logo
All TV Shows Premiering in 2025: Complete Release Calendar

All TV Shows Premiering in 2025: Complete Release Calendar

Newsweek5 days ago
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
Entertainment gossip and news from Newsweek's network of contributors
Imagine if you could find a list of every single TV show releasing throughout 2025 in one handy place.
Imagine no longer, because in this article you'll find the complete release calendar for TV across the entire year still to come. Starting from July, here's the full schedule of both new and returning shows set to premier.
We've included every major streaming service and platform too, such as Paramount+, Netflix, Hulu, Disney+, Prime Video, and Peacock.
The cast of Stranger Things Season 5
The cast of Stranger Things Season 5
Netflix
Whether you're looking for the release dates of "Stranger Things Season 5" and "F1: Drive to Survive Season 2", need a reminder of all the great reality shows waiting in the wings, or just want to know when the next big Marvel series are dropping on Disney+, read on below for every confirmed release date.
All TV Shows Premiering in 2025: Complete Release Calendar
July 2
Tour de France: Unchained (Netflix)
July 3
The Sandman (Netflix, final season part one)
July 4
All the Sharks (Netflix)
Macy's 4th of July Fireworks (NBC)
A Capitol Fourth (PBS)
Boston Pops Fireworks Spectacular (The CW)
July 5
Investigation Shark Attack (Nat Geo)
Super Shark Highway (Nat Geo)
July 7
Such Brave Girls (Hulu)
The Madame Blanc Mysteries (Acorn TV)
Bachelor in Paradise (ABC)
Christmas at Sea (Hallmark)
Survival Mode (NBC)
July 8
Quarterback (Netflix)
Renaissance: The Blood and the Beauty (PBS)
July 9
Ballard (Prime Video)
Building the Band (Netflix)
People & Places (Disney+)
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia (FXX)
July 10
Too Much (Netflix)
Suspicious Minds (Hulu)
Celebrity Family Feud (ABC)
Big Brother (CBS)
Back to the Frontier (Magnolia/Max)
Press Your Luck (ABC)
The Real Housewives of Orange County (Bravo)
July 11
Dexter: Resurrection (Showtime, new drama series)
Foundation (Apple TV+, Season 3)
The Wild Ones (Apple TV+, new docuseries)
One Night in Idaho: The College Murders (Prime Video, new limited docuseries)
Rage (HBO, new drama series)
The Great American Recipe (PBS, Season 4)
Last Cowboy Standing (Fox Nation, Season 2)
July 12
Buried in the Backyard (Oxygen, Season 6)
Mysteries from Above (History, Season 2)
48 Hours to Buy (FYI, Season 2B)
Oceanfront Property Hunt (FYI, Season 1B)
Betting on Beloit (A&E, new unscripted series)
July 13
The Institute (MGM+, new drama series)
Love Island: Beyond the Villa (Peacock, new unscripted series)
Live Aid: When Rock 'n' Roll Took on the World (CNN, new documentary miniseries)
Billionaire Boys Club (CNN, new documentary miniseries)
Kings Court (Bravo, new dating series)
Shark Quest: Hunt for the Apex Predator (National Geographic, new docuseries)
July 14
Sakamoto Days (Netflix, Season 1B)
A Killer Among Friends (ID, new docuseries)
Binge Queens (WOW Presents Plus, Season 11)
July 15
Her Last Broadcast: The Abduction of Jodi Huisentruit (Hulu, new docuseries)
The Big Fix (MHz Choice, Season 1 of Swedish drama series)
July 16
The Summer I Turned Pretty (Prime Video, Season 3; final season)
Amy Bradley Is Missing (Netflix, new limited docuseries)
2025 ESPY Awards (ESPN, live awards special)
July 17
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (Paramount+, Season 3)
Untamed (Netflix, new drama series)
Catalog (Netflix, new dramedy series)
Community Squad (Netflix, Season 2)
Surf Girls: International (Prime Video, new docuseries)
The Furry Detectives: Unmasking a Monster (SundanceTV, new docuseries)
July 18
The Fixer (Fox, new business competition series)
The Nice Guy (Disney+, new drama series)
Superstar (Netflix, new drama series)
My Lottery Dream Home (HGTV, Season 17)
Zillow Gone Wild (HGTV, Season 2)
July 19
Trafficked with Mariana van Zeller (National Geographic, Season 5)
Love & Marriage: Huntsville (OWN, Season 10)
Kaiju No. 8 (Crunchyroll, Season 2)
July 21
The Hunting Wives (Netflix, new drama series; moved from Starz)
Justice on Trial (Prime Video, new docuseries)
