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23 TV Shows You Can Binge-Watch in One Weekend and How to Stream Them

Don’t have time for all the TV? Here are 23 shows you can digest before Monday rolls around.

Binge-worthy TV shows for your weekend

The CableTV.com team watches television professionally, so it’s easy to forget sometimes that normal humans don’t have time for all the shows, movies, and sports we throw at them every week. With that in mind, we’ve compiled 23 short series that you could easily take in over a weekend.

1883 (Paramount+)

1883 (2021; 10 episodes, 44–67 minutes each)

If you want to cleanse your tear ducts over the weekend, binge all 10 episodes of 1883, the first Yellowstone prequel series. The therapeutic journey will take you over nine hours to complete, during which you’ll google the Dutton family tree multiple times and wonder why actor Isabel May hasn’t gone on to bigger things. Of course, don’t forget the tissues. Unless Brian Tyler’s hypnotically tragic music score gets stuck in your mind, you should recover emotionally by Monday. —Taylor Kujawa, CableTV.com Sports Editor

Where to watch 1883

Emmy Rossum in Angelyne (Peacock)
Angelyne (Peacock)

Angelyne (2022; 5 episodes, 42–52 minutes each)

In pre-internet ’80s Los Angeles, blonde bombshell Angelyne made herself (locally) famous by posting her busting-out image on billboards all over the city, a clever path to quasi-stardom long before influencer culture. Shameless star Emmy Rossum worked for years to bring her story to biopic life. Angelyne (with Rossum in the titular role) is a wild, dazzling, and partially fabricated ride that paints an ambiguous portrait of one of America’s reality-fame pioneers.

Where to watch Angelyne

Baby Reindeer (Netflix)
Baby Reindeer (Netflix)

Baby Reindeer (2024; 7 episodes, 27–45 minutes each)

In writer-creator Richard Gadd’s Baby Reindeer, traumatized struggling comedian Donny (Gadd) commits a simple act of kindness, landing himself in the 13th circle of stalker hell. In the resulting cat-and-mouse routine, manic, maniacal Martha (Jessica Gunning, The Outlaws) relentlessly pursues Donny (her “baby reindeer”), upending his life and dredging up his considerable past trauma. It’s a gripping, hysterical, and terrifying story—especially because it draws from Gadd’s real-life experience. You can blow through these seven half-hour episodes in one sitting. —Randy Harward, CableTV.com Senior Staff Writer

Where to watch Baby Reindeer

BlackBerry (IFC Films)
BlackBerry (IFC Films)

BlackBerry (2023; 3 episodes, 40–47 minutes each)

With Jay Baruchel and Glenn Howerton as nerdy BlackBerry phone co-inventor Mike Lazaridis and ruthless co-CEO Jim Balsillie, respectively, BlackBerry is a quick and cutting business biopic. Originally released as a movie, AMC expanded BlackBerry by 16 minutes and reconfigured it as a limited series for TV. The BlackBerry was the mobile device of the early 2000s (IYKYK)—until the iPhone’s debut and in-house treachery brought the company crashing down.

Where to watch BlackBerry

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Cooper's Bar (AMC+)
Cooper's Bar (AMC+)

Cooper’s Bar (2022; 12 episodes, 10–22 minutes each)

Veteran Hollywood character actor Cooper Marino (played by veteran Hollywood character actor Louis Mustillo) runs a secret bar in his Los Angeles backyard. When a studio exec (Better Call Saul’s Rhea Seehorn, also a show co-creator, director, and producer here) visits Cooper’s Bar, Cooper and his pals pitch her on an autobiographical comedy called Cooper’s Bar—it’s all very meta. The dryly funny Hollywood satire began as an online short before graduating to IFC.

