
Stream These Journalism Shows On Hulu, Peacock, HBO Max & More
Billy Crudup in Season 4 of Apple TV+'s "The Morning Show."
Journalism is taking center stage at the moment across a variety of different streaming platforms.
A fresh wave of streaming content that includes TV shows, both new series and returning favorites, as well as high-profile documentaries is helping to shine a light on the fourth estate — with the newest titles touching on everything from the profession's larger-than-life personalities to iconic publications that challenged norms. The coming months will also visit fictional newsrooms wrestling with the kinds of crises that are all too real.
From Hulu's portrait of a broadcast icon to a new HBO docuseries that reexamines a feminist media revolution, the picks that we've rounded up below dive into the messy, inspiring, and often chaotic business of reporting the news. Together, they spotlight four of the latest journalism-themed releases from streamers including Hulu, HBO, Apple TV+, and Peacock.
New and upcoming journalism-themed streaming picks
As someone who's worked in this profession for a couple of decades now, I'd argue that few industries are as naturally suited to drama and documentary storytelling as journalism – a function of things like the generally high stakes and the pursuit of truth that's often at the center of these kinds of stories. The streaming titles below tap into that dynamic, each in their own unique way.
Barbara Walters: Tell Me Everything is a documentary film directed by Jackie Jesko that presents a retrospective of Barbara Walters' life and work.
The broadcast icon, who died in 2022, went on to become one of the most recognizable faces in U.S. TV news despite beginning in what was then a male-dominated field. Among other achievements, she helped change what journalism on television could be, blending hard-nosed interviews with a conversational style that connected with millions of viewers.
This film, which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival earlier this month, traces Walters' long TV career, as well as her influence on journalism and celebrity culture. Walters herself is also heard from in her own voice through previously unreleased recordings, which supplements the film's archival footage and interviews with colleagues and public figures including Oprah Winfrey, Joy Behar, and Katie Couric.
The next title on our journalism-themed streaming list offers a reminder that some magazines spark conversation — and then there are publications like Ms., which sparked a revolution.
Dear Ms.: A Revolution in Print is an upcoming three-part HBO docuseries that charts how Ms. reshaped journalism by focusing on women's voices and their lived experiences. Directed by Salima Koroma, Alice Gu, and Cecilia Aldarondo, the series also goes beyond the magazine itself to explore the movement it helped ignite — which it does in part thanks to the inclusion of interviews with founders like Gloria Steinem and Letty Cottin Pogrebin.
Each episode unpacks a chapter in Ms.'s evolution, from its bold launch to its clashes with advertisers and its ongoing reckoning with issues of race, sex, and representation. What Dear Ms. delivers is also more than a history lesson; it's an intimate portrait of feminist media in motion. And it's about the kinds of stories that women tell when they're the ones in control of the narrative.
Apple TV+'s prestige newsroom drama is coming back this fall, and this time the story will pick up in the spring of 2024 — two years after the end of Season 3.
The fourth season of The Morning Show will continue its exploration of power, ambition, and truth in modern media. In terms of the new season's story: With a corporate merger complete, the fictional UBA network faces new threats — from deepfakes and disinformation to behind-the-scenes betrayals. Reese Witherspoon and Jennifer Aniston reprise their roles as dueling anchors, joined this season by newcomers including Marion Cotillard, Jeremy Irons, and William Jackson Harper.
The Morning Show has racked up a slew of awards (including multiple Emmys for Billy Crudup as the charismatic Cory Ellison) and critical acclaim for its take on what happens when idealism meets ratings pressure. The show is basically a dramatization of how news is made, sometimes manipulated, and monetized.
This final journalism-themed streaming release is the most old school-focused of the bunch.
From the creators of The Office comes a new mockumentary that trades Dunder Mifflin's cubicles for a drab Midwestern newsroom. The Paper follows the crew behind The Toledo Truth Teller, a small newspaper with a shrinking number of subscriptions, and staffed by a skeleton crew of idealists.
Set in the same universe as The Office and filmed by that show's same fictional documentary team, this new Peacock series features a blend of fresh faces and familiar ones — including the return of Oscar Nuñez as accountant Oscar Martinez, while the rest of the cast include Domhnall Gleeson and Sabrina Impacciatore. Co-created by Greg Daniels and Michael Koman, expect The Paper to skewer everything from the existential crisis confronting local journalism to Gen Z office politics.
I'll certainly be among the viewers feeling a twinge of nostalgia with this upcoming streaming release, seeing as I once spent more time than I'd have preferred slogging away in the trenches of a daily print newsroom. Which is why I'm especially curious to see how the show grapples with the collapse of regional newspapers — and the absurdity of trying to save a newsroom with little more than grit and good intentions.
Hashtags

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


CBS News
an hour ago
- CBS News
Sacramento hosts Michelin Guide California 2025. New capital city restaurants added to guide.
To get a Michelin star as a chef is like an actor getting an Oscar, and the stars were out in California's capital city on Wednesday night with Sacramento hosting the Michelin Guide California 2025. Two Sacramento restaurants kept their Michelin stars, while three others, new to the guide this year, celebrated the boost to business. Majka Pizzeria was buzzing Wednesday night, with the hum of the kitchen and friends sharing some of Sacramento's best pizza. "We opened in the pandemic in 2020. It was just me and my wife working a takeout window," owner Alex Sherry said. "Fast forward to 2025, we have a full staff, full dining room, full set dinners every night now." The hard work didn't go unnoticed, and this year, Majka got on the Michelin Guide. "It changed dramatically more than you could ever imagine," Sherry said. "Business was just incredibly busy overnight. Now it's five days a week, fresh pasta and small plates, fresh salad and pizza. It's been really amazing." Call it the Michelin effect for 17 Sacramento-area restaurants. Two of those, Localis and The Kitchen, hold Michelin stars and were showcased during the ceremony. The guide brings the farm-to-fork capital to a larger audience, one that seeks out dining as an experience, making Sacramento the destination. "You think about how Sacramento used to be defined," said Visit Sacramento CEO Mike Testa. "Obviously, we're the home of the gold rush. We're a government city, but you look at it now, food is at the top of that list." Pho Momma in Sacramento earned the Bib Gourmand distinction, which means they offer a three-course meal at a reasonable price.


