Here Are the Best TV Shows to Stream this Weekend on Peacock, Including ‘Trolls: The Beat Goes On!’
If you’re settling in for the weekend (Friday, November 21–Sunday, November 23, 2025), Peacock has a fresh mix of new docuseries, reality staples, and comfort comedies—plus a few buzzy originals that landed earlier this month and are ready to binge. We pulled this list from this week’s and recent weekly lineups, prioritizing the newest arrivals first, then Peacock originals, and rounding out with notable library picks so you can jump straight to something that fits your mood.
‘The Good Place’ (2016–2020)

Arriving Monday, November 17, the comedy follows Eleanor Shellstrop as she wakes up in the afterlife and tries to become a better person with help from ethics professor Chidi, architect Michael, and Janet. The ensemble includes Kristen Bell, William Jackson Harper, Ted Danson, Jameela Jamil, D’Arcy Carden, and Manny Jacinto. Created by Michael Schur and produced by Fremulon, 3 Arts Entertainment, and Universal Television, the series spans four seasons and 53 episodes. It’s part of Peacock’s incoming week slate running November 17–23.
‘Epic Ride: The Story of Universal Theme Parks’ (2025)

This three-part docuseries lands Monday, November 17 and traces Universal’s evolution from studio tours to modern immersive lands, culminating with the build-up to Universal Epic Universe in Orlando. Expect archival footage, creative-team interviews, and behind-the-scenes looks at ride design and technology. The series highlights how film franchises informed attraction development across decades. It’s listed among this week’s new arrivals on Peacock.
‘Trolls: The Beat Goes On!’ (2018–2019)

Arriving Monday, November 17, DreamWorks Animation’s follow-up to the feature films returns to Troll Village for musical mini-adventures with Poppy, Branch, and friends. Created by Matthew Ireland Beans and Hannah Friedman, the show features Amanda Leighton as Poppy and Skylar Astin as Branch, with recurring voices like Kevin Michael Richardson. Episodes blend standalone stories with playful genre riffs and original tunes. The series extends the franchise’s world between the movies.
‘Cold Justice’ (2013– )

Hitting Peacock Tuesday, November 18, this true-crime series follows former Texas prosecutor Kelly Siegler and a rotating team as they partner with local law enforcement to reopen unsolved homicides. The show documents real investigative steps from evidence reviews to arrests, with updates on prosecutions when available. Executive produced by Dick Wolf, it began on TNT and moved to Oxygen. Episodes typically run an hour and center on one case.
‘A Different Breed’ (2025)

Arriving Thursday, November 20, this docuseries dives into competitive canine sports—agility, dock-diving, and more—through the work of elite trainers and their dogs. Episodes profile teams balancing training regimens, travel, and qualifying pressures on the national circuit. The show features on-site event access, veterinary insights, and slow-motion analysis of performance runs. It’s flagged as a new title in Peacock’s current weekly lineup.
‘Southern Charm’ (2014– )

Coming Thursday, November 20, the long-running reality series chronicles Charleston’s social circle, including figures like Shep Rose, Craig Conover, Kathryn Dennis, Madison LeCroy, and Austen Kroll. Produced by Haymaker Productions, the show has aired 10 seasons with reunion specials hosted by Andy Cohen. Storylines span friendships, businesses, and highly public fallouts against Lowcountry backdrops. The opening theme “It’s Easy” by Mia Sable is a fixture across episodes.
‘All Her Fault’ (2025)

Based on Andrea Mara’s novel, this Peacock mystery thriller centers on Marissa Irvine, who arrives to pick up her son from a playdate only to learn no one knows him—setting off a tense search that exposes neighborhood secrets. Created by Megan Gallagher and directed by Minkie Spiro and Kate Dennis, the cast includes Sarah Snook, Dakota Fanning, Jake Lacy, Michael Peña, Sophia Lillis, and others. Universal International Studios and Carnival Films produce. Episodes began rolling out earlier this month and are now available to stream.
‘Stumble’ (2025– )

This mockumentary comedy follows junior-college cheerleading, tracking athletes, coaches, and administrators as they push to “make mat.” Created by Liz and Jeff Astrof with executive producer Monica Aldama, the series features Jenn Lyon, Taran Killam, Ryan Pinkston, and more, with Kristin Chenoweth recurring. The show riffs on sports-doc tropes while situating the action in everyday campus life. It’s part of Peacock’s recent November additions.
‘Happy’s Place’ (2024– )

Set in Knoxville, this multi-camera sitcom stars Reba McEntire as Bobbie McAllister, who inherits her late father’s bar and discovers she must co-own it with a newly found half-sister. The cast includes Melissa Peterman, Belissa Escobedo, Rex Linn, Pablo Castelblanco, and Tokala Black Elk. Created by Kevin Abbott and Julie Abbott, the series focuses on family dynamics and small-business hijinks inside the neighborhood hangout. Recent episodes are available on Peacock.
‘Surviving Mormonism with Heather Gay’ (2025)

Guided by ‘The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City’ figure Heather Gay, this limited docuseries examines the history and controversies surrounding the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints through interviews with survivors, ex-members, and former leaders. The show includes voices such as David Matheson to contextualize conversion-therapy debates and institutional practices. First-person testimonies and archival materials frame the narrative. It’s one of the new non-fiction entries added in mid-November.
Tell us what you’re queuing up on Peacock this weekend in the comments!