Mr. & Mrs. Murder (Hulu, new docuseries)
The Challenge Vets and New Threats (MTV, Season 41)
July 22
Hip Hop Was Born Here (Paramount+, new docuseries)
Mickey Mouse Clubhouse+ (Disney Jr., new children's animated series)
Welcome to Plathville (TLC, Season 7)
Renovation Resort Showdown (HGTV, Season 2)
Alef (MHz Choice, Season 1 of Turkish drama series)
July 23
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (ABC, Season 11 in primetime)
Match Game (ABC, new game show series revival)
Washington Black (Hulu, new drama limited series)
Acapulco (Apple TV+, Season 4; final season)
Shiny Happy People: A Teenage Holy War (Prime Video, Season 2)
South Park (Comedy Central, Season 27; moved from July 9)
Digman! (Comedy Central, Season 2; moved from July 9)
July 24
The Sandman (Netflix, Season 2B; final season)
Hitmakers (Netflix, new docuseries)
Epic Ride: The Story of Universal Theme Parks (Peacock, new documentary miniseries)
My Melody & Kuromi (Netflix, new animated series)
Code of Silence (BritBox, Season 1 of British drama series)
The Congregation: Bride of Christ (Viaplay, Season 2)
July 25
Trigger (Netflix, new drama series)
Solo Traveling with Tracee Ellis Ross (Roku Channel, new travelogue series)
July 27
Hurricane Katrina: Race Against Time (National Geographic, new docuseries)
Naked and Afraid: Apocalypse (Discovery, new competition series)
In the Eye of the Storm (Discovery, Season 2)
July 28
The Wonderfully Weird World of Gumball (Hulu, new short‑form animated comedy series)
Adaptive (Peacock, new docuseries)
Animals on Drugs (Discovery, new docuseries)
July 29
Mud Madness (Discovery, Season 2)
Running with the Wolves (ESPN, new docuseries)
July 30
Conversations with a Killer: The Son of Sam Tapes (Netflix, Season 4)
July 31
Twisted Metal (Peacock, Season 2)
Leanne (Netflix, new comedy series)
Glass Heart (Netflix, new drama series)
Marked (Netflix, new drama series)
Project Runway (Freeform, Season 21; new network)
August 1
Stillwater (Apple TV+, Season 4)
Chief of War (Apple TV+, new drama series)
Perfect Match (Netflix, Season 3)
Built In Birmingham: Brady & the Blues (Prime Video, new docuseries)
Deadliest Catch (Discovery, Season 21)
Life After Lockup (We TV, Season 7)
August 2
Heart & Hustle: Houston (OWN, new unscripted series)
August 3
The Great Food Truck Race (Food Network, Season 18)
1000 Ways to Dine (A&E, new docuseries)
August 4
King of the Hill (Hulu, Season 14; new network)
Tim Rex in Space (Nickelodeon, new children's animated series)
Empire: The World's First Superpower With David Olusoga (PBS Passport, British documentary miniseries)
August 5
Hard Knocks: Offseason with the Buffalo Bills (HBO, new docuseries)
August 6
Wednesday (Netflix, Season 2A)
Platonic (Apple TV+, Season 2)
The Proud Family: Louder and Prouder (Disney+, Season 3)
Eyes of Wakanda (Disney+, new drama series)
August 7
Necaxa (FXX, new docuseries)
Demascus (Tubi, new comedy series; moved from AMC)
August 8
Outlander: Blood of My Blood (Starz, new drama series)
PBR Friday Night Live (Fox Nation, new live sports series)
August 9
American Prince: JFK Jr. (CNN documentary miniseries)
August 10
The Chicken Sisters (Hallmark Channel, Season 2)
August 11
Marvel's Iron Man and his Awesome Friends (Disney Jr., new children's animated series)
August 12
Alien: Earth (FX/Hulu, new drama series)
Chef Grudge Match (Food Network, new competition series)
August 13
Butterfly (Prime Video, new drama series)
Sausage Party: Foodtopia (Prime Video, Season 2)
Fixed (Netflix, new animated comedy series)
August 14
And Just Like That ... (HBO Max, Season 3)
Miss Governor (Netflix, Season 1B; fka She the People)
August 15
The Rainmaker (USA, new drama series)
Magic City: An American Fantasy (Starz, new docuseries)
August 18
Lego Masters Jr. (Fox, new competition limited series)
August 19
America's Team: The Gambler and His Cowboys (Netflix, new docuseries)
August 20
Katrina: Come Hell and High Water (Netflix, new docuseries)
The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox (Hulu, new drama limited series)
August 21
Peacemaker (HBO Max, Season 2)
Hostage (Netflix, new drama limited series)
August 22
Invasion (Apple TV+, Season 3)
