‘Murdaugh: Death in the Family’ Tops Disney+’s Most-Watched Shows List This Week: Here Are the Remaining Top 10 Shows of the Week
Here’s a concise guide to what each series offers and how episodes are structured, so you can quickly decide what to watch next.
10. ‘Bluey’ (2018)

This animated series follows a Blue Heeler pup and her family as everyday moments turn into organized games with clear rules and goals. Episodes model play-based learning, turn-taking, and conflict resolution that kids can replicate at home. Short runtimes make it easy to stack multiple stories or drop in for a quick watch. Parents get grounded family-life scenarios that are easy to follow with or without previous episodes.
9. ‘Mickey’s Spooky Stories’ (2024)

This anthology delivers short, self-contained segments featuring familiar characters in gentle mystery setups. Each story pairs a simple problem—like a missing item or strange noise—with teamwork and step-by-step clues. Clear openings and wrap-ups make it easy for younger viewers to track what happened and why. The format works well for themed rewatching and mixed-age viewing.
8. ‘Modern Family’ (2009)

Presented in a mockumentary style, this sitcom follows three connected households managing school, work, and home logistics. Episodes typically run parallel A, B, and C plots that converge in tag scenes resolving the day’s mishaps. Talking-head cutaways provide context for character choices and timeline shifts. The structure allows viewers to jump into any episode without prior setup.
7. ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ (2005)

This medical drama tracks surgeons through emergency cases, surgical planning, and ethical decision-making across departments. Episodes balance patient-of-the-week stories with ongoing professional development and mentoring. Procedures highlight triage, diagnostics, and postoperative outcomes that shape later cases. The teaching-hospital setting keeps rotations, specialties, and leadership changes in clear view.
6. ‘Would You Marry Me?’ (2025)

This unscripted series follows couples weighing long-term commitment through milestone conversations and family introductions. Structured challenges surface compatibility around finances, communication, and planning. Experts and relatives provide outside perspectives that influence each couple’s next steps. Each episode ends on a defined decision point that clarifies where the relationship stands.
5. ‘Marvel Zombies’ (2025)

Set in a corner of the Marvel multiverse, this animated survival story maps safe zones, supply runs, and shifting alliances amid an expanding infection. Flashbacks explain how the outbreak spread and how factions formed. Action sequences apply character abilities to crowd-control, reconnaissance, and evacuation tasks. Continuity callouts connect events to adjacent Marvel storylines without requiring prior viewing.
4. ‘Chad Powers’ (2025)

This sports comedy uses a game-week arc—practice, game plan, kickoff—to organize campus and team storylines. Episodes examine recruiting protocols, eligibility rules, and locker-room dynamics around a latecomer to college football. Play segments track drives, field position, and coaching adjustments that set up the punchlines. Off-field scenes handle class schedules, media attention, and team policies.
3. ‘To Cook a Bear’ (2025)

Set in the 19th-century far north, this period mystery follows a pastor and an apprentice investigating violent deaths in a remote community. Episodes emphasize field forensics, regional customs, and methodical deduction as evidence is cataloged. Social hierarchies and local economies inform motives and access to resources. Case files progress through interviews, tracked movements, and reconstructed timelines.
2. ‘High Potential’ (2024)

This procedural dramedy centers on a single mom with exceptional pattern-recognition who assists police on complex cases. Each episode features a contained mystery with a clear trail of clues from initial suspicion to resolution. Family logistics and workplace rules provide constraints that shape her investigative choices. The format supports drop-in viewing while maintaining a throughline for character development.
1. ‘Murdaugh: Death in the Family’ (2025)

This true-crime docuseries examines a legal dynasty and the homicide investigation that drew national attention. It maps the timeline with interviews, court records, and archival footage from the first 911 call through the trials. Episodes identify key figures, evidence handling, and procedural steps across agencies. Viewers get a clear chronology that connects financial probes, indictments, and courtroom outcomes.
Tell us which of these you’re queuing up first this week in the comments!


