
7 new shows and seasons on DStv, Disney+, Netflix and Showmax
Mzansi couldn't believe their eyes at the sudden death of Thembinkosi Mthembu's King Dingiswayo on Shaka iLembe 's second season. Don't worry, many will still get to see the heartthrob on their screens in the dramatic Mzansi Wethu series Homecoming, where Thembinkosi plays a police officer by day and traditional healer by night.
READ MORE | Discover Mimi Mahlasela, Mpho Popps and more stars' must-watch picks for your next TV binge
For those looking for content from across the pond, fans of the critically acclaimed crime series Dexter will get a look into the purpose-driven killer's back story.
Explore more local and international shows to elevate your comfort viewing this season:
1. Fatal Seduction Season 2
After a spicy first season, Fatal Seduction returns.
Months after Nandi (played by Kgomotso Christopher) and Jacob's (played by Prince Gootboom) affair and consequences come to a head, Nandi finds herself unjustly imprisoned. She forms an unlikely relationship with fellow inmate Phila (played by Tina Redman) for her protection but prison can't shield her from the dangers lurking on the outside.
The Minister of Police (played by Warren Masemola) along with his aide Precious (played by Nqobile Khumalo), use Nandi's freedom as leverage. Together, they demand that she put a stop to Vuyo's (played by Nat Ramabulana) investigation that threatens to expose the minister's darkest secrets, destroy him publicly and shatter all illusions with his loyal wife, Delisiwe (played by Xolile Tshabalala).
Desperate to protect her daughter, Zinhle (played by Ngele Ramulondi) and reclaim her freedom, Nandi turns to people she hoped never to need again.
Fatal Seduction Season 2 streams on Netflix from 15 August 2025.
2. Homecoming
Homecoming follows Zethu Hlongwane, played by Mpume 'Six' Nyamane. She's a straight-A medical graduate hoping to become one of the country's few Black woman surgeons. When things don't turn out how she had hoped, with no job or placement, she is forced to return to the village she left behind.
There Zethu finds herself at the crossroads of two worlds, that of Western medicine and traditional healing, when she meets Sifiso Kubheka, played by award-winning actor Thembinkosi Mthembu. A police officer by day and a traditional healer by night, Sifiso challenges everything she thought she knew about love, healing and home.
Homecoming plays Mondays to Wednesdays at 18:30 on Mzansi Wethu.
3. Dexter: Original Sin
Fans of the acclaimed crime thriller series Dexter are in for a treat as the 'Dexterverse' continues .
Set in Miami in 1991, the prequel series takes place 15 years before the events of the first season of the original series and takes a deeper look at how it all began, focusing on 20-year-old university graduate-turned-police-department-forensics-intern Dexter Morgan (played by Patrick Gibson) as he commits his first kill.
Dexter: Original Sin airs every Tuesday at 21:00 on M-Net with the boxset releasing on Showmax.
4. Married at First Sight Mzansi Season 2
Another round of South Africans opting for fast-tracked love returns.
Married at First Sight Mzansi is coming back for season 2 with the ultimate love hack: get matched by experts, meet at the altar and say 'I do' to a stranger. The experts – marriage and relationship coach Linda Yende, conflict resolution expert Khanyi Yende, counsellor and author Thabang Mashego, gynaecologist and sexologist Dr Mpume Zenda, and marriage officiator and counsellor Pastor Xolani Hlitana – are available to offer the necessary guidance every step of the way.
New episodes of Married at First Sight Mzansi Season 2 stream every Sunday at 18:30 on Showmax.
5. Wednesday Season 2
Here we woe again.
Wednesday Addams (played by Jenna Ortega), returns to prowl the Gothic halls of Nevermore Academy, where fresh foes await. This season, Wednesday must navigate family, friends and old adversaries, propelling her into another year of delightfully dark and kooky mayhem. Armed with her signature razor-sharp wit and deadpan charm, Wednesday is also plunged into a new bone-chilling supernatural mystery.
Part one of Wednesday Season 2 debuts on Netflix on 6 August and part two debuts on 3 September.
6. Marked
Marked is a six-part original series that follows Babalwa (played by Lerato Mvelase), a law-abiding cash-in-transit security guard, devoted wife to Lungile (played by Bonko Khoza) and a loving mother to Palesa (played by Ama Qamata). But when they receive some devastating news about the treatment of her daughter Palesa's life-threatening illness, Babalwa's carefully built world begins to crumble.
