Here Are the Fresh Streaming Shows and Premieres for This Week, Including ‘Slow Horses’

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Here’s your fully corrected, soup-to-nuts guide to every TV show (no movies) premiering between Monday, September 22 and Sunday, September 28 — now with tighter creator and cast details and all the titles you flagged. If you’re setting your DVR or stacking a watchlist, this puts every date and platform right where you need it inside each entry.

From returning staples and reality juggernauts to new scripted dramas, animated adventures, and true-crime docuseries, this week spreads premieres across broadcast, cable, and streaming. Read on for what each show is about, who’s in it or behind it, and exactly when and where it lands.

‘The Voice’ (2011–)

'The Voice' (2011–)
Warner Horizon Television

NBC’s ‘The Voice’ is back Monday, September 22 with blind auditions that build into Battles, Knockouts, and live shows as music-star coaches assemble teams and mentor artists. The format originates from John de Mol’s Dutch franchise and pairs coaching panels with a host guiding eliminations.

Produced by MGM Television and Warner Horizon in association with ITV Studios, the competition’s structure — chair turns, steals, and instant saves — fuels weekly stakes before a final winner emerges with a recording deal.

‘Let’s Make a Deal’ (2009–)

'Let’s Make a Deal' (2009–)
FremantleMedia North America

‘Let’s Make a Deal’ returns to CBS on Monday, September 22, with Wayne Brady hosting costumed contestants who wheel and deal for cash and prizes while dodging Zonks. Jonathan Mangum supports as announcer and comedic foil as quick-fire offers unfold.

Created by Stefan Hatos and Monty Hall and produced by Fremantle, the modern revival threads classic mini-games, audience participation, and the Big Deal finale through a rapid, improv-friendly hour.

‘Seeking Sister Wife’ (2018–)

'Seeking Sister Wife' (2018–)
Discovery Studios

Back Monday, September 22 on TLC, ‘Seeking Sister Wife’ follows families at different stages of plural-marriage courtship and integration. Episodes cover introductions, negotiations, and family logistics as participants weigh emotional and practical realities.

The unscripted series uses interviews and verité to track simultaneous storylines across households, capturing milestones, setbacks, and the dynamics of expanding families.

‘SuperKitties’ (2023–)

'SuperKitties' (2023–)
Disney Junior

‘SuperKitties’ returns to Disney Channel on Monday, September 22 with Ginny, Sparks, Buddy, and Bitsy solving small problems in Kittydale using teamwork, gadgets, and empathy. The preschool series was created by Paula Rosenthal and produced by Silvergate Media.

Episodes pair musical moments and gentle humor with social-emotional lessons designed for early learners, with a voice cast bringing recurring friends and mischievous foes to life.

‘Brilliant Minds’ (2024–)

'Brilliant Minds' (2024–)
Warner Bros. Television

NBC’s medical drama ‘Brilliant Minds’ is back Monday, September 22, led by Zachary Quinto as Dr. Oliver Wolf, an eccentric neurologist tackling puzzling brain-behavior cases while navigating hospital politics and ethics.

Developed as a character-forward procedural, the series blends case-of-the-week mysteries with serialized arcs for Wolf’s team, drawing from neurological phenomena and patient stories to anchor each episode’s stakes.

‘Blippi’s Job Show’ (2025–)

'Blippi’s Job Show' (2025–)
Netflix

Landing Monday, September 22 on Netflix, ‘Blippi’s Job Show’ sends Blippi and Meekah into real-world workplaces — kitchens, garages, racetracks — to introduce preschoolers to different careers. The show extends the larger ‘Blippi’ live-action educational universe.

Produced with safety-first demonstrations and simple explanations, each episode highlights tools, teamwork, and community helpers, aiming for curiosity and hands-on discovery.

‘Into the Void’ (2025–)

'Into the Void' (2025–)
Into the Void

Premiering Monday, September 22 on Hulu, ‘Into the Void: Life, Death & Heavy Metal’ is a docuseries exploring the genre’s evolution and cultural impact through archival performance footage and new artist interviews.