Where to watch Cooper’s Bar

Crazyhead (Netflix)
Crazyhead (Netflix)

Crazyhead (2016; 6 episodes, 43–45 minutes each)

In British import Crazyhead, Amy (Cara Theobold) learns that she’s a “seer” who can identify the demon-possessed hiding among humans. She then forms an at-first rocky alliance with fellow seer-turned-hunter Raquel (Susan Wokoma), creating an instant Buffy the Vampire Slayer vibe of ass-kicking, wisecracking, and trauma-bonded female friendship. Crazyhead also boasts a killer soundtrack and, weirdly, some stunning public restrooms.

Where to watch Crazyhead

Cunk on Earth (Netflix)

Cunk on Earth (2022; 5 episodes, 28–29 minutes each)

Documentarian Philomena Cunk (Diane Morgan) gets history hysterically wrong at every turn with the deadliest deadpan delivery ever committed to film. Over five brisk episodes, Philomena navigates the dawn of humankind, the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, the rise of science, and the wages of world war, leaving no fact unflattened. Cunk on Earth is a mockumentary that at first seems legit because of the British accent and sweeping cinematography, but it’s just pure comedy.

Where to watch Cunk on Earth

Daughters of the Cult (Hulu)
Daughters of the Cult (Hulu)

Daughters of the Cult (2024; 5 episodes, 43–48 minutes each)

Known as the “Mormon Manson,” 1970s Church of the First Born Lamb of God leader Ervil LeBaron didn’t receive a proper documentary treatment until 2024’s Daughters of the Cult. The brutal “prophet” had 13 wives, most of whom were underage, and he ordered them to carry out the “blood atonement” murders of 20 rivals—even after he died in prison in 1981. Surviving ex-members tell the story, which makes for one of the most harrowing religious-cult docuseries yet.

Where to watch Daughters of the Cult

Dead Boy Detectives (Netflix)
Dead Boy Detectives (Netflix)

Dead Boy Detectives (2024; 8 episodes, 52–56 minutes each)

Dead Boy Detectives is sort of like The Sandman’s cool teen sibling. It takes place in the same universe, inspired by the DC Comics series, but follows a group of teenagers solving supernatural mysteries and facing off against ghosts, witches, and metaphysical bureaucracy. Fair warning: It’s nothing like the backdoor pilot from season 3 of Doom Patrol. Netflix recast the leads, Charles, Edwin, and Crystal, when they acquired the rights from Warner Bros. Discovery. —Olivia Bono, CableTV.com Staff Writer

Where to watch Dead Boy Detectives

Four well-dressed nobles, a servant, and a doctor take refuge in a fancy villa. One noblewoman is on her knees in a position of prayer, and everyone else looks surprised.
The Decameron (Netflix)

The Decameron (2024; 8 episodes, 48–59 minutes each)

Are we far enough from the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic that we can start making fun of it? Netflix’s The Decameron reimagines a 14th century Italian classic as a dark comedy about inequality, love, and the plague. On the outside, it’s the story of a handful of medieval nobles vacationing in their friend’s opulent villa, but the vibes turn “hiding from the zombie apocalypse at the end of the world” pretty quickly. Except the “zombies” are just the disease-ridden poor. Unprecedented times, indeed. —Olivia Bono, CableTV.com Staff Writer

Where to watch The Decameron

Everyone Else Burns (The CW)
Everyone Else Burns (The CW)

Everyone Else Burns (2023; 6 episodes, 21 minutes each)

British comedy Everyone Else Burns follows the Mancunian family, a puritanical Christian clan devoted to preparing for Armageddon while avoiding the temptations of the modern world. That’s easy for bowl-cut patriarch David (Simon Bird), but not so much for his children (Harry Connor and Amy James-Kelly), who have to attend school with the normies. Everyone Else Burns walks a fine line in not being critical of religion while still being funny as … heck. A doomsday cult comedy feels right right about now.

