
Streaming Wednesday, April 22:
Criminal Record — In Season 2, a stabbing at a political rally has ominous implications for all of London. Terrorism? No, worse: One of the town takeaways is now a skewer short. (Apple TV)
Hulk Hogan: Real American — The last recorded interview with the wrestling legend is a highlight of this four-part documentary. Hear him recount in his own words the many highlights of his celebrated career. And also which minorities it’s safe to let your daughter date. (Netflix)
Lainey Wilson: Keepin’ Country Cool — The country superstar’s very own doc shows how she vaulted to the top of the charts from her humble beginnings in a trailer. But I don’t know what the big deal is, because it was the trailer to Hoppers and pretty much everybody saw it. (Netflix)
Santita — Paulina Dávila and Gael García Bernal headline the story of a wheelchair-bound Mexican woman who is determined to experience her first orgasm in two decades. Or as Ben Shapiro would call her, a selfish whore. (Netflix)
This Is a Gardening Show — Zach Galifianakis salutes Earth Day with a six-part miniseries about living with a green thumb. Meanwhile, over on Newsmax, Lindsey Graham is still out there living with a brown nose. (Netflix)

Streaming Thursday, April 23:
Flunked — A French ne’er-do-well agrees to go undercover as a high-school math teacher to help the police and keep himself out of jail. Gosh, remember when French teachers were on the up-and-up and just wanted to cop an innocent feel?(Netflix)
Running Point — Ray Romano joins the cast in Season 2, playing the new head coach of the underdog b-ball team the L.A. Waves. Look for his character to reappear in next season’s Untold: Everybody Loves Point Shaving. (Netflix)
Stranger Things: Tales From ’85 — The animated sequel to the streaming landmark is set after the events of Season 2, when we all thought Eleven had shut the gate to the Upside Down forever. But now we learn something slipped through first. And I think we all know what that means: the greatest threat to children since Chappell Roan discovered brunch. (Netflix)
The Trials of Winnie Mandela — The “Mother of the Nation” is recalled by her surviving family and others who knew her best, to form a more complete picture of her complicated legacy. Of course, “complicated” is what they call it when you’re on the right side of the cattle prod. On the business end, they just call it OH JESUS LADY FOR THE LOVE OF ALL THAT’S HOLY PLEASE STOP (Netflix)

Streaming Friday, April 24:
Apex — It’s Deliverance meets Cliffhanger as rock climber Charlize Theron tries to run from her troubles with an invigorating excursion to the Australian wilderness, only to find herself pursued by serial killer Taron Egerton. There was a warning in the brochure, but nobody reads past the part about wiping with poison oak. (Netflix)
Cochinas — The setting is the Mexico of 1998 as a woman fights to keep her family fed by launching the country’s first adult video store. See what breathtakingly original ideas you can come up with when you stumble across some used VHS copies of Clerks and Zack and Miri Make a Porno at the bodega? (Prime Video)
If Wishes Could Kill — Young adults are the target audience of a Korean series about a magic app that grants its users’ wishes but makes them pay with their lives. Which seems a lot more legit than promising to pay you in crypto for engagement. (Netflix)
Joe Bob’s Wicked Witchy Wingding — His Last Drive-In show may have gotten the ax, but Joe Bob still has to burn off his Shudder contract with four specials before he can depart for greener and more ghoulish pastures. This one’s a celebration of Walpurgisnacht, the German night of the witches. As usual, Joe Bob isn’t saying which movie he’s showing to mark the occasion; before you place a bet on Polymarket, remember Bezos has exclusive rights to Melania. (Shudder)
New Bandits — In the second season of the Brazilian crime drama, gang leader Ubaldo and his sisters have to balance a thirst for revenge with the demands of their faith. Which makes me wonder what in the heck religion they’re following that doesn’t thoroughly condone and support a thirst for revenge in the first place. Are they some sort of Buddhist crew or something? (Prime Video)
Supernova Strikers: Genesis — Sign in at 9 p.m. to watch a bunch of Mexican luminaries pummel one another in a multi-card amateur boxing event being streamed live from Azcapotzalco. It’s kind of like Celebrity Deathmatch, only nobody’s made out of clay. (Except for the country’s current teen heartthrob, one Adobe Gillis.) (Netflix)
Streaming Saturday, April 25:
UFC Fight Night: Sterling vs. Zalal — Prelims start at 5 p.m. ET with the main card following at 8, as former UFC bantamweight champ Aljamain Sterling and No. 7-ranked featherweight Youssef Zalal take to the ring in Vegas. Hey, remember when you could read a sentence like that and not immediately think “Nah, I’ll just wait to see what happens at the White House?” (Paramount+)
Streaming Monday, April 27:
Straight to Hell — Here’s a chance for Western audiences to learn all about Kazuko Hosoki, whose fortune-telling skills made her one of the celebrities of postwar Japan. The elevator pitch: What if Walter Mercado had been born 8,000 miles away and was slightly more butch? (Netflix)
Streaming Tuesday, April 28:
My Killer Father: The Green Hollow Murders — A cold case heats up again when an Iowa woman reveals she used to help bury bodies for her serial-killer dad. See, that was back when we understood chores build character. (Paramount+)
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This article appears in April 22-28, 2026.
