Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Showing Up’ on Paramount+, Another Intimate Character Study from Michelle Williams and Kelly Reichardt 'Priscilla' Comes to Digital, But When Will It Be Streaming on Max? The Rock Looks To Rebound From 'Black Adam' Flop By Signing On For An A24 UFC Movie Directed By Benny Safdie Is 'The Zone Of Interest' Streaming on Netflix or HBO Max? André Braugher: 'Brooklyn Nine-Nine' Star Dead At 61 What Time Will ‘Barbie’ Be on HBO Max? How to Watch ‘Barbie’ on Streaming Is 'American Fiction' Streaming on Netflix or HBO Max? ‘Brooklyn Nine-Nine’ Star Andre Braugher’s Cause Of Death Has Been Revealed Stream It Or Skip It: ‘The Bad Guys: A Very Bad Holiday’ on Netflix, a Modestly Clever IP-Spinoff Christmas Special Movie’ on Netflix, a Perfectly Fine Family Movie Further Proving That IP is King Stream It Or Skip It: ‘The Super Mario Bros. Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Baby Shark’s Big Movie!’ on Paramount+, a Feature-Length Animated Earworm (That Might Secretly Be A Commentary On Taylor Swift?!?) Where to Watch the 'Willy Wonka' Movies Before 'Wonka' Stream It or Skip It: 'Christmas on Cherry Lane' on Hallmark, Where Family is Born and Made on the Same Street Throughout Five Decades Rudolph, Frosty, and Santa, Oh My! How To Watch Every Rankin/Bass Christmas Film In 2023 Stream It or Skip It: 'Heaven Down Here' on Hallmark Movies & Mysteries, Where a Christmas Eve Snowstorm Changes Four Peoples' Lives Forever Shoutout to Adam Sandler’s adorable film “Leo,” which had the biggest debut ever for a Netflix animated movie (34.6 million views in its first six days).Stream It or Skip It: 'An Ice Palace Romance' on Hallmark Movies Now, Where a Small Town Ice Rink Sparks New Loves and Perspectives on Life Princess Diana (Elizabeth Debicki) in “The Crown” Season 6 Courtesy of Netflixīelow is the full set of Netflix’s Top 10 lists for the week of November 20. To crack the all-time English-language shows, a series would have to bump “Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story” (81.3 million views on 526.8 million hours viewed) to 11th place. That’s in large part due to the far greater rewatch-ability of scripted series. There are currently no unscripted shows on Netflix’s all-time Top 10. “Squid Game: The Challenge” had the most views in one week since Netflix began calculating views in mid-June 2023. Now the hierarchy favors “views” (hours viewed divided by runtime) and includes 91 days - about three months or one quarter of a year - of streaming. Netflix used to rank its all-time “Most Popular” content by hours viewed across a show or film’s first 28 days of availability. The closest foreign-language series to “Squid Game” is “Money Heist: Part 4,” which tallied 710.2 million hours viewed, or 106 million views. (With about half the total runtime of “Stranger Things” Season 4, “Wednesday” actually has more views: 252.1 million vs. ![]() Season 1 of the scripted Korean drama packed together more than 2.2 billion hours viewed within its first 91 days, or 265.2 million “views.” The only other shows to have reached - or passed - 1 billion hours viewed are English-language series “Stranger Things 4” (1.8 billion), “Wednesday: Season 1” (1.7 billion), and “Dahmer” (1 billion). “Squid Game” the narrative series remains Netflix’s most-watched show ever - and by a landslide. ![]() ![]() It puts everyone on the same timeline - you know, kind of like linear TV! It’s an effort to reduce spoilers, build momentum, and generally establish a fan community from scratch, a person with knowledge of Netflix’s thinking told IndieWire. Netflix stretched out fellow competitions “Love Is Blind,” “The Circle,” and “Rhythm & Flow” in much the same way. “But IndieWire,” you’re probably wondering, “doesn’t Netflix drop all of its episodes at once?” That’s the streamer’s default, sure, but not this time - and there is precedent. That’s when we’ll finally find out who won the $4.56 million dollars. The final episode, a “Batch” in and of itself, debuts on Wednesday, December 6. “ Squid Game: The Challenge” premiered the first five of its 10 episodes on November 22 - it’s what Netflix is referring to as “Batch 1.” The next four episodes, “Batch 2,” bow on Wednesday, November 29. Why Netflix Doesn’t License Its Own Content to Others
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