Where to watch Everyone Else Burns

Exploding Kittens (Netflix)
Exploding Kittens (Netflix)

Exploding Kittens (2024; 10 episodes, 24–27 minutes each)

Based on the popular card game from The Oatmeal’s Matthew Inman and produced by the King of the Hill team of Greg Daniels and Mike Judge, Exploding Kittens is 2024’s fastest and funniest cartoon. God (voiced by Lucifer’s Tom Ellis, oddly enough) is banished to Earth as a housecat to reconnect with humankind. Meanwhile, the Devil (Sasheer Zamata) lives right next door and is also a housecat. Will these chonky kitties wage holy war or become BFFs? Yes, and yes.

Where to watch Exploding Kittens

High Desert (Apple TV+)
High Desert (Apple TV+)

High Desert (2023; 8 episodes, 30 minutes each)

Directed by Jay Roach (Austin Powers) and starring Patricia Arquette, quirky amateur-detective series High Desert didn’t catch on like Poker Face did before it. In the small desert town of Yucca Valley, California, recovering addict and general hot mess Peggy (Arquette) decides to become a private investigator following the death of her mother. With a sweet dune buggy and the reluctant mentorship of a real detective (Brad Garrett), Peggy stumbles into an actual crime.

Where to watch High Desert

Jury Duty (Freevee)
Jury Duty (Freevee)

Jury Duty (2023; 8 episodes, 26–29 minutes each)

If you haven’t yet experienced the hilarious and unexpected delight that is Jury Duty, let me be the first to recommend you take a seat in this comedic courtroom. In this show, we get to watch behind the scenes of mundane jury service, or so we think. Spoiler alert: It’s not mundane at all—every jury member is an actor except one. And the best part is that throughout all of the funny and cringy moments of the fake trial, we all come to love the one person not in on the ruse, juror Ronald Gladden. —Chantel Buchi, CableTV.com Senior Staff Writer

Where to watch Jury Duty

The Little Drummer Girl (AMC+)
The Little Drummer Girl (AMC+)

The Little Drummer Girl (2018; 6 episodes, 60 minutes each)

The first role that hinted at Florence Pugh’s vast potential as an actor, The Little Drummer Girl is also one of the best adaptations of espionage novelist John le Carré’s works. In 1979, an aspiring British actress (Pugh) is recruited by a Mossad agent (Alexander Skarsgård) to infiltrate a Palestinian terrorist group planning attacks in Europe. The Little Drummer Girl is a six-episode slow burn that glides on the performances of Pugh, Skarsgård, and Michael Shannon, and the lush direction of Park Chan-wook.

Where to watch The Little Drummer Girl

The cast of HBO series Los Espookys
Los Espookys (Max)

Los Espookys (2019–2022; 12 episodes, 25–28 minutes each)

If you’ve been charmed by Julio Torres’ series Fantasmas and his movie Problemista recently, you’ll want to check out his previous co-creation, Los Espookys. The series, about a group of young friends in an undisclosed Latin American country who stage supernatural-themed events for hire (exorcisms, sea monsters, alien abductions, etc.), is an utterly unique Spanish/English comedy. Los Espookys even won a Peabody Award in 2022 before it was canceled.

Where to watch Los Espookys

Mare of Easttown (HBO)
Mare of Easttown (HBO)

Mare of Easttown (2021; 7 episodes, 58–66 minutes each)

Kate Winslet stars as Marianne “Mare” Sheehan, an Easttown, Pennsylvania, police detective investigating the murder of one young woman and the disappearance of another. As per small-town murder mystery rules, Mare’s personal life is a mess piled up like a stack of empty Rolling Rock bottles, and most of her case leads are dead ends. Winslet, Julianne Nicholson, and Evan Peters won Emmys for Mare of Easttown, and the series enjoyed near-universal critical acclaim (especially for the Philly accents).