Long Story Short (Netflix, new animated comedy series)
August 24
Masterpiece: Unforgotten (PBS, Season 6 of British drama series)
Masterpiece: The Marlow Murder Club (PBS, Season 2 of British drama series)
Professor T (PBS, Season 4 of British drama series)
August 25
Upload (Prime Video, Season 4; final season)
August 27
The Terminal List: Dark Wolf (Prime Video, new drama series)
My Funeral (MHz Choice, Season 1 of Icelandic drama series)
August 29
Two Graves (Netflix, new drama miniseries)
August 30
Big Noon Kickoff (Fox, Season 5)
Big Noon Saturday (Fox, new season)
Pac‑12 College Football (ESPN, new season; games on The CW & CBS)
August 31
Let the Devil In (MGM+, new docuseries)
August TBA
Dinner Time Live with David Chang (Netflix, Season 3)
September 4
Sunday Night Football (NBC, Season 20 on network & 39 overall; kickoff game)
Sunday NFL Countdown (NBC, Season 31)
Thursday Night Football (Prime Video, Season 20)
Wednesday (Netflix, Season 2B)
NCIS: Tony & Ziva (Paramount+, new drama series)
September 7
Sunday Night Football (NBC, Season 39 time‑slot premiere)
Sunday NFL Countdown (NBC, Season 31 time‑slot premiere)
The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon (AMC, Season 3)
September 8
Monday Night Football (ESPN/ABC, Season 565)
Monday Night Countdown (ESPN, Season 33)
Monday Night Football with Peyton and Eli (ManningCast, ESPN+/ESPN2, Season 5)
Scrambled Up (Syndication, new game show series)
September 11
Diary of a Ditched Girl (Netflix, new drama series)
Beauty in Black (Netflix, Season 2)
September 13
Notre Dame Football (NBC, Season 35)
September 14
Emmy Awards (BritBox, live awards special)
September 17
The Morning Show (Apple TV+, Season 4)
Gen V (Prime Video, Season 2)
Human (PBS, new docuseries)
September 18
Reasonable Doubt (Hulu, Season 3)
September 19
Lego Star Wars: Rebuild the Galaxy – Pieces of the Past (Disney+, new animated series)
September 20
Pac‑12 College Football (CBS, Season 2)
September 22
Comics Unleashed with Byron Allen (CBS, re‑airing syndicated stand‑up comedy series)
September 23
The Lowdown (FX/Hulu, new drama series)
September 24
Survivor (CBS, Season 49)
Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent (The CW, new drama series)
Slow Horses (Apple TV+, Season 5)
Hotel Costiera (Prime Video, new drama series)
September 25
The Amazing Race (CBS, Season 38)
Alice in Borderland (Netflix, Season 3)
The Paper (Peacock, new comedy series)
September 27
48 Hours (CBS, Season 39)
Big Ten Saturday Night (NBC/Peacock, new season)
September 28
60 Minutes (CBS, Season 58)
September 30
Chad Powers (Hulu, new comedy series)
September TBA
Most Wanted: Teen Hacker (HBO Max, new docuseries)
The NFL Playback (Vice TV, new docuseries)
Summer TBA
Elle (Prime Video, new comedy series)
Plastic Surgery Rewind (E!, new docuseries)
Ballard (Prime Video, new drama series)
Untitled Birmingham City Football Club Project (Prime Video, new docuseries)
My Life with the Walter Boys (Netflix, Season 2)
Untitled SEC Project (Netflix, new docuseries; working title)
Is It Cake? Halloween (Netflix, new competition limited series)
Untitled Mike Williams Murder Docuseries (Hulu, new docuseries)
Billy Joel: And So It Goes (HBO, new documentary miniseries)
Everything on the Menu with Braun Strowman (USA, new drama series)
Condemned (HGTV, new docuseries)
They Know What They Did (ID, new docuseries)
Untitled Vanity Fair/Dick Wolf Series (ID, new docuseries)
Sister Boniface Mysteries (BritBox, Season 4 of British drama series)
The Cleaner (BritBox, Season 3 of British comedy series)
Silent Witness (BritBox, Season 28 of British drama series)
October 5
Masterpiece: The Gold (PBS, Season 1 of British drama series)
Masterpiece: Maigret (PBS, new drama series)
October 12
Matlock (CBS, Season 2; sneak preview)
Elsbeth (CBS, Season 3; sneak preview)
October 13
The Neighborhood (CBS, Season 8)
DMV (CBS, new comedy series)
FBI (CBS, Season 7)
Watson (CBS, Season 2)
October 14
NCIS (CBS, Season 22)
NCIS: Sydney (CBS, Season 3)
NCIS: Origins (CBS, Season 2)
Devil in Disguise: John Wayne Gacy (Peacock, drama series)
October 16
Georgie & Mandy's First Marriage (CBS, Season 2)
Ghosts (CBS, Season 4)
Matlock (CBS, Season 2 time‑slot premiere)
