Tuesday 3 July 2018

The 13 most popular TV shows and how you can watch them (July)

The 13 most popular TV shows and how you can watch them (July)

Link to US – The Official Roku Blog

The 13 most popular TV shows and how you can watch them (July)

Posted: 02 Jul 2018 04:54 PM PDT

These are the 13 most popular TV shows right now according to our friends over at Rotten Tomatoes. Add one (or all) of these to your streaming list so you can stay up to date on the shows everyone is talking about.

What's the best show you're currently streaming? Let us know in the comments below!

1. Marvel’s Luke Cage (Season 2) | Netflix

When a sabotaged experiment gives him super strength and unbreakable skin, Luke Cage becomes a fugitive attempting to rebuild his life in Harlem and must soon confront his past and fight a battle for the heart of his city.

2. Westworld (Season 2) | HBO NOW

A sci-fi drama set in an Old West theme park where guests interact with automatons in scenarios that are developed, overseen and scripted by the park's creative, security and quality assurance departments. Based on the 1973 feature film directorial debut by Michael Crichton.

3. Marvel’s Cloak and Dagger (Season 1) | Freeform (5 episodes free), Prime Video, FandangoNOW, Vudu, Hulu

Two teenagers from very different backgrounds find themselves burdened and awakened to newly acquired superpowers while falling in love.

4. Cobra Kai (Season 1) | YouTube Red via YouTube TV

Set thirty years after the events of the 1984 All Valley Karate Tournament, the series focuses on Johnny Lawrence reopening the Cobra Kai dojo, which causes his rivalry with Daniel LaRusso to be reignited.

5. Vida (Season 1) | STARZ

A drama series focusing on two Mexican-American sisters from the Eastside of Los Angeles who couldn't be more different or distanced from each other. Circumstances force them to return to their old neighborhood, where they are confronted by the past and surprising truth about their mother's identity.

6. The Handmaid’s Tale (Season 2) | Hulu

Set in a dystopian future, a woman is forced to live as a concubine under a fundamentalist theocratic dictatorship.

7. Yellowstone (Season 1) | Paramount Network, Prime Video, Vudu

A ranching family in Montana faces off against others encroaching on their land.

8. The Staircase (Season 1) | Netflix

Michael Iver Peterson, an American novelist convicted in 2003 of murdering his second wife, Kathleen, sees his life go under the microscope in this award winning true crime series by Netflix.

9. The Expanse (Season 3) | SYFY, Prime Video, FandangoNOW, and Vudu

Picking up immediately following the emotional and suspenseful second season finale, the 13-episode third season finds Earth, Mars and The Belt at war, with each competing entity vying for control. Now, more than ever, the mission to unlock the secret of the protomolecule reaches an all-time high and every decision made could jeopardize the survival of the solar system.

10. Goliath (Season 2) | Prime Video

A disgraced lawyer, now an ambulance chaser, gets a case that could bring him redemption or at least revenge on the firm which expelled him.

11. Pose (Season 1) | FOX Now, Prime Video, FandangoNOW, Vudu

Set in the 1980s, Pose explores the juxtaposition of several segments of life and society in New York: the ball culture world, the rise of the luxury Trump-era universe and the downtown social and literary scene. Evan Peters and Kate Mara play New Jersey couple "Stan" and "Patty," who get sucked into the glamour and intrigue of New York City in the 1980s. James Van Der Beek plays Peters' financial kingpin boss "Matt."

12. Endeavour (Series 5) | PBS (5 episodes free)

Set in the 1960s, the show follows Endeavour Morse in his early years as a police constable. Working alongside his senior partner DI Fred Thursday, Morse engages in a number of investigations around Oxford.

13. Succession (Season 1) | HBO NOW

Succession follows a dysfunctional American global-media family.

Happy Streaming!

The post The 13 most popular TV shows and how you can watch them (July) appeared first on The Official Roku Blog.

No comments:

Post a Comment