With nowhere left to turn, Babalwa makes a bold and desperate choice, enlisting help from her trusted colleague, Tebza (played by S'Dumo Mtshali) and reckless newcomer to the criminal underworld, Zweli (played Sphamandla Dhludhu).
Marked debuts on Netflix on 31 July.
7. Only Murders in the Building Season 5
After their beloved doorman, Lester, dies under suspicious circumstances, Charles (played by Steve Martin), Oliver (played by Martin Short) and Mabel (played by Selena Gomez) refuse to believe it was an accident. Their investigation plunges them into the shadowy corners of New York and beyond — where the trio uncovers a dangerous web of secrets connecting powerful billionaires, old-school mobsters and the mysterious residents of the Arconia.
Guest starring acclaimed actors like Meryl Streep, Renée Zellweger and more, the upcoming fifth season of the comedy drama series promises more than meets the eye.
The fifth season of Only Murders in the Building streams on Disney+ from 9 September, with all four seasons available for bingeing.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Cosmopolitan
8 minutes ago
- Cosmopolitan
Margaret Qualley Took the Cosmo Quiz Between Making Movies
You know when someone is so booked and busy it feels kind of spiritual? That's Margaret Qualley right now. Case in point: The very morning she sat down to chat with Cosmopolitan editor-in-chief Willa Bennett for her 60th anniversary cover interview, her latest film Honey Don't!—the second entry in Ethan Coen and Tricia Cooke's Drive-Away Dolls lesbian road trip trilogy—was announced to premiere at Cannes. Not bad for a random Wednesday. And that's not all she has going on right now. She is also starring in Richard Linklater's Blue Moon and just wrapped Huntington, a darkly funny thriller with Glen Powell—and yes, you did spot her in Happy Gilmore 2 on Netflix last weekend. Somehow, she still managed to show up to the set of her cover shoot on time and with the vibe of a girl who borrowed her best friend's sweater on the way out the door—not the air you'd expect of someone redefining screen stardom before our very eyes. She understandably had no time to fill out her version of our iconic Cosmo Quiz between photo setups, but she promised she'd get it done—and she's a woman of her word! So she FedEx'd us her completed copy from yes, she was working on yet another movie. (We knew she'd come through!) Over more than a decade in the game, Margaret's made a name for herself inhabiting characters who sit right at the intersection of womanhood, contradiction, and full-blown emotional hurricane. And we wouldn't have it any other way. The answers to her quiz aren't indicative of any characters though. They're quintessentially Margaret. Married. Jack Antonoff. Adam Sandler. Asheville, NC. My dad. My wedding day. Listen to your heart and share how you feel. Anything that involves playing that game is Pictionary. Today. Like 10 minutes ago. Smokey and Jack. Rhinestone butterflies. Björk's swan, duh. Bleachers Stone Pony. Super-high paying with flexible hours. Fine, wings, wave. 4.8 Avocado toast, Fml. Hutch, aka Shawn Hutchinson from Bleachers. Killed anyone. The Kardashians. Show up. Go outside and ride my scooter around in a circle in the driveway while listening to Daniel Powter's 'Bad Day.' Hair by Evanie Frausto for PRAVANA. Makeup by Romy Soleimani. Manicure by Yukie Miyakawa for Dior. Set design by Nicholas Des Jardins. Production by Dana Brockman at Viewfinders. Shot on location at The Penthouse of 1 East 62nd Street, represented by Zina Raslan with the Gambino Group at Compass, and Classic Harbor Line.


Los Angeles Times
2 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
Ad-supported streaming is the future. So why is the experience so bad?
