‘Black Rabbit’ Tops Netflix’s Weekly Most-Watched Shows List This Week: Here Are the Remaining Top 10 Shows
It’s a busy week on Netflix in the United States, with buzzy new dramas, family-friendly learning, live sports entertainment, a fan-favorite baking competition, and a headline-grabbing true-crime docuseries all surging in viewership. To help you quickly figure out what each title is about and whether it fits your mood, here’s a clear, no-fluff rundown of the essentials for every show that climbed into the Top 10.
Below, you’ll find a countdown from 10 to 1 that sticks to this week’s actual order. For each entry, we’ve included core details like creators and cast, release timing, how each season or collection is structured, and any notable context—so you can jump in without digging around for background.
10. ‘Mafia: Most Wanted’ (2025)

This three-episode docuseries investigates the Calabrian ’Ndrangheta, tracing how a once-regional clan built a global criminal network with hubs stretching from southern Italy to Toronto. Through interviews with former insiders, investigators, and journalists—alongside archival wiretaps and surveillance—the series maps kidnappings, narcotics routes, and money-laundering schemes and explains why the group’s family-based structure has made it difficult to penetrate.
Episodes were released together in September 2025, making it an easy weekend watch for true-crime fans who want a complete story in one sitting. The show also situates the ’Ndrangheta in recent law-enforcement crackdowns, giving helpful context on major trials and cross-border operations referenced throughout the series.
9. ‘Ms. Rachel’ Season 1 (2025)

‘Ms. Rachel’ compiles research-informed early-learning videos into Netflix-friendly seasons that focus on language, letters, numbers, colors, and social-emotional skills. The series is created by educator Rachel Accurso, with music direction by Aron Accurso, and is designed for interactive viewing—encouraging kids to sing, repeat sounds, and practice vocabulary out loud.
Seasonal drops began in 2025, with additional episodes rolling out later in the year as Netflix expands its preschool slate. Parents will find short, themed episodes curated from the creator’s larger library, making it simple to select age-appropriate segments or reinforce specific skills during screen-time.
8. ‘Ms. Rachel’ Season 2 (2025)

A second batch of episodes continues the same interactive format, with new compilations organized by topics that build foundational speech and literacy. The structure remains consistent—call-and-response songs, clear articulation, and on-screen prompts—so returning families can slot these into their routines without changing what already works.
Netflix’s kids hub highlights these additions as part of a broader push into preschool learning, with localized subtitles to increase accessibility. As with the first set, episodes are grouped to help caregivers quickly match content to their child’s stage and interests.
7. ‘Beauty and the Bester’ (2025)

This limited documentary series examines South Africa’s high-profile Thabo Bester prison-break saga and the alleged involvement of Dr. Nandipha Magudumana. Across its episodes, the show reconstructs timelines, relationship ties, and security lapses using interviews and case materials to clarify how the breakout unfolded and why it gripped the region.
Viewers get a focused true-crime treatment rather than a sprawling anthology, which makes it straightforward to follow the key players and judicial developments. The series also places the event within broader discussions about public institutions and accountability that dominated headlines at the time.
6. ‘The Great British Baking Show’ (2025)

‘The Great British Baking Show’ returns with Collection 13 on Netflix in the U.S., bringing weekly themed challenges—Signature, Technical, and Showstopper—plus the familiar rhythms of “Star Baker” accolades and eliminations. The collection features a fresh lineup of home bakers from across the UK competing in the tent under the watchful eyes of the judges.
For U.S. viewers, episodes arrive on Netflix shortly after their UK broadcast, so it’s easy to stay current without spoilers. Expect the usual mix of bread engineering, patisserie precision, and ambitious multi-element desserts, all within timed briefs that test planning, execution, and consistency.
5. ‘Adolescence’ (2025)

This limited series centers on a 13-year-old boy accused of murdering a classmate, with each episode unfolding from a different vantage point—family, therapist, and the lead detective—asking what truly happened and why. Notably, the episodes were produced to play like single continuous takes, heightening the sense of immediacy as the investigation and fallout tighten around the characters.
Created by Jack Thorne and Stephen Graham, the drama earned attention for its craft and performances after premiering in March 2025. It’s designed as a complete story, making it appealing to viewers who want a prestige crime drama they can finish in just a few nights.
4. ‘Raw’ (1993)

WWE’s ‘Raw’ now streams live on Netflix in the U.S., with weekly Monday-night episodes and on-demand replays. The Sept. 15, 2025 show from Springfield, Massachusetts featured developments across multiple storylines, including angles with John Cena, Brock Lesnar, CM Punk, AJ Lee, Seth Rollins, and Becky Lynch, alongside tag-team results that set up future matches.
Live start times are 7 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. PT, aligning with Netflix’s broader push into sports-adjacent live programming. Performance metrics show stable U.S. viewership despite fall competition, reflecting how Netflix calculates series rankings based on watch time relative to episode length.
3. ‘Wednesday’ (2022– )

All eight episodes of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2 are now streaming, bringing Jenna Ortega back as Wednesday Addams alongside returning Addams family members in new arcs. The season expands the Nevermore Academy world while threading in fresh mysteries and antagonists across two parts released in August and September 2025.
Critics’ roundups note broader ensemble focus compared with the first season, while still keeping the character’s deadpan investigations front and center. If you’re catching up, Season 2 was structured as a self-contained chapter that resolves its core plot while leaving room for future stories.
2. ‘Beauty in Black’ (2024– )

Tyler Perry’s drama returns with Season 2, Part 1, following Kimmie as she steps into a leadership role within the Bellarie beauty empire—and the family power struggle that follows. The new episodes premiered on Sept. 11, 2025, with Part 2 to come; Netflix’s preview materials and cast guides are helpful refreshers if you’re diving back in.
Production is set in Atlanta while the story plays in Chicago, and the show continues to track how control of the company intersects with past secrets and shifting alliances. Official hub pages and trade coverage indicate viewers should expect more corporate intrigue and personal reversals as the season continues.
1. ‘Black Rabbit’ (2025)

This New York-set limited series stars Jude Law and Jason Bateman as brothers whose upscale hotspot, Black Rabbit, becomes the pressure point when one sibling’s debts pull the other into the city’s criminal underworld. Created by Zach Baylin and Kate Susman, the show blends restaurant-world politics with nightlife-scene tensions and premiered on Netflix in mid-September 2025.
Netflix’s official pages and companion features outline the principal players—owners, investors, staff, and antagonists—so new viewers can quickly grasp how each relationship drives the plot. Interviews from the premiere week add context on the leads’ dynamic and why the series is labeled a limited run, even as audience interest prompts questions about possible continuation.
Share which titles you’re watching—and what you’re starting next—in the comments.


