Here Are the Best TV Shows to Stream this Weekend on Hulu, Including ‘Fire Force’
Looking for something fresh to queue up without wading through endless menus? This weekend’s Hulu slate mixes buzzy premieres, returning reality staples, and fan-favorite anime alongside a few timely docuseries. You’ll find new episodes and catalog drops that cover everything from gridiron disguises and classroom chaos to culinary showdowns and paranormal lock-ins.
Below are ten titles worth a look—picked with this weekend’s newest arrivals first, followed by notable originals and modern essentials. For each one, you’ll get quick, fact-packed details on the premise, key cast, and the creative teams behind the scenes so you can decide what fits your watchlist.
‘Digimon Beatbreak’ (2025–present)

The latest mainline entry in the long-running ‘Digimon’ franchise introduces a new team of protagonists and partner Digimon set against a fresh digital-world mystery. Produced by Toei Animation, the series follows its young leads as they uncover how music, rhythm, and digital evolution intersect inside and outside the networked world.
Creative stewardship continues the franchise’s tradition of high-energy action and creature design, with core staff drawing on series lore first showcased at a major fan expo preview. The show opens a new chapter in the timeline while keeping the partner-bond structure and evolving battle mechanics that define the property.
‘Fire Force’ (2019–present)

Based on Atsushi Ōkubo’s manga, ‘Fire Force’ tracks recruit firefighter Shinra Kusakabe as he joins Special Fire Force Company 8 to battle human “Infernals” and investigate spontaneous combustion incidents. The anime blends squad-based tactics with larger conspiracies, steadily expanding its cast of pyrokinetic fighters and rival units.
Animated by David Production, earlier seasons featured direction by Yuki Yase and Tatsuma Minamikawa with detailed effects animation for flame combat. The series connects narratively to Ōkubo’s broader universe, and recent arcs push toward a climactic confrontation that threads character backstories through increasingly large-scale set pieces.
‘Spy x Family’ (2022–present)

‘Spy x Family’ centers on master spy Loid Forger, who builds a fake family to execute an undercover mission—unaware that his “wife” Yor is an assassin and their adopted daughter Anya is a telepath. The show balances espionage assignments with school hijinks and domestic cover stories that constantly threaten to unravel.
Produced by Wit Studio alongside CloverWorks, the adaptation is directed by Kazuhiro Furuhashi with character designs and music that lean into both spy-thriller motifs and warm family comedy. Ensemble favorites—from classmates and handlers to agency rivals—round out storylines that hop between covert ops and slice-of-life antics.
‘90 Day Fiancé’ (2014–present)

This flagship reality series follows couples navigating the K-1 visa process, documenting proposals, cross-cultural clashes, and the countdown to the altar. Episodes track day-to-day adjustments—finances, family introductions, and living arrangements—while reunion installments revisit major turning points with the participants.
Produced by Sharp Entertainment, the franchise is hosted across live specials by longtime presenter Shaun Robinson. Spinoffs and companion series expand the universe, but the core format remains focused on relationship decisions under a tight timeline, with producers and field crews capturing high-stakes milestones as they unfold.
‘Halloween Wars’ (2011–present)

A seasonal competition that assembles teams of cake, sugar, and pumpkin artists, ‘Halloween Wars’ tasks contestants with building elaborate, theme-driven displays. Challenges emphasize sculpture scale, structural problem-solving, and edible effects that bring horror concepts to life under time pressure.
The series features judges such as Shinmin Li and Aarti Sequeira, with hosting duties handled in recent years by Jonathan Bennett. Production showcases specialized kitchen rigs and carving bays, while camera teams follow each station from initial sketch to final reveal across qualifying rounds, semifinals, and finales.
‘Natalie Wood: An American Murder Mystery’ (2018)

This three-part docuseries reexamines the 1981 death of actor Natalie Wood near Santa Catalina Island, using archival footage, court documents, and contemporary interviews. Episodes reconstruct the night on the yacht Splendour and chart investigative threads and public-record developments that kept the case in the spotlight.
Produced by Jupiter Entertainment with American Media, Inc., the project presents a chronological account across its installments, drawing on journalists, law-enforcement figures, and those close to the case. The series places new and historical materials side by side to outline competing narratives and outstanding questions.
‘Sister Wives’ (2010–present)

‘Sister Wives’ documents the Brown family’s evolving relationships, following day-to-day logistics, household changes, and shifting dynamics among spouses and adult children. Recent episodes focus on pivotal conversations and family milestones that have reshaped the group’s future.
The long-running series blends sit-down interviews with verité footage, capturing moves, career decisions, and celebrations across multiple households. Production keeps a consistent timeline through seasonal arcs and follow-ups that revisit major choices and their ripple effects.
‘My Hero Academia’ (2016–present)

Adapted from Kōhei Horikoshi’s manga, ‘My Hero Academia’ follows Izuku Midoriya as he trains at U.A. High School to become a pro hero in a world where superpowers—called Quirks—are the norm. Story arcs chart classroom growth, tournament-style trials, and escalating clashes with the League of Villains.
Produced by Bones, the anime features Japanese voice leads Daiki Yamashita and Nobuhiko Okamoto and an English dub headed by Justin Briner and Christopher R. Sabat. Direction, choreography, and score highlight character-specific abilities while expanding the pro-hero roster and the school’s faculty and rival students.
‘Abbott Elementary’ (2021–present)

Set at a public school in Philadelphia, ‘Abbott Elementary’ is a mockumentary-style comedy that follows teachers navigating limited resources, classroom chaos, and small victories. The ensemble includes creator-star Quinta Brunson along with Tyler James Williams, Janelle James, Lisa Ann Walter, Chris Perfetti, Sheryl Lee Ralph, and William Stanford Davis.
Executive producers include Brunson, Randall Einhorn, Justin Halpern, and Patrick Schumacker. Single-camera production and tight runtimes keep the focus on staff relationships, school culture, and recurring hall-monitor, field-trip, and funding storylines that reflect ongoing challenges in education.
‘Shifting Gears’ (2025–present)

This multi-camera sitcom stars Tim Allen as Matt, a widowed classic-car restorer, and Kat Dennings as Riley, his estranged daughter whose return sparks shop-floor and family shake-ups. The cast also features Seann William Scott and Daryl “Chill” Mitchell as the garage crew supporting and complicating daily operations.
Created by Julie Thacker Scully and Mike Scully with Michelle Nader as showrunner, the series is produced under the ABC/20th Television banner. Episodes blend father-daughter reconciliation with restoration projects, client mishaps, and callbacks to automotive culture across the shop’s changing workload.
Got a favorite from this lineup—or something we missed? Share your picks in the comments so everyone can compare weekend watchlists!


