‘The Summer I Turned Pretty’ Is Back as Amazon Prime’s Most-Watched Show of the Week: Here Are the Remaining Top 10 Shows
If your watchlist is bursting at the seams right now, you’re not alone. From campus-set super-antics and military thrillers to soapy newsroom shake-ups and a breakout band on the rise, Prime Video has something for every mood this week. Below, you’ll find the buzzy mix everyone’s streaming—some brand-new, some newly trending again, and all drawing big attention on Prime.
We’re counting down from 10 to 1. Each entry includes quick-hit details—what it’s about, who’s in it, and the key creative leads behind the scenes—so you can jump straight to the ones that match your vibe tonight.
10. ‘The Chosen’ (2019– )

This historical drama depicts the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth through the lives of those who followed him, tracing the personal journeys of the apostles and other figures from the Gospels. Jonathan Roumie stars as Jesus, with Shahar Isaac as Simon Peter, Paras Patel as Matthew, Elizabeth Tabish as Mary Magdalene, and other ensemble performers recurring across seasons.
Created, directed, and co-written by Dallas Jenkins, the series originated as an independent production and later partnered with distributors for broader reach, including streaming windows on Prime Video alongside other platforms. Multi-season arcs and occasional theatrical event releases have expanded its audience while maintaining a serialized narrative approach.
9. ‘We Were Liars’ (2025– )

Adapted from E. Lockhart’s bestselling novel, this psychological thriller centers on Cadence Sinclair Eastman and the summers she spends on her wealthy family’s private island, where a traumatic event forces her to unravel fragmented memories. The cast includes Emily Alyn Lind as Cadence, with Caitlin FitzGerald, Mamie Gummer, David Morse, and Candice King portraying members of the Sinclair clan.
Developed for Prime Video by Julie Plec and Carina Adly MacKenzie, the series is produced with Amazon MGM Studios and Universal Television. The creative team uses a puzzle-box structure faithful to the book’s perspective shifts, with directors and editors emphasizing unreliable narration and late-episode reveals.
8. ‘The Runarounds’ (2025– )

This music-drama follows a fledgling band chasing gigs, writing original tracks, and navigating friendship and first brushes with the industry after high school graduation. The core ensemble features William Lipton, Axel Ellis, Jesse Golliher, and Zendé Murdock as the bandmates whose rehearsals, road trips, and small-venue sets drive the story.
Created by Jonas Pate for Prime Video, the series blends performance sequences with character-driven arcs about collaboration and creative pressure. Season direction and writing come from a rotating team under Pate’s lead, shaping a track-list-like episode flow that mirrors the group’s evolving sound.
7. ‘The Morning Show’ (2019– )

Set behind the scenes of a major U.S. morning news program, this drama tracks the professional and personal fallout facing its anchors and producers. Jennifer Aniston stars as Alex Levy and Reese Witherspoon as Bradley Jackson, with Billy Crudup, Mark Duplass, Néstor Carbonell, Karen Pittman, and Greta Lee among the ensemble.
Originally created by Jay Carson and developed by Kerry Ehrin, the series features executive producers including Aniston, Witherspoon, Michael Ellenberg, and Mimi Leder, who also directs multiple episodes. The show streams on Apple TV+, and in some regions viewers access it via add-on channel options alongside other subscriptions.
6. ‘The Terminal List’ (2022– )

This action-thriller follows Navy SEAL James Reece after an ambush leaves his platoon decimated, sending him on a mission to uncover a conspiracy that reaches from the battlefield to boardrooms. Chris Pratt stars as Reece, with Constance Wu as investigative journalist Katie Buranek, Taylor Kitsch as Ben Edwards, Riley Keough as Lauren Reece, and Jeanne Tripplehorn as Secretary Hartley.
Created by David DiGilio and adapted from Jack Carr’s bestseller, the series is produced by Amazon MGM Studios and Sony Pictures Television. Directors across the season include Antoine Fuqua and Frederick E. O. Toye, with military advisors contributing to the show’s tactics and hardware authenticity.
5. ‘Countdown’ (2019)

In this tech-tinged horror film, a nurse downloads an app that predicts users’ time of death and discovers she has only days to live, pushing her to outsmart a malevolent force behind the code. Elizabeth Lail stars as Quinn Harris, joined by Jordan Calloway, Talitha Bateman, Tichina Arnold, P. J. Byrne, and Peter Facinelli.
Written and directed by Justin Dec, the feature was produced by Boies/Schiller Film Group with music by Danny Bensi and Saunder Jurriaans and cinematography by Maxime Alexandre. After its theatrical run, it found a broad streaming audience for late-night scares and urban-legend thrills.
4. ‘The Girlfriend’ (2025)

A psychological thriller, ‘The Girlfriend’ follows a family upended when a mother becomes suspicious of her son’s enigmatic new partner, setting off a chain of escalating confrontations. The limited series stars Robin Wright and Olivia Cooke, with Laurie Davidson and Waleed Zuaiter in key supporting roles across six episodes.
Created by Naomi Sheldon and Gabbie Asher, the series was produced for Prime Video by The Imaginarium and Amazon MGM Studios. Episodes include directing from Robin Wright and Andrea Harkin, with the creative team shaping a tightly wound narrative driven by shifting loyalties and unreliable accounts.
3. ‘The Terminal List: Dark Wolf’ (2025– )

This prequel spin-off centers on Navy SEAL Ben Edwards in the covert-ops years before the events of ‘The Terminal List’. Taylor Kitsch returns as Edwards, with franchise ties through appearances from Chris Pratt’s James Reece and additional cast that includes Tom Hopper.
Developed within the same production umbrella as the flagship series, the show draws on characters from Jack Carr’s novels. Executive producers include Chris Pratt, Antoine Fuqua, and David DiGilio, with Amazon MGM Studios and Sony Pictures Television steering the military-thriller staging and tactical set-pieces.
2. ‘Gen V’ (2023– )

Set in the universe of ‘The Boys’, this series takes place at Godolkin University, a Vought-run college where young Supes train for fame and brand deals as much as for heroics. Jaz Sinclair leads as Marie Moreau, with Lizze Broadway as Emma Meyer, Chance Perdomo as Andre Anderson, Maddie Phillips as Cate Dunlap, and London Thor and Derek Luh sharing the role of Jordan Li.
The show was developed by Craig Rosenberg, Eric Kripke, and Evan Goldberg, with Michele Fazekas and Tara Butters as showrunners. Produced by Sony Pictures Television and Amazon MGM Studios, it features crossovers and guest appearances from ‘The Boys’, expanding characters and storylines introduced in the comics by Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson.
1. ‘The Summer I Turned Pretty’ (2022–2025)

This coming-of-age drama follows Belly Conklin through sun-drenched summers at Cousins Beach and a complicated love triangle with brothers Conrad and Jeremiah. The series is based on Jenny Han’s novel trilogy and stars Lola Tung as Isabel “Belly” Conklin, Christopher Briney as Conrad Fisher, and Gavin Casalegno as Jeremiah Fisher, with Sean Kaufman, Jackie Chung, and Rachel Blanchard rounding out the Fisher-Conklin family circle.
Jenny Han created the show for Prime Video and serves as executive producer, with episodes written by Han and collaborators including Sarah Kucserka and Gabrielle Stanton. Direction across the seasons includes work by Jessika Borsiczky, Jeff Chan, and others, with Amazon MGM Studios and wiip among the producers.
Share your current favorites from this week’s list—and what we should queue up next—in the comments!


