Here Are the Best TV Shows to Stream this Weekend on Hulu, Including ‘The Most Heretical Last Boss Queen: From Villainess to Savior’
Welcome to your weekend Hulu lineup. Pulling from this month’s fresh arrivals, here are ten series landing between Thursday and Saturday that you can stream right now or queue up for the next couple of days. Each pick includes the essential what-and-who details—plots, creators, casts, and production facts—so you can zero in on what fits your vibe without extra digging.
To keep things timely, the list starts with the latest premieres first, then moves through other very recent additions. You’ll find everything from true-crime and competition series to a brand-new medical drama remake and an anime adaptation. Titles are presented with their original years, and you’ll see single quotes around every show name for clarity.
‘Evil Lives Here: The Killer Speaks’ (2023)

This Investigation Discovery spinoff centers on first-person interviews with convicted killers, paired with accounts from family members and others whose lives were directly affected by the crimes. Episodes trace timelines through planning, motive, and aftermath and incorporate archival footage and case materials to document how events unfolded.
Produced under the broader ‘Evil Lives Here’ banner, the series emphasizes prison-set conversations and intimate recollections to illuminate relationships that preceded each offense. Episodes newly available on Hulu this weekend expand the franchise’s catalog with cases that include nationally covered investigations and personal perspectives on consequences.
‘Celebrity Wheel of Fortune’ (2021– )

The celebrity edition of the long-running word-puzzle format brings familiar faces to the puzzle board to compete for charity. Historically hosted by Pat Sajak with Vanna White revealing letters, the show follows the same structure as its parent—toss-ups, main rounds with wedges and prizes, and a bonus round.
Produced by Sony Pictures Television, episodes feature themed categories, charity payouts, and gameplay filmed on the franchise’s iconic set. This weekend’s Hulu drop adds a fresh batch of installments under the continuing ‘Wheel of Fortune’ umbrella.
‘Hell’s Kitchen’ (2005)

Gordon Ramsay’s culinary competition puts professional chefs through dinner-service gauntlets, team challenges, and eliminations en route to a head-chef post. Signature elements include the red-vs-blue brigade setup, staple dishes like risotto and Beef Wellington, and high-pressure services overseen by Ramsay and his sous-chefs.
Developed by A. Smith & Co. Productions, the series showcases the mechanics of a working kitchen—prep, timing, communication, and service standards—across seasons that culminate in a final head-to-head. Newly streaming episodes arrive on Hulu in time for the weekend.
‘Special Forces: World’s Toughest Test’ (2023)

Celebrities enroll in a condensed version of special-forces selection designed and led by the Directing Staff—Rudy Reyes, Jason “Foxy” Fox, Mark “Billy” Billingham, and Jovon “Q” Quarles. There are no formal eliminations; recruits withdraw, are medically removed, or are dismissed for failing critical tasks.
The FOX-originated series documents courses set in harsh environments, spanning water drills, mountainous terrain, and resistance-to-interrogation phases. With on-site instruction from the DS and a rotating roster of participants, the newest episodes hit Hulu just in time for weekend viewing.
‘The Most Heretical Last Boss Queen: From Villainess to Savior’ (2023)

Based on Tenichi’s light-novel series, this anime follows Pride Royal Ivy, a reincarnated “final boss” princess who resolves to defy her predestined tyranny and instead protect her kingdom. The adaptation is directed by Norio Nitta with series composition by Deko Akao and animation by OLM Team Yoshioka.
The Japanese voice cast includes Fairouz Ai as Pride, with additional roles voiced by Maaya Uchida and Jun’ya Enoki; the English dub features Karlii Hoch, among others. Freshly added episodes on Hulu broaden the platform’s late-week anime slate with a strategy-forward fantasy premise.
’99 to Beat’ (2025)

This large-scale physical-comedy game show fields 100 contestants in a rapid-fire gauntlet of short challenges where the only rule that matters is: don’t finish last. The U.S. edition is hosted by Ken Jeong with Erin Andrews, adapting an ITV format built for quick, visual showdowns.
Produced with international partners, episodes stack mini-games into elimination rounds that shrink the field toward a final sprint. New installments launched on Hulu this week, bringing a just-released competition option to your Thursday-through-weekend queue.
‘The Floor’ (2024)

Hosted by Rob Lowe and created by John de Mol, this quiz-competition series places 81 contestants on a giant LED grid, where players battle adjacent rivals in subject-matter duels. Victors capture tiles to expand territory, with strategy shaping who challenges whom across the board.
Backed by FOX and produced by Eureka Productions with Talpa, the format blends fast trivia with territorial tactics and a final contest for a top cash prize. The latest batch is now streaming on Hulu, adding a fresh trivia format to the platform’s game-show lineup.
‘Shark Tank’ (2009)

Entrepreneurs pitch products and companies to a panel of investors—Mark Cuban, Barbara Corcoran, Lori Greiner, Robert Herjavec, Daymond John, Kevin O’Leary, and frequent guest-turned-regular Daniel Lubetzky—seeking capital in exchange for equity or royalties. Segments include valuation talk, negotiation, and due-diligence updates in follow-ups.
Adapted from the ‘Dragons’ Den’ franchise and produced by Sony Pictures Television, the series highlights business mechanics from go-to-market plans to margins and supply chain. Newly added episodes landed on Hulu this week, giving you a sizable trove to sample over the weekend.
‘Ozark Law’ (2025)

This A&E docuseries rides along with Lake Ozark–area police departments, chronicling public-safety operations across a seasonal tourist corridor. Patrols range from boating incidents and traffic stops to nightlife-related calls, with body-cam and cruiser-cam footage shaping each episode’s narrative.
Produced for A&E and newly streaming on Hulu, installments focus on local agencies’ daily workflows and resource demands during peak visitor surges. The series joins Hulu’s growing slate of real-time public-safety and observational documentaries.
‘Doc’ (2025)

An American remake of Italy’s ‘Doc — Nelle tue mani,’ this medical drama centers on Dr. Amy Larsen, a physician who loses eight years of memories after a traumatic accident and must rebuild both her personal life and her hospital career. Developed by Barbie Kligman and inspired by the true story of Italian doctor Pierdante Piccioni, the series streams on Hulu via its U.S. broadcast partner.
Produced by Fox Entertainment and Sony Pictures Television, the ensemble includes Molly Parker as Amy alongside Omar Metwally, Jon Ecker, Amirah Vann, Anya Banerjee, Patrick Walker, Charlotte Fountain-Jardim, and Felicity Huffman. Case-of-the-week stories intersect with Amy’s efforts to reconnect with colleagues and family amid shifting medical protocols and institutional pressures.
If you caught any of these this weekend, share which episodes stood out in the comments!