We all need to stop getting mad about the fact that our favorite streaming series are now full of ads and focus on how awful those ads are. Yes, it is infuriating that streaming platforms sold a product they could not reasonably hope to sustain. The promise that, for a small fee, viewers would be granted instant access to a vast array of TV series and movies that they could watch when and where they desired, all at once and without the irritant of commercial breaks, seemed too good to be true. Which, of course, it was. Having lured millions of viewers away from cable and broadcast television, subscription services were first able to raise their rates and then, on top of that, introduce advertising. Far from freeing us from commercials, they now demand, just like cable, that we pay for the honor of watching them. Judging from recent reports, millions of new subscribers to Netflix, Prime Video, Hulu, Disney+ and HBO Max are OK with that. According to the research firm Antenna, ad-supported subscriptions hit 100 million this year; according to Omar Karim, director of brand and video products for Amazon, that number will double by 2027. (Free ad-supported streamers like Tubi and Pluto TV are also seeing remarkable growth.) Commercial-free viewing is still possible for a higher-priced rate. But like business class on planes and Magic Key passes at Disneyland, those tiers may become a VIP experience (i.e., absurdly expensive), if they don't vanish altogether. With the cost of multiple streaming services already outstripping the much-maligned price of the cable bundle, ads on streaming are here to stay and will, no doubt, be increasing. So instead of wasting perfectly good outrage over the fact that, once again, a few technocrats have managed to get very rich by destroying the economy of a billion-dollar industry only to return to that industry's own earlier business plan, let's focus on the ad-supported streaming experience. Which is universally terrible. It's not just that so many of the spots are low-rent — and we are beyond being surprised by the graphic symptom/side-effect description of pharmaceutical ads — it's that they are often repeated several times during a program. For a single hour's viewing, this would be an annoyance. But streaming was built on the binge, which means a person can see the same damn truck commercial a dozen times in a single sitting. At which point it feels less like advertising and more like brainwashing, with the unintentional effect of ensuring that if I were in the market for a truck, I would literally buy any other model than the one that was 'Clockwork Orange'-d on me while I was trying to watch a murder-mystery series. Or, God forbid, a movie. If anything sends viewers back to the cineplex, it will be ads for depression meds in the middle of a rom-com or a sophisticated chase scene. And when I say middle, I mean middle. Subscription streaming was not built for ads and it shows: On Netflix, Prime Video and others, ads will more than occasionally appear midscene, often cutting off dialogue and almost always providing maximum narrative disruption. This is especially true for streaming shows made before ad-supported streaming became commonplace. In the old days, writers fashioned scripts to accommodate ads with scene breaks and fade-outs. Streaming promised to free them from this, which is one reason so many writers ran around calling television 'long form' and claiming each season was like shooting a 10-hour movie. Imagine watching a 10-hour movie with commercial breaks shoved in every 15 minutes or so. Not great, Bob. And it's not like you can fast-forward through them. We willingly relinquished the power of the DVR, which, when wielded properly, was essentially a DIY ad-free streamer, and put ourselves in the hands of people who think having a little countdown clock telling you how long the ads will last somehow makes up for the fact that they just interrupted a monologue. Again, it is difficult not to instantly hate whatever is being advertised, which, as I understand it, is not the point of any commercial. Even if you pay for the ad-free tier, series are often interrupted by weird little blips where, presumably, ads appear in economy seating. Presumably, creators are now factoring in the need for ads, but the current rhythm of streaming ads is maddeningly inconsistent — sometimes there are a bunch of spots at the beginning, sometimes wedged in the middle, sometimes scattered throughout. How's a writer supposed to cope with that? One can only hope that these are growing pains, that as with early dubbing fiascoes, the streaming services will realize that writing and editing around commercials is an art form in itself. Film and video editors and postproduction teams have a long history of prepping theatrical films for presentation on ad-supported television. For the love of God, hire professionals. According to Ad Age, this is the year to invest in streaming. Given the information-sharing and consumer-targeting tendencies of the digital universe, this is a bit worrisome — no one needs their last Amazon search for, say, pimple patches following them around as they try to watch 'The Summer I Turned Pretty.' But presumably, more advertisers will force the variety and quality of the ads and ad placement to improve. At this point, unless we're willing to fork over more and more money to chase the dream that once was streaming, that's the best we can hope for.