Elsbeth (CBS, Season 3 time‑slot premiere)
October 17
Fire Country (CBS, Season 4)
Sheriff Country (CBS, new drama series)
Boston Blue (CBS, new drama series)
October 19
Tracker (CBS, Season 3)
The Road (CBS, new competition series)
October 22
The Monster of Florence (Netflix, new drama limited series)
October 23
Nobody Wants This (Netflix, Season 2)
October 24
Fire Country (CBS, Season 4 time‑slot premiere)
Sheriff Country (CBS, new drama series time‑slot premiere)
Boston Blue (CBS, new drama series time‑slot premiere)
October 29
Star Wars: Visions (Disney+, Season 3)
October TBA
Marvel Zombies (Disney+, new drama series)
Anne Rice's Talamasca (Prime Video, new drama series)
My Hero Academia (Crunchyroll, Season 8; final season)
To Your Eternity (Crunchyroll, Season 3)
Campfire Cooking in Another World with My Absurd Skill (Crunchyroll, Season 2)
Fall TBA
Dancing with the Stars (ABC, Season 33)
High Potential (ABC, Season 2)
Shifting Gears (ABC, Season 2)
Abbott Elementary (ABC, Season 4)
The Golden Bachelor (ABC, Season 2)
Shark Tank (ABC, Season 7)
9‑1‑1 (ABC, Season 9)
9‑1‑1: Nashville (ABC, new drama series)
Grey's Anatomy (ABC, Season 22)
Celebrity Wheel of Fortune (ABC, Season 6)
20/20 (ABC, Season 48)
America's Funniest Home Videos (ABC, Season 36)
Mission Unstoppable (CBS, Season 7)
The Visioneers with Zay Harding (CBS, Season 2)
The Voice (NBC, Season 27)
Brilliant Minds (NBC, Season 2)
Law & Order: SVU (NBC, Season 27)
Law & Order (NBC, Season 25)
Chicago Med (NBC, Season 11)
Chicago Fire (NBC, Season 14)
Chicago P.D. (NBC, Season 13)
The Hunting Party (NBC, Season 2)
Saturday Night Live (NBC, Season 51)
Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom (NBC, Season 6)
On Brand with Jimmy Fallon (NBC, new unscripted series)
The Fall and Rise of Reggie Dinkins (NBC, new comedy series)
Surviving Earth (NBC, new docuseries)
Name That Tune (Fox, Season 6)
Celebrity Weakest Link (Fox, new game show series)
99 to Beat (Fox, new game show series)
The Floor (Fox, Season 4)
Doc (Fox, Season 2)
The Simpsons (Fox, Season 37)
Family Guy (Fox, Season 24)
Bob's Burgers (Fox, Season 16)
Special Forces: World's Toughest Test (Fox, Season 3)
Hell's Kitchen (Fox, Season 24)
Kitchen Nightmares (Fox, Season 3)
Murder in a Small Town (Fox, Season 2)
Best Medicine (Fox, new comedy series)
Memory of a Killer (Fox, new drama series)
The Diplomat (Netflix, Season 3)
With Love, Meghan (Netflix, Season 2)
Physical: Asia (Netflix, Season 3; fka Physical: 100)
Next Gen Chef (Netflix, new competition series)
Young Jedi Adventures (Disney+, Season 3)
Solar Opposites (Hulu, Season 6; final season)
All's Fair (Hulu, new drama series)
The Savant (Apple TV+, new drama limited series)
Shape Island (Apple TV+, Season 2)
Faceoff: Inside the NHL (Prime Video, Season 2)
Spartacus: House of Ashur (Starz, new drama series)
Extra (Syndicated, Season 32)
The Kelly Clarkson Show (Syndicated, Season 7)
Tamron Hall (Syndicated, Season 7)
The Drew Barrymore Show (Syndicated, Season 6)
The Jennifer Hudson Show (Syndicated, Season 4)
Sherri (Syndicated, Season 4)
Funny You Should Ask (Syndicated, Season 9)
Tribunal Justice (Syndicated, new courtroom series)
The Braxtons (We TV, Season 2)
Studio C (BYUtv, Season 20)
Karen Pirie (BritBox, Season 2 of British drama series)
Beyond Paradise (BritBox, Season 3 of British drama series)
November 4
Squid Game: The Challenge (Netflix, Season 2)
November 7
Maxton Hall – The World Between Us (Prime Video, Season 2)
November 16
The American Revolution (PBS, new docuseries)
November 26
Stranger Things (Netflix, Season 5A; final season)
November TBA
Last Samurai Standing (Netflix, new drama series)
December 25
Stranger Things (Netflix, Season 5B; final season)
December 31
Stranger Things (Netflix, Season 5C; final season)
December TBA
Percy Jackson and the Olympians (Disney+, Season 2)
Wonder Man (Disney+, new drama series)
Kimora: Back in the Fab Lane (E!, new unscripted series)
The Twelve Dates of Christmas (Hallmark Channel, new comedy limited series; working title)
TBA
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'WWE: Unreal' Reveals Secret WrestleMania 41 Plans
'WWE: Unreal' Reveals Secret WrestleMania 41 Plans

