What to Stream on TV This Week: ‘The Residence,’ ‘Wicked’ and More
If you’re craving for stories of real crime and sensational reality news, you’re lucky: This week’s new profession falls Streaming platform With a large amount of ship content. (This is “based on the real story.”) On Hulu, you can grab a good American family, dramatizing the Natalia Grace case, and on Max, you can be familiar with Karen Read’s polarization story, the woman allegedly murdering her boyfriend in the snow, who killed her boyfriend in the snow: Karen’s trial: Karen’s trial.
Meanwhile, on Netflix, you can capture the new mysterious series The Residence, starring Orange, Uzo Aduma of the new Black, and the new Korean psychological thriller Apocalypse from the creator of the supernatural fantasy series Hellbound.
There are some lighter things, and a little more…Anti-gravity…The Evil is about to arrive on streaming this week, so if you haven’t seen it, it’s time.
These titles and more are coming soon. Here is all the information you need to listen to this week.
Read more: Best streaming services in 2025
The best new TV shows and movies
(March 17-23)
Netflix
The new mystery of Netflix will surely be interesting. Eight episodes of the show focus on a mysterious death, and a murder investigation took place at a state dinner held at the White House. Uzo Aduba plays the role of detective Cordelia Cupp, who investigates the staff and personnel working locally. The cast is filled with incredible comedians and character actors including Ken Marino, Jane Curtin, Giancarlo Esposito and Randall Park. Andre Braugher was originally the role of Esposito as the White House principal Esposito, but Esposito was played after Braugher’s outdated death in 2023. The show is scheduled to arrive on Netflix on March 20.
Yeon Sang-Ho and Choi Gyu-Seok, creators of Netflix’s exciting Hellbound series, return to their latest project, a feature-length film, Apocalypse. The film by the performer produced by Alfonso Cuarón is focusing on investigating missing persons. As a local pastor, Sung Min-chan investigates the crime with the desire to punish the perpetrators, while the detective Lee Yeon-hui (Lee Yeon-Hui) in the case was troubled by personal trauma, which also affected his investigation. The film will arrive on March 21 with Ryu Jun-Yeol, Shin Hyun-Been and Shin Min-jae stars.
Hu Lu
Good American Family (March 19)
Starring Ellen Pompeo and Mark Duplass’ Good American Family is a Hulu Limited series based on the true story of Natalia Grace. Grace’s story is the adopter of the Dwarf, the subject of the allegations that she was a child who was a grown-up, was told in several documentaries and received television treatment in this version. Two episodes of the series are scheduled to premiere on March 19, with new episodes going on weekly thereafter.
Sean Baker’s backup film Anora, which swept this year’s Oscars, is one of the lowest-grossing best-film champions at the box office, but hopefully it will have more gazes on Hulu. The film follows a sex worker (Best Actress Winner Mikey Madison), who married the son of a Russian oligarch and was pulled into some tragic family drama, arrives in Hulu on March 17.
Peacock
Evil and evil singing (March 21)
The Oscar-winning phenomenon of evil directed by John Chu will be exclusively broadcast on the peacock, and you can watch the sing version in addition to the regular movies. When you try to hit the treble of Cynthia Erivo, just make sure the windows are closed. Two versions of the film will be on the Peacock on March 21.
Maximum
The Body in the Snow: Karen’s Trial (March 17)
If you haven’t heard of Karen Read, a new series about Max and survey discoveries can be used as your introduction. Read, a resident of Massachusetts, spent her whole life proclaiming her innocence, accused of killing the policeman’s boyfriend and freezing his body in the snow. According to the person you ask, she was either a stone killer or a murder caused by the police force for murder. The three-episode series will attract national attention to sparking a fierce debate in New England since 2022 and prompt the #FreekarenRead movement.
Paramountainga
Desire for a more real crime? Paramount Plus has another entry this week in the Real Story-based genre, and premiered Happy Faces. The series plays Annaleigh Ashford as Melissa Moore, the daughter of Keith Hunter Jespers, a serial killer also known as the Happy Killer (Dennis Quaid). According to Moore’s podcast Happy Face , the show found that Moore worked hard to reconcile the fact that the caring man who raised her was responsible for killing several women.