Episodes profile influential bands, producers, and scenes, stitching together studio stories, touring lore, and fan communities to map heavy metal’s global footprint.

‘America’s Got Talent’ (2006–)

'America’s Got Talent' (2006–)
Syco Television

‘America’s Got Talent’ returns to NBC on Tuesday, September 23, with singers, comics, magicians, dancers, and specialty acts auditioning before a celebrity judges’ panel. The format, created by Simon Cowell, funnels acts from early rounds to live shows and a public-voted finale.

Produced by Fremantle and Syco Entertainment, the show’s staples — buzzers, Golden Buzzers, and themed live episodes — drive momentum as contestants vie for a headlining prize.

‘Homestead Rescue’ (2016–)

'Homestead Rescue' (2016–)
RAW

Discovery Channel brings back ‘Homestead Rescue’ on Tuesday, September 23, where Marty Raney and family help struggling off-grid homesteaders secure water, shelter, food, and safety. Each project unfolds from assessment to build-out with pragmatic instruction.

The docuseries spotlights self-reliance and problem-solving, leaving owners with durable systems and safety upgrades suited to climate and terrain.

‘Doc’ (2025–)

'Doc' (2025–)
Sony Pictures Television

Returning Tuesday, September 23 on FOX, ‘Doc’ follows a physician whose brain injury erased the last eight years of her memory, forcing her to rebuild a career and personal life she no longer recalls. Weekly cases mirror her search for identity and trust.

Adapted from an international concept, the drama weaves hospital ethics, strained relationships, and the mystery of lost time into a character-driven medical procedural.

‘Murder in a Small Town’ (2024–)

'Murder in a Small Town' (2024–)
Sepia Films

FOX’s ‘Murder in a Small Town’ is back Tuesday, September 23, centering on former city detective Karl Alberg as he confronts layered mysteries in a coastal community. The series blends methodical policework with the intimacy of small-town relationships.

Based on novels featuring Alberg, the drama uses setting and isolation as both atmosphere and plot engine while case-of-the-week threads reveal deeper local secrets.

‘The Lowdown’ (2025–)

'The Lowdown' (2025–)
FX Productions

FX debuts ‘The Lowdown’ on Tuesday, September 23, a Tulsa-set noir created by Sterlin Harjo that follows a dogged “truthstorian” digging into corruption tied to a powerful family. The series stars Ethan Hawke and leans into investigative suspense with a regional lens.

The show draws on the city’s history to connect past atrocities to present-day power structures, building a hardboiled investigation that courts danger as it closes in on buried truths.

‘Cristela Alonzo: Upper Classy’ (2025)

'Cristela Alonzo: Upper Classy' (2025)
Push It Productions

Cristela Alonzo’s new stand-up hour ‘Upper Classy’ premieres Tuesday, September 23 on Netflix, where the comedian riffs on family, money, self-care, and reframing the American dream. The special was filmed for a 2025 rollout.

The set blends personal storytelling and social observation across one hour, expanding Alonzo’s prior TV, podcast, and book work into a fresh, tightly written special.

‘Survivor’ (2000–)

'Survivor' (2000–)
Mark Burnett Productions

CBS launches a new cycle of ‘Survivor’ on Wednesday, September 24, with castaways split into tribes and competing in challenges while negotiating alliances and blindsides for a $1 million prize. Jeff Probst returns as host and executive producer.

Created by Charlie Parsons and produced by S.E.G., the show refreshes advantages and twists each season while retaining the core of social strategy and Tribal Council votes.

‘Shark Tank’ (2009–)

'Shark Tank' (2009–)
Sony Pictures Television

ABC’s ‘Shark Tank’ returns Wednesday, September 24, where entrepreneurs pitch companies to a panel of investors who evaluate markets, margins, and valuations. The format derives from Japan’s ‘Dragons’ Den’ and centers on negotiation and due diligence in the room.

Produced by Sony Pictures Television, episodes balance consumer products, services, and tech plays, with follow-ups charting post-deal growth.