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Late Night Ponders the Possibility of a Millennial Mayor of New York
Welcome to Best of Late Night, a rundown of the previous night's highlights that lets you sleep — and lets us get paid to watch comedy. Here are the 50 best movies on Netflix right now. Young Blood A young state assemblyman, Zohran Mamdani, is likely to be the Democratic candidate for mayor of New York City after stunning former Gov. Andrew Cuomo in a primary election on Tuesday. 'My seven roommates are never going to believe this,' Jimmy Fallon imagined the 33-year-old candidate saying on Wednesday's 'Tonight Show.' 'Wow, that's a good age, 'cause he knows the meaning of both the spending cap and 'no cap.'' — JIMMY FALLON 'Between his campaign and his billionaire-backed super PACs, Cuomo raised over $36 million, while Mamdani relied on volunteers and a relentlessly positive campaign based on issues that affect everyday New Yorkers, like freezing the rent, no-cost child care and free buses. Sounds pretty good. Sounds pretty good — and I, for one, cannot wait to get my free bus. I'm gonna paint mine like the Scooby-Doo Mystery Machine and then fight ghost crime.' — STEPHEN COLBERT 'According to experts, with this message, Mamdani generated excitement among minority groups and electrified younger voters, while older voters still run on diesel.' — STEPHEN COLBERT The Punchiest Punchlines (Cuomo Edition) 'Yesterday was New York City's Democratic mayoral primary, and former Governor Andrew Cuomo conceded to state Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani. On the bright side for Cuomo, at least he doesn't have to move to New York City.' — SETH MEYERS 'Mamdani won decisively in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens, while Andrew Cuomo won Staten Island, the Bronx and the secret sixth borough of Groper's Island.' — STEPHEN COLBERT 'During his concession speech, Cuomo said that Mamdani put together a great campaign and added, 'He touched young people and inspired them and got them to come out and vote.' Cuomo's mistake was waiting until after he was elected to touch young people.' — SETH MEYERS 'Yes, that Andrew Cuomo, the same one who sentenced grannies to death in nursing homes during Covid. I guess the senior vote was important after all.' — DANA PERINO, guest host of 'Gutfeld' 'The same Cuomo who resigned in disgrace and blamed his groping tendencies on being Italian, like he was Super Mario popping Cialis instead of mushrooms.' — DANA PERINO The Bits Worth Watching Diego Luna, this week's guest host of 'Jimmy Kimmel Live,' and Guillermo Rodriguez tried to cash in on the surge in Americans moving to Mexico with a new business venture, Gring-Go. What We're Excited About on Thursday Night The 'Law & Order: Special Victims Unit' star Mariska Hargitay will talk about her intimate new documentary, 'My Mom Jayne,' on 'Late Night with Seth Meyers.' Also, Check This Out Modern Love listeners talked about how location sharing has affected their relationships with loved ones.


Screen Geek
an hour ago
- Screen Geek
Justin Baldoni's Lawyer Says Blake Lively Hasn't Won Just Yet
The legal debacle between celebrities Justin Baldoni and Blake Lively is far from over. At least, that's what Justin Baldoni's lawyer has to say, insisting that Blake Lively has not yet won and that she shouldn't be celebrating this soon. A judge recently dismissed Baldoni's $400 million defamation lawsuit that was made against Lively. As noted via Newsweek, Baldoni's laywer Bryan Freedman is taking the next steps necessary to continue their legal battle against Lively. Here's his latest statement regarding this endeavor: 'Ms. Lively and her team's predictable declaration of victory is false,' Freedman shared. 'This case is about false ccusations of sexual harassment and retaliation and a nonexistent smear campaign, which Ms. Lively's own team conveniently describes as 'untraceable' because they cannot prove what never happened,' he continued. 'Most importantly, Ms. Lively's own claims are no truer today than they were yesterday, and with the facts on our side, we march forward with the same confidence that we had when Ms. Lively and her cohorts initiated this battle and look forward to her forthcoming deposition, which I will be taking.' Currently, Baldoni's legal team has until June 23 to refile the amended claims of their dismissed lawsuit. The court is allowing the team to amend four of the seven claims against Blake Lively, with the court having dismissed the defamation-related claims, which the team hopes will allow them to provide more evidence and refined allegations. Although Lively's legal team is quite happy with the outcome so far, especially having the initial $400 million defamation lawsuit dismissed by a judge, Freedman could be right in that it's too early to celebrate. Especially if they're being allowed to amend four of their seven claims. Stay tuned to ScreenGeek for any additional updates regarding the legal situation between Justin Baldoni and Blake Lively as we have them, including whether or not Baldoni's lawyer has any additional statements to share. In the meantime, they do seem to be right in that the debacle will still be ongoing.