‘Wednesday’ Tops Netflix’s Weekly Most-Watched Shows List Once Again: Here Are the Remaining Top 10 Shows

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This week’s U.S. Top 10 is a lively mix of new seasons, timely documentaries, comfort-TV competition, a live sports juggernaut, and a couple of buzzy international imports. From supernatural sleuthing at Nevermore Academy to real-world romance-scam takedowns and a Spanish revenge thriller, there’s plenty to sample across genres.

Below, you’ll find quick, useful rundowns on each title: core plot setup, key cast and characters, and the creative minds behind the scenes. Per your request, we’re counting down from 10 to 1—while keeping the exact order of your original list.

10. ‘Orphan Black’ (2013–2017)

10. 'Orphan Black' (2013–2017)
Bell Media

‘Orphan Black’ opens with Sarah Manning witnessing a doppelgänger’s suicide and stepping into her identity, only to discover she’s one of many clones at the center of a conspiracy. Tatiana Maslany headlines as multiple distinct clones—including Sarah, Beth, Cosima, Alison, and Helena—supported by Jordan Gavaris (Felix), Dylan Bruce (Paul), Maria Doyle Kennedy (Mrs. S), Kevin Hanchard (Art), and others.

Co-created by Graeme Manson and John Fawcett, the Canadian series blends sci-fi, thriller, and character drama; it ran five seasons and earned Maslany an Emmy for her multifaceted performance. Production companies include Temple Street Productions, with U.S. broadcasting via BBC America at the time of its original run.

9. ‘Two Graves’ (2025)

9. 'Two Graves' (2025)
Sábado Películas

‘Two Graves’ is a Spanish limited series about a grandmother determined to uncover the truth after her 16-year-old granddaughter Verónica and a friend go missing from a coastal town. The thriller stars Kiti Mánver as Isabel, with Álvaro Morte as Rafael Salazar and Hovik Keuchkerian among the ensemble, as the search spirals into secrets and retribution.

Created by Agustín (Agustín) Martínez, the series assembles a strong Iberian cast; IMDb’s full credits list additional roles, while Netflix provides the official synopsis and primary billing.

8. ‘A Thousand Tomorrows’ (2023)

8. 'A Thousand Tomorrows' (2023)
Affirm Films

Adapted from Karen Kingsbury’s novel, ‘A Thousand Tomorrows’ follows bull rider Cody Gunnar and barrel racer Ali Daniels as they confront past traumas and the realities of Ali’s cystic fibrosis while forging a sacrificial love story set on the rodeo circuit. Colin Ford stars as Cody alongside Rose Reid as Ali, with Kate Easton, K.C. Clyde, Cole Sibus, and James Austin Kerr in supporting roles.

Kingsbury created and co-wrote the series (with Tyler Russell), with directing duties handled by Cassidy Lunnen and Kohl Glass across the six-episode run. Casting and episode credits confirm the creative team and character roster.

7. ‘Ms. Rachel’ (2025–present)

7. 'Ms. Rachel' (2025–present)
Netflix

‘Ms. Rachel’ features early-childhood educator Rachel Griffin Accurso leading interactive lessons with music and sign-backed speech to foster language development, phonemic awareness, and social-emotional learning. On-screen collaborators include Aron Accurso and Keisha Gilles across the show’s curated episodes for toddlers and preschoolers.

Created by Rachel Griffin Accurso with Aron Accurso, the series compiles research-informed segments—songs, repetition, and call-and-response—to support milestones like letter sounds, counting, and vocabulary growth.

6. ‘Love Con Revenge’ (2025)

6. 'Love Con Revenge' (2025)
Twenty Twenty Television

‘Love Con Revenge’ is a docuseries in which romance-scam survivor Cecilie Fjellhøy (of ‘The Tinder Swindler’) teams up with licensed private investigator Brianne Joseph to support victims and pursue accountability against con artists. Cases spotlight fake-identity schemes, military impersonation, and medical-crisis cons, tracking outcomes ranging from restitution orders to prison sentences.