‘Help! I Wrecked My House’ (2020–)

'Help! I Wrecked My House' (2020–)
RTR Media

HGTV revives ‘Help! I Wrecked My House’ on Wednesday, September 24, as Jasmine Roth diagnoses DIY missteps and delivers safe, functional redesigns. The team addresses structure, layout, and finishes while teaching homeowners practical skills.

Makeovers conclude with reveal walkthroughs that highlight code-compliant fixes, durable materials, and family-friendly layouts.

‘Marvel Zombies’ (2025)

'Marvel Zombies' (2025)
Marvel Studios

‘Marvel Zombies’ premieres Wednesday, September 24 on Disney+, an animated limited series set in a parallel universe where a zombie plague forces surviving heroes to adapt alliances and tactics. Voice talent includes returning MCU actors, with new takes like “Blade Knight.”

Developed by Marvel Studios Animation, the four-episode run expands the multiverse with action-horror set pieces, franchise Easter eggs, and serialized survival stakes.

‘Slow Horses’ (2022–)

'Slow Horses' (2022–)
See-Saw Films

Apple TV+ brings back ‘Slow Horses’ on Wednesday, September 24, adapting Mick Herron’s spy novels about disgraced MI5 agents at Slough House under the rumpled, razor-sharp Jackson Lamb. The ensemble juggles off-book fieldwork and bureaucratic turf wars.

Produced by See-Saw Films, the series blends dry wit and high-wire operations, threading novel-based conspiracies with character arcs across returning agents.

‘The Golden Bachelor’ (2023–)

'The Golden Bachelor' (2023–)
Warner Horizon Unscripted Television

ABC’s ‘The Golden Bachelor’ returns Wednesday, September 24, centering a senior lead navigating group dates, one-on-ones, and rose ceremonies while seeking a late-in-life partner. The spinoff maintains core franchise rituals with a focus on second chances.

Warner Bros. Unscripted Television and NZK Productions produce, highlighting conversations about family, loss, and companionship within the familiar Bachelor framework.

‘The Floor’ (2024–)

'The Floor' (2024–)
FOX

FOX revives ‘The Floor’ on Wednesday, September 24, pitting 81 contestants on a massive grid in head-to-head trivia duels. Victories claim territory and move players closer to the final showdown.

Adapted from a European format, the competition balances general knowledge and niche categories, with rapid editing and bold graphics tracking shifting control of the board.

‘Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent’ (2024–)

'Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent' (2024–)
Universal International Studios

Debuting Wednesday, September 24 on The CW, ‘Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent’ relocates the psych-driven investigations of the Dick Wolf franchise to Toronto. An elite unit pursues high-profile crimes using interrogation craft and behavioral insight.

The show preserves the franchise’s two-act structure — pursuit and consequences — while integrating Canadian institutions and city landmarks into each case.

‘The Change’ (2023–)

'The Change' (2023–)
Expectation TV

BritBox returns ‘The Change’ on Wednesday, September 24, following Linda’s late-in-life reset after a menopause diagnosis leads her to carve out a new path at a caravan park. The comedy leans on a quirky ensemble and small-town revelations.

Episodes build character-centered vignettes that turn seemingly small decisions into meaningful pivots, balancing heartfelt moments and offbeat humor.

‘Hotel Costiera’ (2025–)

'Hotel Costiera' (2025–)
Lux Vide

Prime Video’s ‘Hotel Costiera’ premieres Wednesday, September 24, starring Jesse Williams as Daniel “DD” De Luca, a former Marine turned fixer at a luxury Positano hotel who’s drawn into a disappearance tied to the owners. The series is created by Elena Bucaccio with directors including Adam Bernstein; Lux Vide and Amazon Studios produce.

The cast features Maria Chiara Giannetta, Jordan Alexandra, Antonio Gerardi, Tommaso Ragno, Amanda Campana, Pierpaolo Spollon, Alejandra Onieva, and Jean-Hugues Anglade. The show blends sun-drenched glamour with a noir-tinged missing-persons investigation.

‘The Amazing Race’ (2001–)

'The Amazing Race' (2001–)
Worldrace Productions

On Thursday, September 25, CBS sets off a new ‘The Amazing Race’ with teams navigating Detours, Roadblocks, and Pit Stops around the globe for a $1 million prize. Phil Keoghan hosts and executive produces.