Newsweek

time27 minutes ago

  • Newsweek

'WWE: Unreal' Reveals Secret WrestleMania 41 Plans

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The new Netflix docuseries, WWE: Unreal, has pulled back the curtain on the original creative plans for this past April's WrestleMania 41. In a series of shocking revelations, the show has unveiled the initial card for the event, which was significantly different from what fans ultimately saw on screen. The series, which premiered on July 29th, gives fans an unprecedented look into the WWE writer's room. It showcases how injuries, creative shifts, and other variables completely change the course of WWE's biggest show of the year. The original planned card for WrestleMania 41 as revealed on 'WWE: UNREAL': • Cody Rhodes v John Cena (Undisputed Title) • Roman Reigns v Seth Rollins • GUNTHER v CM Punk (World Title) • Rhea Ripley v Bianca Belair (Women's World Title) • Bad Bunny v Dominik Mysterio •… — Wrestle Ops (@WrestleOps) July 29, 2025 The Original Main Event The biggest change revealed was the originally planned main event. The docuseries confirms that the initial plan was for a massive one-on-one match between former Shield brothers, Roman Reigns and Seth Rollins. As fans know, this match did not happen. The final main event of Night One was changed to a triple-threat match that also included CM Punk, which culminated in Paul Heyman's shocking betrayal and a victory for Seth Rollins. More news: WWE Superstar Announces Retirement Match A Completely Different Card The main event was not the only major change. The docuseries revealed several other marquee matches that were on the original card but were ultimately scrapped or altered. These included a powerhouse dream match for the Women's World Championship between Rhea Ripley and Bianca Belair. The original card also featured Nia Jax defending the WWE Women's Championship against Jade Cargill. John Cena (L) sits on the top rope during his Undisputed WWE Championship match against Cody Rhodes during WrestleMania 41 at Allegiant Stadium on April 20, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada. John Cena (L) sits on the top rope during his Undisputed WWE Championship match against Cody Rhodes during WrestleMania 41 at Allegiant Stadium on April 20, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Photo byOther planned bouts included a supernatural faction war between the Wyatt Sicks and The Judgment Day, and a hoss fight between Bron Breakker and Drew McIntyre, with "Stone Cold" Steve Austin as the special guest referee. The original card also featured two massive multi-person ladder matches for the Intercontinental and United States Championships, which were later changed to standard singles and tag team matches. The Ever-Changing Road to WrestleMania The "Road to WrestleMania" is the period from the Royal Rumble in January to the Showcase of the Immortals in April. It is historically the most volatile and fluid creative time of the year for WWE. The revelations in WWE: Unreal provide a fascinating glimpse into this process, showing fans the "what if" scenarios that were on the table and illustrating just how quickly plans can change in the world of WWE. More WWE News: For more on WWE, head to Newsweek Sports.