New York Times
3 hours ago
- New York Times
The ‘Troublemaker' Behind Netflix's Biggest Gamble
When Netflix's leaders gathered in Reykjavik, Iceland, for a company retreat in 2019, Brandon Riegg, the executive in charge of nonfiction programming, didn't hold back. The company, he told the 150 people gathered there, should stream live events. He pointed to Amazon's sports deals with Major League Baseball and the N.F.L., and some hugely popular one-time spectacles. 'I think we need this,' he recently recalled saying at the meeting. Mr. Riegg's bosses didn't hold back, either. The company's top three executives at the time — Reed Hastings and Ted Sarandos, its co-chief executives, and Greg Peters, the chief operating officer — interrogated him: Why spend so much money and time on programming that would account for a small percentage of total viewing? Why invest in something anathema to on-demand viewing, Netflix's core business? What would it really add? 'Usually you get one of them, or maybe two, weighing in on these debates,' Mr. Riegg said. 'I was sword-fighting with the three of these guys.' He's not getting that treatment anymore. Live programming is now a major priority at the streaming giant — and Mr. Riegg, 48, sits atop the effort, making him one of the most-watched executives in the entertainment world. His growing corner of Netflix includes unscripted series, sports, documentary series, and efforts to integrate gaming technologies, which allow viewers to vote for winners of a show, into unscripted events. Together, he is helping to transform Netflix's binge-on-your-own-time service into something more like the traditional broadcast networks, but on a global scale. Netflix's live boxing match last year between Jake Paul and Mike Tyson drew 65 million U.S. viewers, making it the country's most-watched sporting event of 2024 after the Super Bowl. The company aired two N.F.L. games on Christmas Day, both watched by millions of people, and will again this year. It has also paid $5 billion for a decade of rights to weekly W.W.E. shows. And there is much more to come. In September, Netflix will broadcast a fight between Canelo Álvarez and Terence Crawford; it will premiere a live version of 'Star Search' in January, where viewers will be able to vote in real time; and has secured the U.S. rights to FIFA's Women's World Cup for 2027. 'Brandon has been a troublemaker his whole time at Netflix,' Mr. Hastings, now the company's chairman, said in an email. 'He was years ago trying to get us into live and into fights. As he nailed unscripted, I could no longer hold back his ambition for us. And darn him, he has been wildly successful. He was right; I was wrong. I love him for it.' But Mr. Riegg's strategy still comes with big risks, firmly inserting the streaming giant into the cutthroat, competitive world of sports rights. Those spectacles can produce outsize results: It is the one type of programming where subscribers will tolerate commercials, producing millions in advertising revenue. But sports rights are hugely expensive — and the company hasn't fully overcome the technical issues required to seamlessly stream live shows to its 300 million subscribers around the world. Some of these issues swirled in Mr. Riegg's brain on a recent Friday, in the hours before the latest Netflix boxing match, a second rematch between Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano. The fight didn't have the pre-fight buzz that came with Tyson-Paul match, though many fans were hoping Ms. Serrano could pull off an upset after losing twice to Ms. Taylor. But it was the first time an all-female fight card had been presented to Netflix audiences live around the world. Mr. Riegg approached the on-air analysts, Laila Ali and Kate Scott, inside Madison Square Garden as they ran through a final rehearsal. 'Like I said at the weigh-in, this is just the beginning,' said Ms. Ali, referencing the magnitude of this event for the female boxing community. 'I almost want Amanda to win once, you know what I mean.' Mr. Riegg knew exactly what she meant. Like other top entertainment executives, he understands that good television is all about good storytelling. A win for Ms. Serrano would mean the underdog had triumphed, and the crowd would be ecstatic. That is another risk with sports, though. You never quite know what you're going to get: a crowd-pleasing story, a dud, or something in between. 'Sometimes a game or match is high-flying and close,' he said, 'and sometimes it's a 3-0 N.F.L. game.' Hollywood Beckons Mr. Riegg started far from Hollywood. The oldest son of a State Department economist, he spent time in Washington and nearby Virginia before hitting spots around the globe during his school years, living in Taiwan, Beijing, London and Sri Lanka. Friends used to record and send him VHS tapes of his favorite shows, 'Fresh Prince of Bel-Air' and 'Parker Lewis Can't Lose.' He credits those tapes, worn out from overuse, to sparking his affinity for entertainment. 'It was a way for me to feel connected still to the U.S. and it gave me a good perspective on other cultures,' he said. After graduating from University of Pennsylvania, Mr. Riegg moved to Los Angeles with hopes of working in feature films. Yet his résumé reads more as a timeline tracking the proliferation of reality programming. He worked with Mark Burnett, the producer of 'Survivor,' on show called 'Boarding House: North Shore.' He then moved to VH1, finding success with the celebrity reality shows 'Breaking Bonaduce' and 'The Surreal Life.' 