Created by Elise Doganieri and Bertram van Munster, the series pairs travel logistics and local culture with high-pressure puzzles and shifting team dynamics.

‘Law & Order: Special Victims Unit’ (1999–)

'Law & Order: Special Victims Unit' (1999–)
Universal Television

NBC’s ‘Law & Order: Special Victims Unit’ returns Thursday, September 25, following Capt. Olivia Benson and the NYPD SVU through investigations of crimes of sexual violence. The procedural blends forensics, interviews, and courtroom sequences.

From Wolf Entertainment and Universal Television, the series remains anchored by meticulous case-building and character arcs across the squad and DA’s office.

‘Law & Order’ (1990–)

'Law & Order' (1990–)
Universal Television

Also Thursday, September 25 on NBC, ‘Law & Order’ continues its classic two-hander: detectives gather evidence, prosecutors test it in court. Scripts interrogate motive, policy, and precedent through terse rhythms and ethical gray areas.

The flagship Dick Wolf series endures on the strength of punchy writing and a revolving ensemble of cops, ADAs, and judges.

‘Hell’s Kitchen’ (2005–)

'Hell’s Kitchen' (2005–)
A. Smith & Co. Productions

‘Hell’s Kitchen’ turns up the heat on FOX Thursday, September 25 as Gordon Ramsay tests chefs in brigade service, pressure tests, and team challenges. The season builds to a head-chef post at a partner venue.

Produced by ITV Entertainment and A. Smith & Co., the series prizes leadership, consistency, and recovery under relentless ticket machines and dinner-service chaos.

‘Law & Order: Organized Crime’ (2021–)

'Law & Order: Organized Crime' (2021–)
Universal Television

‘Law & Order: Organized Crime’ makes its broadcast return Thursday, September 25 with Detective Elliot Stabler leading the OCCB against New York’s syndicates. After premiering Season 5 on Peacock in spring 2025, the season now rolls out on NBC in primetime.

Developed by Dick Wolf, Ilene Chaiken (initial showrunner), and later showrunners across seasons, the series favors serialized arcs that track sophisticated criminal networks over multi-episode investigations.

‘Silent Witness’ (1996–)

'Silent Witness' (1996–)
BBC

BritBox brings back ‘Silent Witness’ Thursday, September 25, chronicling a team of forensic pathologists who decode crimes via post-mortems and scene work. Multi-part storylines follow cases from lab to arrest.

Created by Nigel McCrery, the long-running drama rotates lead pathologists while keeping a core team dynamic focused on science-driven detection.

‘This Old House’ (1979–)

'This Old House' (1979–)
This Old House Productions

PBS returns ‘This Old House’ on Thursday, September 25 with long-form renovations led by expert craftspeople. Episodes span demo to finish carpentry, plumbing, electrical, and energy upgrades with teachable breakdowns.

Companion segments cover tool know-how and shop visits, culminating in reveal walkthroughs that highlight craftsmanship and code-compliant improvements.

‘Alice in Borderland’ (2020–)

'Alice in Borderland' (2020–)
Robot Communications

Netflix’s ‘Alice in Borderland’ is back Thursday, September 25 with Arisu and Usagi facing new, deadly games in a deserted Tokyo. Based on Haro Aso’s manga, the live-action thriller stars Kento Yamazaki and Tao Tsuchiya.

The series balances puzzle mechanics, kinetic action, and moral dilemmas, with each game pushing alliances, betrayals, and revelations about the world’s design.

‘Special Forces: World’s Toughest Test’ (2023–)

'Special Forces: World’s Toughest Test' (2023–)
FOX

FOX’s ‘Special Forces: World’s Toughest Test’ returns Thursday, September 25, dropping celebrity recruits into condensed selection-style military training. Directing Staff cadre enforce pass-fail endurance, height, cold, and fear challenges.

The unscripted format strips away voting and eliminations — endurance or voluntary withdrawal are the only outcomes — while off-camera safety teams support high-risk evolutions.

