‘Canelo Álvarez vs. Terence Crawford’ Tops Netflix’s Weekly Most-Watched Shows List This Week: Here Are the Remaining Top 10 Shows
There’s a little bit of everything in this week’s U.S. top-10: prestige teen mystery, wholesome bakes, a live-wire night of sports entertainment, preschool sing-alongs, a swoony YA romance—and a massive championship boxing event anchoring the list. If you’re looking for something to queue up, this lineup spans comfort TV, new seasons of buzzy hits, and timely specials that people are talking about right now.
Below, you’ll find each title with a quick primer so you know what you’re getting into. For series, we note the season highlighted in this week’s chart, along with core premise and key creative details. For the sports entries, we include essential context—so you can jump in without feeling lost.
10. ‘Countdown: Canelo vs. Crawford’ (2025)

This docuseries follows the build-up to the super middleweight showdown between Saúl “Canelo” Álvarez and Terence “Bud” Crawford, documenting training-camp routines, sparring, game plans, and the logistics that go into staging a global boxing event. Episodes typically intercut both camps to show contrasting preparation styles, conditioning work, and strategy sessions with their respective coaching teams.
Produced in collaboration with the event’s organizers, the series features sit-down interviews with the fighters, members of their corners, and boxing analysts who break down styles, strengths, and past performances. It’s designed as a primer for the main event listed at No. 1 this week, and it functions as a narrative companion piece that sets stakes and storylines ahead of fight night.
9. ‘Ms. Rachel: Season 1’ (2025)

A preschool learning series created by educator and musician Rachel Griffin Accurso, this program focuses on early language development through songs, repetition, and call-and-response. Segments often incorporate sign-supported speech and simple phonemic awareness activities aimed at toddlers and pre-K learners.
Episodes are structured around themes—letters, numbers, feelings, routines—and include interactive prompts to encourage speaking, singing, and movement. Behind the scenes, composer and music director Aron Accurso contributes original arrangements that support clear diction and steady pacing for young viewers.
8. ‘Ms. Rachel: Season 2’ (2025)

The second season builds on the show’s interactive format with new original songs, expanded vocabulary targets, and gentle social-emotional lessons woven into skits and musical numbers. Visuals rely on bright, uncluttered staging to keep attention on mouth shapes, articulation, and gestures that aid imitation.
Recurring segments introduce simple problem-solving and early literacy cues (like syllable clapping and rhyme recognition). Parents and caregivers will also notice consistent routines—greetings, transitions, and closing songs—that help children anticipate what comes next and practice participation.
7. ‘My Life With the Walter Boys’ (2023–)

Based on the novel by Ali Novak, this YA drama follows Jackie Howard as she relocates to rural Colorado and moves in with the large, lively Walter family, where she’s caught between brothers with very different personalities. The show stars Nikki Rodriguez as Jackie, with Noah LaLonde and Ashby Gentry as Cole and Alex, and Sarah Rafferty as guardian Katherine Walter.
Season 2 continues the academic, family, and romantic pressures introduced in the first outing, tracking Jackie’s adjustment to a new school, the Walters’ household dynamics, and the consequences of big decisions made at the end of Season 1. The series is developed for television by showrunner Melanie Halsall, who adapts Novak’s page-turning setup into hour-long episodes.
6. ‘Raw’ (1993–)

This weekly live sports-entertainment program from WWE features ongoing storylines that culminate in matches, contract signings, and dramatic in-ring segments. The September 8, 2025 episode highlighted in this week’s chart continues current feuds and angles across the men’s and women’s divisions and typically includes championship implications, tournament rounds, or No. 1-contender bouts.
Produced by WWE, the show blends wrestling, backstage vignettes, and real-time crowd interaction. Regular broadcast elements include ring-announcing, commentary, and post-match interviews, with appearances from a rotating roster of superstars, tag teams, and stables advancing multi-week arcs.
5. ‘The Great British Baking Show’ (2010–)

This long-running competition from Love Productions places amateur bakers in a tent for three challenges each episode: the Signature, the Technical, and the Showstopper. Judged by Paul Hollywood and Prue Leith, the series is known for precise bakes, exacting standards, and gentle time-pressure. ‘Collection 13’ marks a fresh set of themed weeks—bread, pastry, chocolate, and more.
Hosting duties are handled in recent collections by Noel Fielding and Alison Hammond, who guide contestants through bakes and add light comic relief between judging rounds. Each episode ends with a Star Baker and an elimination, while the finale crowns a winner based on cumulative performance and a last, ambitious brief.
4. ‘Love Con Revenge’ (2025–)

A contemporary romance-thriller, this series centers on a whirlwind relationship that begins as a deceptive arrangement and evolves as buried motives come to light. Season 1 sets up the initial “contract” premise, then pivots into corporate intrigue and family secrets, using cliffhangers to reframe earlier episodes.
Production leans on glossy locations, fashion-forward costuming, and a soundtrack that underscores the show’s push-pull dynamic between attraction and betrayal. The writers’ room structures episodes around reveals—flashbacks, recovered messages, and shifting alliances—to keep the central couple’s pact under constant pressure.
3. ‘Wednesday’ (2022–)

From creators Alfred Gough and Miles Millar, this supernatural mystery-comedy follows Wednesday Addams as she navigates school, psychic visions, and a trail of cryptic clues. Jenna Ortega headlines as Wednesday, with Catherine Zeta-Jones and Luis Guzmán appearing as Morticia and Gomez Addams, alongside Emma Myers and other returning cast.
Season 2 expands the mythology introduced at Nevermore Academy and widens the circle of suspects and allies tied to Wednesday’s investigations. The production continues its distinctive gothic look with sharp costuming and set design, while directors—including Tim Burton in select episodes—balance creature features, sleuthing, and deadpan humor.
2. ‘Beauty in Black’ (2024–)

This melodrama follows intersecting lives in the fashion and beauty world, where rivalry, reinvention, and public image collide. Season 2 picks up existing feuds and forges new partnerships as characters jockey for creative control, runway visibility, and corporate backing.
The show’s production design foregrounds styling and wardrobe as extensions of character arcs, while the scripts weave workplace maneuvering with personal histories that resurface at inconvenient moments. Expect boardroom power plays, high-stakes launches, and media scandals that test loyalties across its ensemble.
1. ‘Canelo Álvarez vs. Terence Crawford’ (2025)

A marquee championship boxing event at super middleweight, this bout features Saúl “Canelo” Álvarez—multiple-division world champion—against Terence “Bud” Crawford, a three-division champion moving up in search of legacy-defining hardware. The broadcast covers full fight-night proceedings: walk-ins, tale-of-the-tape, undercard highlights, and all rounds of the main event.
Coverage includes commentary, corner audio between rounds, and post-fight interviews that contextualize scorecards, tactical adjustments, and momentum shifts. Pre-fight rules meetings, weigh-in results, and officials are typically noted on screen so viewers have the essential facts as the opening bell rings.
Share your picks and what you’re watching next in the comments!