'These were not the shows my parents were bragging to their friends about,' he said. Yet he credits those shows, 'Bonaduce' specifically, with elevating his name around the industry. 'It was pretty groundbreaking at the time,' he said. 'No one had ever done an unvarnished, unfiltered follow doc about a celebrity before.' Mr. Riegg then moved over to ABC, where he was responsible for 'Dancing With the Stars' and 'Extreme Makeover: Home Edition.' In 2010, he jumped to NBC, overseeing 'Biggest Loser,' 'American Ninja Warrior' and 'America's Got Talent.' He spent his summers in New York during Howard Stern's time on the talent competition show, serving as the shock jock's main point of contact with the network. 'He showed great success at dealing with talent, and I think that's when he got the confidence,' said Alan Braun, the head of unscripted television at Creative Artists Agency. 'That was a big job for him because that is such an important franchise at NBC.' Bela Bajaria, then the head of global television for Netflix and now its chief content officer, hired him in 2016, at a time when the streaming giant was just dipping its toe into unscripted content. Mr. Riegg was given pretty much free rein. 'It was like I showed up at the Netflix mansion and Ted walked me down the hallway, opened a door into a totally empty room and said, 'Here you go,'' Mr. Riegg said, referring to Mr. Sarandos. 'That is exhilarating to hear, but also terrifying.' Lightning in a Bottle? At Netflix, the first show Mr. Riegg released was a reboot of 'Queer Eye,' now completing its 10th and final season. He also debuted two successful cooking shows: 'Nailed It' and 'Sugar Rush,' proving that a variety of unscripted content can succeed on the service. 'They all blew way past any projection of what any unscripted show could do,' he said. But the biggest gamble he ever took, he said, was starting a reality show spinoff of the Korean drama 'Squid Game,' a global phenomenon and the company's most popular series ever. No entertainment company had successfully created a reality show based on one of its scripted shows. If his show failed, it could mar one of Netflix's crown jewels. But if he got it right, the show could possibly open up a new world of reality programming. 'This is either going to destroy both our careers or it's going to be a huge success,' Stephen Lambert, the producer of the reality show, 'Squid Game: The Challenge,' recalls Mr. Riegg telling him. The show wound up costing $40 million, one of the most expensive reality television shows ever. But viewers showed up in droves to watch 456 contestants play for $4.56 million. And it generated renewed interest in the scripted 'Squid Game' ahead of its next season. Season 2 of the competition series will debut in November, and a third season has already been ordered. Netflix will try to replicate that success with two upcoming shows: 'Monopoly,' and 'Willy Wonka: The Golden Ticket.' 'I don't know if we got lightning in a bottle, or if we actually cracked a little bit of the code,' Mr. Riegg said. 'Time will tell.' Avoiding a 'Westside' A common refrain inside Netflix is, 'If you're not failing, you're not trying.' Mr. Riegg's biggest failure in his nine-year tenure, the show 'Westside,' has become something of an urban legend within the company. The show, released in 2018, tracked the lives of nine struggling musicians in Los Angeles. Mr. Riegg describes it as 'The Hills' meets 'Cop Rock,' with each contestant breaking into song when their emotions overtake them. The show attracted so few viewers that Mr. Riegg initially thought it wasn't appearing on the service. He spent hours on the phone with the product team questioning the company's technology. That wasn't the problem. Mr. Hastings sent Mr. Riegg and his team the meager viewership figures with a note that simply read, 'Ouch!' Today the show's name is shorthand for a flop. Mr. Riegg said Mr. Sarandos, the company's co-chief executive, often quips: 'At least it's not a 'Westside.' ' No one thinks that Mr. Riegg's deals for live programming will result in another 'Westside.' But the stakes, and dollars involved, are much higher — particularly as the company weighs how deeply to invest in sports rights. Mr. Riegg insists it is a necessary risk for Netflix to add a robust new aspect to Netflix's programming with spectacles that bring viewers together en masse. Though he says he still isn't convinced that acquiring an entire season of a sports league is the way to go for the company. He considered the Taylor-Serrano fight, for example, to be a 'no-brainer.' Boxing had proved to be a sport Netflix viewers would tune into. The two women had fought as part of the undercard the night of Tyson-Paul match, with their bout becoming one of the most-talked about moments of the evening. Viewership of their recent rematch — yet another victory for Ms. Taylor — did not come close to the Tyson-Paul event, attracting 6 million at its peak. But Mr. Riegg suggested that the figure was encouraging. Now he's searching for ways to best the 'high-water mark' of Tyson-Paul. 'The competitive part of me would love to top that,' he said. 'The realist in me thinks something will beat it. I don't know what it will be and I don't know how quickly it will be.' But, he insists, he will keep looking. Read by Nicole Sperling Audio produced by Sarah Diamond.