‘English Teacher’ (2024–)

'English Teacher' (2024–)
FX Productions

FX’s ‘English Teacher’ returns Thursday, September 25, following Evan Marquez, a high-school teacher in Austin, Texas juggling personal, professional, and political pressures that shape classroom life.

Episodes mix staff-room dynamics, district policies, and student stories to explore how decisions ripple across a public-school community.

‘House of Guinness’ (2025–)

'House of Guinness' (2025–)
Kudos

On Thursday, September 25, Netflix premieres ‘House of Guinness’, a period drama set in 1868 Dublin where four heirs with dangerous secrets steer the brewery’s fate after their patriarch’s death. Family intrigue collides with business and reputation.

Production foregrounds Victorian Dublin and brewing operations while dramatizing succession battles and the costs of power.

‘Wayward’ (2025–)

'Wayward' (2025–)
Sphère Média

Netflix’s ‘Wayward’ arrives Thursday, September 25 as a limited series about a small-town cop who suspects a school for troubled teens — and its charismatic founder — hides darker intentions. The mystery builds from local unease to high-stakes investigation.

The show favors slow-burn tension, layered backstories, and visual mood, seeding clues and red herrings that pay off over a short run.

‘Barbara Walters: Tell Me Everything’ (2024–)

'Barbara Walters: Tell Me Everything' (2024–)
ABC News Studios

Airing Thursday, September 25 on ABC, ‘Barbara Walters Tell Me Everything’ surveys Walters’ pioneering broadcast-journalism career and the barriers she faced. The special uses archival interviews and contemporary commentary to chart her influence.

Segments explore sexism and ambition in network news while contextualizing how Walters reshaped high-stakes televised interviews with public figures.

‘The Red King’ (2024–)

'The Red King' (2024–)
Quay Street Productions

‘The Red King’ premieres Thursday, September 25 on AMC+, following Sgt. Grace Narayan to a remote island where a cold case and an eerie local religion unearth buried secrets. The folk-noir police drama blends procedure with unsettling myth.

As Narayan digs, community loyalties and ritual practices complicate every lead, steering the investigation toward a reckoning with the island’s past.

‘Cocaine Quarterback: Signal-Caller for the Cartel’ (2025–)

'Cocaine Quarterback: Signal-Caller for the Cartel' (2025–)
Unrealistic Ideas

Prime Video debuts this true-crime docuseries Thursday, September 25, chronicling Owen Hanson’s rise from USC football to drug-trafficking kingpin and the federal investigation that toppled his network.

Interviews and case records reconstruct operations and rivalries, connecting athletics fame to criminal opportunity and cross-border logistics employed by modern cartels.

’20/20′ (1978–)

'20/20' (1978–)
ABC News

ABC’s ’20/20′ returns Friday, September 26 with long-form true-crime and newsmagazine reporting. Correspondents anchor deep dives built from interviews, documents, and archival material.

Episodes frequently revisit cold cases or legal turns, bringing new context and updates as investigations and trials evolve.

‘Celebrity Wheel of Fortune’ (2021–)

'Celebrity Wheel of Fortune' (2021–)
Sony Pictures Television

ABC’s ‘Celebrity Wheel of Fortune’ spins back Friday, September 26, inviting celebrity players to solve word puzzles and donate winnings to chosen charities. Classic gameplay — Toss-Ups, Prize Puzzles, and the Bonus Round — remains intact.

Sony Pictures Television produces, with the prime-time hour adding playful banter and quick crowd beats to the familiar puzzleboard and wheel.

‘The Savant’ (2025–)

'The Savant' (2025–)
Freckle Films

Apple TV+ premieres ‘The Savant’ on Friday, September 26, following an undercover investigator who infiltrates online hate groups to prevent real-world violence. The thriller explores digital radicalization and the personal cost of deception.

Episodes pair procedural infiltration with serialized arcs built around encrypted channels, burner identities, and the line between online rhetoric and offline plots.

’48 Hours’ (1988–)

'48 Hours' (1988–)
CBS News Productions

CBS’s ’48 Hours’ returns Saturday, September 27 with crime and justice investigations that unpack complex cases via interviews, evidence walkthroughs, and law-enforcement perspectives.