Seth Meyers Gets Serious in Call for US Aid to Gaza: ‘If Even Trump' Acknowledged Their Starvation, It's ‘Long Past Time to Act'
Seth Meyers Gets Serious in Call for US Aid to Gaza: ‘If Even Trump' Acknowledged Their Starvation, It's ‘Long Past Time to Act'

Yahoo

time39 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Seth Meyers Gets Serious in Call for US Aid to Gaza: ‘If Even Trump' Acknowledged Their Starvation, It's ‘Long Past Time to Act'

"We are appalled by the unspeakable horrors currently unfolding in Gaza," the NBC host says Seth Meyers set aside his typical jokes for a few moments on Monday night to make a solemn call for U.S. aid to those suffering in Gaza — and to call out the Trump Administration for being 'complicit' in that suffering. During his 'A Closer Look' segment, Meyers noted that the 'horror of what is happening in Gaza' is 'so obvious' that even Trump himself was made to acknowledge it earlier on Monday. Indeed, the president was asked by members of the press if he agrees with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu that there's no starvation in Gaza. More from TheWrap Every Upcoming Marvel TV Show Coming to Disney Plus Seth Meyers Points Out Trump Says 'Worse Things About Windmills Than He Says About Jeffrey Epstein' | Video Anne Burrell's Final 'Worst Cooks' Co-Host Remembers Food Network Star as 'Larger Than Life' | Video Netflix's 'Untamed' Renewed for Season 2, Turning Limited Series Into an Ongoing Show 'I mean, based on television, I would say not particularly, because those children look very hungry,' Trump said. In another press event, the president added, 'Some of those kids are — that's real starvation stuff. I see it, and you can't fake that.' 'If even Trump is forced to acknowledge the reality of the crisis, that means it is long past time to act and end the suffering,' Meyers said. 'Unfortunately, we have an administration that seems concerned mainly with golf, cover-ups and windmills.' The 'Late Night' host was quick to point out Trump's comments just a day prior, when the president was asked if Israel should be doing more to allow food into Gaza. In response, Trump immediately complained that Gazans aren't being grateful enough to the U.S. as is. 'Well, you know, we gave $60 million two weeks ago and nobody even acknowledged it, for food,' he said. 'And it's terrible. You know, you really at least want to have somebody say thank you.' 'So many responses you could go with first,' Meyers scoffed. 'We need to feed the children, we need to end the killing, we need a cease-fire and to free the hostages. But only Trump could respond with 'Ahem! Does anyone have anything to say to me?' like a DoorDash driver looking for a rating.' The comedian then pushed back at any critics who might argue that 'Late Night' is a comedy show and thus should only make jokes, rather than get serious on matters such as this. 'We try, every day. We try,' he said seriously. 'But we're also human beings, and we are appalled by the unspeakable horrors currently unfolding in Gaza. And our government is complicit, which is why we have a duty as Americans to speak out on a horrific crisis that has been foreseeable for a long time.' You can watch Seth Meyers' full 'A Closer Look' segment in the video above. The post Seth Meyers Gets Serious in Call for US Aid to Gaza: 'If Even Trump' Acknowledged Their Starvation, It's 'Long Past Time to Act' | Video appeared first on TheWrap.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store