Where to watch Mare of Easttown

Minx (Starz)
Minx (Starz)

Minx (2022–2023; 18 episodes, 25–35 minutes each)

In 1970s Los Angeles, young feminist Joyce (Ophelia Lovibond, Guardians of the Galaxy) teams up with a sketchy publisher (Jake Johnson, New Girl) to create the second erotic magazine for women. (Playgirl already existed in the ’70s, but Minx forged on.) The Paul Feig-produced Minx also stars Jessica Lowe, Oscar Montoya, Lennon Parham, Michael Angarano, Idara Victor, and Gillian Jacobs. FYI, the dramedy contains copious amounts of male nudity and was canceled by both Max and STARZ.

Where to watch Minx

My Lady Jane (Prime Video)
My Lady Jane (Prime Video)

My Lady Jane (2024; 8 episodes, 46–52 minutes each)

Historical romance is really having a moment right now, from Outlander to Bridgerton. My Lady Jane takes viewers back to the 1500s—and the aftermath of Henry VIII’s death—as out-of-touch Tudors battle for the English throne. It puts a comedic spin on medieval fantasy, a la Ella Enchanted and The Princess Bride. Oh yeah, did I mention it’s a fantasy story? Rather than Catholics vs. Protestants, the dispute over succession is all about hot, shape-shifting animal people who live in the woods. Is TV good again? —Olivia Bono, CableTV.com Staff Writer

Where to watch My Lady Jane

Peacemaker (Max)
Peacemaker (Max)

Peacemaker (2022; 8 episodes, 39–47 minutes each)

John Cena reprises his role from 2021’s The Suicide Squad as Peacemaker, the most erroneously named “hero” in the DC Universe. (Mayhemmaker would be more accurate, if not pronounceable.) Writer/director James Gunn is also back, penning all eight episodes of this action-comedy that reveals the origin story of Peacemaker, the man who “loves peace, no matter how many men, women, and children I need to kill to get it.” Bonus: a headbanging hair-metal soundtrack.

Where to watch Peacemaker

The Perfect Couple (Netflix)
The Perfect Couple (Netflix)

The Perfect Couple (2024; 6 episodes, 42–63 minutes each)

If you ate up Big Little Lies, Nine Perfect Strangers, Apples Never Fall, Little Fires Everywhere, and The Undoing, you’re likely a fan of frothy family dramas and/or Nicole Kidman. She also stars in The Perfect Couple, Netflix’s adaptation of Elin Hilderbrand’s 2018 novel, along with Liev Schreiber, Meghann Fahy, Eve Hewson, and Dakota Fanning. Picturesque Nantucket nuptials are ruined when one of the wedding party guests washes up on the beach dead—but whodunnit? Also, The Perfect Couple has more of a sense of humor than the usual streaming murder-mystery fare.

Where to watch The Perfect Couple

Tin Man (Syfy)
Tin Man (Syfy)

Tin Man (2007; 3 episodes, 90 minutes each)

Back when Syfy was the Sci-Fi Channel and actually spent big bucks on big events, the network launched an epic steampunk reimagining of The Wizard of Oz in Tin Man, a three-part miniseries. Small-town waitress D.G. (Zoey Deschanel as Dorothy) travels to the O.Z. (Outer Zone), where she meets Glitch (Alan Cumming as the Scarecrow), Wyatt (Neal McDonough as the Tin Woodman), and Raw (Raoul Trujillo as the Cowardly Lion). Tin Man is darker than Oz, but still a fun new angle on an old favorite.

Where to watch Tin Man

Wolf Hall (BBC)
Wolf Hall (BBC)

Wolf Hall (2015; 6 episodes, 60–65 minutes each)

You don’t need to be a history buff to relish in the subdued drama of Wolf Hall. Adapted from Hilary Mantel’s novels, Wolf Hall centers on the cool and calculating Thomas Cromwell (Mark Rylance) as he rises to the position of King Henry VIII’s (Damian Lewis) closest advisor. What becomes of Cromwell after (500-year-old spoiler alert) Anne Boleyn’s (Claire Foy) execution? The show’s second and final season will eventually answer the question: Can anyone make it out of Henry’s court alive? —Logan Jones, CableTV.com Junior Staff Writer

Where to watch Wolf Hall

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