The series features Fjellhøy and Joseph on-screen, with executive producers including Chris McLaughlin and Ruth Kelly and direction from Max Shapira, among others, across its six episodes.

5. ‘Raw’ (1993–present)

5. 'Raw' (1993–present)
WWE Home Video

‘Raw’ is WWE’s flagship weekly program blending in-ring matches with ongoing storylines. The Sept. 1, 2025 edition from Paris advanced several arcs, including Jimmy Uso aiding Jey Uso against Bronson Reed and Bron Breakker, a heated Becky Lynch–CM Punk confrontation, and Intercontinental Champion Dominik Mysterio retaining against AJ Styles with an assist from El Grande Americano.

The series showcases WWE Superstars across divisions with commentary, backstage segments, and recurring championship bouts. Netflix’s live presentation has included special start times for international shows like the Paris event while maintaining the show’s weekly cadence and marquee feuds.

4. ‘The Great British Bake Off’ (2010–present)

4. 'The Great British Bake Off' (2010–present)
Love Productions

‘The Great British Baking Show’ (known as ‘The Great British Bake Off’ in the U.K.) returns with Collection 13, featuring amateur bakers tackling weekly signature, technical, and showstopper challenges under the tent. Judges Paul Hollywood and Prue Leith preside, while Noel Fielding and Alison Hammond host.

Produced by Love Productions, the long-running competition remains a staple of feel-good reality TV, and Collection 13 introduces 12 new bakers from across the U.K., spanning careers from software engineering to medicine—all vying for the cake stand.

3. ‘Katrina: Come Hell and High Water’ (2025)

3. 'Katrina: Come Hell and High Water' (2025)
Message Pictures

‘Katrina: Come Hell and High Water’ is a three-part documentary revisiting Hurricane Katrina on its 20-year mark, centering survivors and leaders who shaped the response and recovery. On-camera voices include retired Lt. Gen. Russel Honoré, former New Orleans mayor Mitch Landrieu, and former police superintendent Eddie Compass.

The series is directed by Geeta Gandbhir, Samantha Knowles, and Spike Lee, with executive producers Spike Lee, Geeta Gandbhir, and Sam Pollard. Terence Blanchard provides the score; companies include 40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks and Message Pictures.

2. ‘My Life With the Walter Boys’ (2023–present)

2. 'My Life With the Walter Boys' (2023–present)
iGeneration Studios

Based on Ali Novak’s novel, ‘My Life With the Walter Boys’ follows Jackie Howard (Nikki Rodriguez), a New York teen who moves to rural Colorado to live with the Walter family after a tragedy, where she finds herself between brothers Cole (Noah LaLonde) and Alex (Ashby Gentry). Season 2 brings back Sarah Rafferty and Marc Blucas as Katherine and George, with additions like Jake Manley as rodeo up-and-comer Wylder Holt and Riele Downs as Maria.

The YA series was developed and is showrun by Melanie Halsall. It’s produced by Nomadic Pictures, iGeneration Studios, and Sony Pictures Television, with the ensemble rounded out by Corey Fogelmanis (Nathan), Zoë Soul (Hayley), Jaylan Evans (Skylar), Johnny Link (Will), and more.

1. ‘Wednesday’ (2022–present)

1. 'Wednesday' (2022–present)
MGM Television

The second season of ‘Wednesday’ returns to Nevermore Academy as Wednesday Addams navigates ominous new psychic visions while digging into another mystery that threatens her friends. Jenna Ortega leads as Wednesday Addams, with returning players Emma Myers (Enid), Hunter Doohan (Tyler), Joy Sunday (Bianca), Catherine Zeta-Jones (Morticia) and Luis Guzmán (Gomez). New faces include Steve Buscemi as Principal Dort and Christopher Lloyd as Professor Orloff, alongside appearances by Thandiwe Newton, Joanna Lumley, Billie Piper, and more.

Behind the camera, the series is created and run by Alfred Gough and Miles Millar, with Tim Burton continuing as executive producer and director alongside Angela Robinson and Paco Cabezas on directing duties this season. The show is produced by MGM Television.

Share your favorites from this week’s list—and what you’re watching next—in the comments!

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