Netflix’s Facet, Netflix has about 167 million paying customers globally. It has played havoc with the television programming model and, to a growing extent, is doing the same to the cable industry.
Netflix faces increasingly fierce competition from rivals including Amazon, Google, and Disney. Netflix has been essentially a storehouse of content, including movies, documentaries, and television series. Following are the 10 top-ranking series right now.
10. Pacific Rim: The Black
“Pacific Rim: The Black” season 1 contains seven episodes, all of which are streaming now on Netflix. The series takes the fight Down Under to Australia and promises more colossus beasts clashing with an old derelict combat mech. “Pacific Rim,” was a blown-up hit in 2013 when its killer kaiju belched forth from a trans-dimensional oceanic rift to do battle with mighty mechs called Jaegers. Are you ready for “Pacific Rim” in anime form?
9. Pokémon Journeys: The Series
Pokémon Journeys: The Series is the seventh series in the Pokémon anime. The series stars Ash Ketchum and Goh as the principal figures. Ash continues his pursuit of becoming a Pokémon Master by entering the World Coronation Series, with the hopes of one day having an official match with the reigning Monarch, Leon. Pokémon Journeys is the first anime series to feature episodes split into two different story segments.
8. Bridgerton
With numbers still being in the count, Season 1 of Bridgerton was watched by a record 82 million households around the world. Based on the first book in Quinn’s series, The Duke and I, centered on the complicated romance between the eldest Bridgerton daughter, Daphne, played by Phoebe Dynevor, and the Duke of Hastings Simon Bassett, portrayed by Regé-Jean Page.
7. Firefly Lane
The series is based on the Novel written by Kristin Hannah by the same name. It consists of a story star casting the bond between two besties who became close since the day they became neighbors. Firefly lane describes friendship in a heartwarming way, the bond two people share for 30 years. From kids to teenagers, from teenagers to adults, and so on, they continue the journey of peaks and valleys.
6. Good Girls
The series is neither crime drama nor black comedy, but something just in the middle. The series has created a genre of its own. It’s a sturdy character study of three imprecise women testing what’s right and wrong, what’s good and what’s bad.
5. CoComelon
This series is meant for kids. Cocomelon is a just series of three-hour-long nursery rhyme collections. Between the ages of one and three, kids have become fanatic about the show. CoComelon TV series is very similar to the wildly popular animated music videos CoComelon publishes on YouTube.
4. icarly
Icarly is a kid show which streamed on nickelodeon. She lives with her guardian Spencer and produces her webcasts from a makeshift third-floor loft studio. The recording becomes an internet rage and turns into the iCarly webcast.
3. Behind Her eyes
BEHIND HER EYES is a psychological thriller web series created by Steve Lightfoot based on the novel by Sarah Pinborough. The series follows the story of a divorced mother Louise who ‘by mistake’ meets David, a Scottish guy at a bar. The principal figure is Adele, a psycho woman with a mysteriously dark past. As Adele tries to tighten her relations with David, on the other side things get in lovely between Louise and David.
2. Murder Among the Mormons
It’s a reality-based series. It covers the 1985 Salt Lake City bombings. Murder Among the Mormons makes an excellent case that you can, presenting its story in strict chronological order and unraveling its mysteries with increasing dramatic tension.
1. Ginny and Georgia
The 10-episode series premiered Wednesday and has been compared to “Gilmore Girls” for its banter and cultural criticism. It’s also been reviewed as “Degrassi dipped in acid”. Well, the series was also in trend due to the. The 10-episode series premiered Wednesday and has been compared to “Gilmore Girls” for its banter and cultural criticism. The series was also in trend due to the “deeply sexist joke” made on Taylor Swift.