reality.
6. ‘Most Wanted: Teen Hacker’ (2025)

‘Most Wanted: Teen Hacker’ investigates the rise of Finnish hacker Julius Kivimäki—known online as “zeekill”—from teenage cyberattacks to high-profile incidents attributed to groups such as Lizard Squad and the fallout from the Vastaamo psychotherapy-center breach. The series follows cross-border investigations and the impact on victims, companies, and law enforcement.
Structured over multiple episodes, it blends interviews with cybersecurity reporters, investigators, and affected individuals alongside archival captures and reconstructions. The show frames Kivimäki’s case within broader cybercrime trends, including DDoS-for-hire operations and data-extortion tactics.
5. ‘Hard Knocks’ (2001– )

‘Hard Knocks’ is HBO’s inside-the-NFL docuseries that embeds with a team—during training camp, the regular season, or the offseason—to capture roster battles, playbook installs, and front-office decisions. Liev Schreiber narrates the franchise (with a one-season exception in 2007), while NFL Films and HBO Sports produce.
The series has profiled clubs from the Baltimore Ravens to the Detroit Lions and added in-season editions that follow teams beyond camp. Producers shape training-camp access into cinematic episodes, highlighting coaching philosophies, undrafted-free-agent stories, and weekly cut-day stakes.
4. ‘Ruby & Jodi: A Cult of Sin and Influence’ (2025)

‘Ruby & Jodi: A Cult of Sin and Influence’ examines former family vlogger Ruby Franke and therapist Jodi Hildebrandt, charting how their teachings and the ConneXions program intersected with a criminal child-abuse case. Across its parts, the series reconstructs the relationship between the two and the events that drew national attention.
The docuseries uses interviews with family members, former associates, and observers to trace key moments from arrests to courtroom outcomes. It places the story within the wider context of influencer culture, high-control counseling models, and the risks of unregulated advice platforms.
3. ‘Real Time with Bill Maher’ (2003– )

‘Real Time with Bill Maher’ is a weekly talk show created and hosted by Bill Maher, combining an opening monologue, one-on-one interviews, a panel discussion with journalists, authors, and political figures, and the closing “New Rules” segment. Episodes are taped in Los Angeles.
Executive producers have included Bill Maher and a long-running production team, with direction that keeps the focus on topical conversation spanning U.S. politics, media, and culture. The format returns each week with a new guest slate reacting to current events.
2. ‘Rick and Morty’ (2013– )

‘Rick and Morty’ is the animated sci-fi comedy created by Dan Harmon and Justin Roiland, following multiverse-hopping scientist Rick Sanchez and his grandson Morty Smith. The voice cast includes Chris Parnell as Jerry, Spencer Grammer as Summer, and Sarah Chalke as Beth, with Ian Cardoni and Harry Belden voicing Rick and Morty in recent seasons.
The series blends episode-specific adventures with longer arcs, riffing on genres like heist films, cosmic horror, and superhero tropes. Produced for Adult Swim with Williams Street, it draws on a writers’ room that has included showrunner-level producers and genre specialists across its seasons.
1. ‘Peacemaker’ (2022– )

‘Peacemaker’ expands the DC universe from ‘The Suicide Squad’, following John Cena’s Christopher Smith as he undertakes covert A.R.G.U.S. missions that collide with his warped code of “peace.” The ensemble includes Danielle Brooks as Leota Adebayo, Freddie Stroma as Adrian Chase/Vigilante, Jennifer Holland as Emilia Harcourt, and Steve Agee as John Economos, with recurring roles tying into larger DC storylines.
Developed by James Gunn, who wrote most episodes and directed several, the series is produced by The Safran Company, Troll Court Entertainment, and Warner Bros. Television. Later episodes deepen Smith’s backstory and introduce antagonists and allies that broaden the show’s mythology.
Tell us in the comments which of these ‘HBO Max’ shows you’re watching this week and which one other viewers should queue up next!