Producers prioritize access to principals and documentation, often returning to stories as trials conclude or new evidence reshapes outcomes.

‘Unlocked: Family Secrets’ (2025–)

'Unlocked: Family Secrets' (2025–)
Unlocked: Family Secrets

OWN premieres ‘Unlocked: Family Secrets’ on Saturday, September 27, following six families as they confront long-buried truths and generational mysteries. Cameras capture facilitated conversations and personal archives.

The series tracks how revelations ripple through marriages, siblings, and parent-child relationships across episodes, allowing time for reflection or renewed conflict.

‘The Simpsons’ (1989–)

'The Simpsons' (1989–)
20th Century Fox Television

FOX brings back ‘The Simpsons’ on Sunday, September 28, continuing animated life in Springfield with Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa, and Maggie. Created by Matt Groening, the series comes from Gracie Films and 20th Television Animation.

The voice cast — including Dan Castellaneta, Julie Kavner, Nancy Cartwright, and Yeardley Smith — anchors satire of American life, peppered with guest voices from across entertainment and sports.

‘Bob’s Burgers’ (2011–)

'Bob’s Burgers' (2011–)
20th Century Fox Television

Also Sunday, September 28 on FOX, ‘Bob’s Burgers’ returns to the Belchers — Bob, Linda, Tina, Gene, and Louise — as family shenanigans intersect with running the burger joint. Created by Loren Bouchard, the series pairs original songs with character-driven comedy.

Voice leads H. Jon Benjamin, John Roberts, Dan Mintz, Eugene Mirman, and Kristen Schaal headline an ensemble of recurring neighborhood eccentrics and one-off guest appearances.

’60 Minutes’ (1968–)

'60 Minutes' (1968–)
CBS News Productions

CBS’s ’60 Minutes’ is back Sunday, September 28 with investigative reports, profiles, and international dispatches across politics, business, science, and culture. Veteran correspondents anchor each segment.

The magazine’s hallmark is rigorous reporting — interviews, documents, and field footage — shaped into concise narratives under its iconic ticking-stopwatch brand.

‘Sister Wives’ (2010–)

'Sister Wives' (2010–)
Advanced Medical Productions

TLC returns ‘Sister Wives’ on Sunday, September 28, chronicling Kody Brown’s plural family as relationships and logistics evolve across multiple households. The unscripted series tracks milestones and conflicts through interviews and day-in-the-life footage.

Long-form storytelling allows viewers to see choices reverberate across seasons, capturing shifting family dynamics and aspirations.

‘Krapopolis’ (2023–)

'Krapopolis' (2023–)
Bento Box Entertainment

FOX’s animated ‘Krapopolis’ returns Sunday, September 28, set in mythic ancient Greece where a family of humans, gods, and monsters tries to run a city. Created by Dan Harmon, the show riffs on classical tropes for modern civic satire.

The voice cast plays divine meddlers and monstrous neighbors whose schemes complicate city-building, with episodic plots skewering bureaucracy and hero worship.

‘Billy the Kid’ (2022–)

'Billy the Kid' (2022–)
Epix

MGM+ brings back ‘Billy the Kid’ on Sunday, September 28, following William H. Bonney’s journey from humble roots to frontier notoriety. Created by Michael Hirst, the Western explores alliances, rivalries, and territorial politics.

Wide-open landscapes frame shootouts and shifting loyalties while character-driven arcs track the outlaw’s relationships and the legend’s making.

‘Universal Basic Guys’ (2024–)

'Universal Basic Guys' (2024–)
Sony Pictures Television

FOX returns ‘Universal Basic Guys’ on Sunday, September 28, an adult animated sitcom from creators Adam and Craig Malamut about South Jersey factory workers placed into a universal-basic-income pilot after AI automation takes their jobs.

Episodes follow two brothers who receive $3,000 a month and a lot of free time, spinning workplace satire into misadventures with friends, family, and a neighborhood ensemble.

That’s the week! Which premieres are you queueing up first — and what did we miss in your lineup — drop your picks in the comments so everyone can compare notes.

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