If your queue is packed and you’re trying to figure out what to play next, we’ve pulled together a quick-hit guide to what everyone’s streaming right now. Below you’ll find the essentials for each title—what it’s about, who’s in it, and the key creative names behind the scenes—so you can jump in without a lot of scrolling.
We’re counting down from ten to one using the list you provided. Each entry includes concise plot context plus cast and creator details, so you can spot your favorites at a glance and sample something new with confidence.
10. ‘General Hospital’ (1963)

This daytime soap opera chronicles the intertwined lives of residents in the fictional town of Port Charles, centered historically on its namesake hospital. Created by Frank and Doris Hursley, the series has aired continuously on ABC since the early 1960s and holds longevity records across daytime drama, with Frank Valentini serving as executive producer in recent years.
The production has shifted formats and runtimes over decades while introducing generations of characters, families, and long-running storylines that intersect medicine, crime, and romance. It celebrated a landmark 15,000th episode and continues to film in Los Angeles at The Prospect Studios.
9. ‘9-1-1: Nashville’ (2025)

Set in Music City, this newest entry in the ‘9-1-1’ franchise follows Fire Captain Don Hart, played by Chris O’Donnell, whose family dynamics collide with high-stakes first-responder rescues across Nashville. The franchise originates from creators Ryan Murphy, Brad Falchuk, and Tim Minear; the spinoff’s showrunner is Rashad Raisani. The cast includes Jessica Capshaw, Hunter McVey, Michael Provost, Hailey Kilgore, Juani Feliz, and Kimberly Williams-Paisley, with appearances by local music figures.
Episodes feature large-scale set pieces filmed on location, and air on ABC with streaming availability the following day. Early coverage highlights the premiere’s tornado storyline and the series’ blend of personal drama with outsized rescue sequences.
8. ‘Only Murders in the Building’ (2021)

A mystery-comedy about three neighbors—played by Steve Martin, Martin Short, and Selena Gomez—who start a true-crime podcast while investigating deaths connected to their Upper West Side building, the Arconia. Co-created by Steve Martin and John Hoffman, the series is produced by 20th Television with executive producers including Martin, Short, Hoffman, and Dan Fogelman.
The show debuted with weekly releases and has continued through multiple seasons with high-profile guest stars. Its latest season premiered in September with a 10-episode run and a Tuesday drop schedule on the streaming platform.
7. ‘Doc’ (2025)

An adaptation of the Italian medical drama ‘Doc – Nelle tue mani’, the series follows Dr. Amy Larsen, a respected physician who must rebuild her life and career after memory loss erases years of personal and professional history. Molly Parker stars as Amy, alongside Omar Metwally, Jon Ecker, Amirah Vann, and Anya Banerjee. Developed by Barbie Kligman, the show is produced by Sony Pictures Television and related partners.
Season 2 expanded the ensemble with promotions and additions while continuing serialized cases tied to Amy’s past and hospital politics. Production is based in Toronto, with a full-season order reflecting a push for longer-running medical procedurals on U.S. broadcast.
6. ‘The Golden Bachelor’ (2023)

A ‘Bachelor’ franchise spinoff focused on older adults seeking companionship, the debut season starred Gerry Turner as the lead, with Jesse Palmer hosting. Filming took place in Los Angeles with travel segments, and the show’s scheduling shifted to fill gaps created by industry strikes during its first year.
The format mirrors the flagship series—night-one introductions, group and one-on-one dates, and rose ceremonies—while tailoring activities and conversations to the cast’s life stages and experiences, under the broader Bachelor Nation production umbrella.
5. ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ (2005)

A medical drama set around surgeons whose careers and personal lives intersect at a Seattle hospital, anchored historically by characters like Meredith Grey and Miranda Bailey. The series was created by Shonda Rhimes and has featured a large rotating ensemble cast over its run.
Premiering in the mid-2000s, the show became a flagship primetime staple with season-spanning medical arcs, disaster episodes, and character-centric narratives, produced by Shondaland and ABC’s studio units.
4. ‘Dancing with the Stars’ (2005)

The long-running competition pairs celebrities with pro dancers for weekly ballroom routines scored by a judges’ panel and audience votes. Hosting duties in recent seasons have been handled by Alfonso Ribeiro alongside Julianne Hough, with judges Carrie Ann Inaba, Derek Hough, and Bruno Tonioli. Produced by BBC Studios Los Angeles, the format is adapted from the U.K.’s ‘Strictly Come Dancing’.
Live episodes showcase styles from cha-cha to Viennese waltz, with eliminations based on combined scores. The series has logged more than 30 seasons and 500 episodes, with multi-camera direction and a live orchestra in earlier years giving way to evolving production approaches.
3. ‘Abbott Elementary’ (2021)

A mockumentary workplace comedy set in a cash-strapped public school in West Philadelphia, following second-grade teacher Janine Teagues (Quinta Brunson) and her colleagues. The ensemble features Tyler James Williams, Janelle James, Lisa Ann Walter, Chris Perfetti, William Stanford Davis, and Sheryl Lee Ralph. The series was created by Brunson for ABC.
Shot single-camera style, the show balances school-wide crises with classroom-level victories, with executive producers including Randall Einhorn, Justin Halpern, Patrick Schumacker, and Brunson. It releases in traditional broadcast cycles with episodes arriving to stream after airing.
2. ‘Reasonable Doubt’ (2022)

This legal drama follows high-powered Los Angeles defense attorney Jax Stewart, played by Emayatzy Corinealdi, as she navigates ethically thorny cases and complicated relationships. The ensemble includes Michael Ealy, Morris Chestnut, McKinley Freeman, and Tim Jo. The series was created by Raamla Mohamed and produced through Onyx Collective, with Mohamed and Kerry Washington among the executive producers; Washington also directed the pilot.
Season 2 expanded the cast and arcs around Jax’s personal stakes and high-profile clients, and the show has been renewed again with new episodes slated on a weekly rollout. Across seasons, the cases draw from contemporary issues while keeping the focus on strategy inside and outside the courtroom.
1. ‘High Potential’ (2024)

A crime drama centered on Morgan Gillory, a single mom with a 160 IQ whose off-the-wall deductions land her a job as a civilian consultant with the LAPD’s Major Crimes Division. Kaitlin Olson leads as Morgan, with Daniel Sunjata as detective Adam Karadec and Judy Reyes as unit head Selena Soto. The show was created for ABC by Drew Goddard and is based on the French–Belgian series ‘HPI’.
Todd Harthan serves as showrunner, with executive producers including Goddard and Rob Thomas. The series launched in mid-September and was quickly renewed, continuing with weekly cases that blend puzzle-box storytelling with character-driven beats.
What did we miss—and which of these are you watching right now? Share your picks in the comments and tell us what should be next in the queue.