The 36 Best Documentaries & Docuseries to Stream in 2024


Documentaries are thriving in the age of streaming, as supply meets the endless demand for deep dives into new worlds and a better understanding of some of pop culture’s most beloved stars. From revealing looks at Steve Martin, Elizabeth Taylor, and Martha Stewart to investigative journeys into the world of exotic animals and the people who love them (Chimp Crazy) and the big business of Renaissance Faires (Ren Faire), there’s something to suit every mood.

Read on for W’s best documentaries and docu-series of 2024 (so far).

Martha

Release date: October 30 on Netflix

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A new documentary on Martha Stewart, from director R.J. Cutler (Elton John: Never Too Late, Billie Eilish: The World’s a Little Blurry), pulls back the curtain on the “first female self-made billionaire in American history,” as she refers to herself at the beginning of the doc’s trailer. The film charts her journey from a teenage model to a Wall Street stockbroker to “the first influencer,” as it were, of lifestyle. Martha includes interviews with Stewart and her inner circle, and draws on archival footage of her earlier beginnings. It also, of course, considers her scandal and stint in prison, as well as her eventual reinvention—and redemption—in pop culture.

Magic City: An American Fantasy

Release date: Premiered at SXSW 2024, wide release TBD

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This three-part series uncovers the untold story behind the iconic Atlanta strip club, Magic City, and its rise from a humble club in 1985 to a cultural institution dubbed the “Black Studio 54.” The series, which premiered at SXSW, looks at the club’s enigmatic founder, entrepreneurial phone salesman Michael Barney (aka Mr. Magic), and the lives of the many women responsible for Magic City’s success over the years. It also features interviews with employees, dancers, journalists, management, and celebrities—including 2 Chainz, Shaquille O’Neal, Quavo, Killer Mike, Outkast’s Big Boi, and more—as they share how the club influenced decades of hip-hop music with the motto: “If the girls in Magic City dance to it, it’s a hit.”

Breath of Fire

Release date: October 23 on Max

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Viewers of documentaries like 2018’s Wild Wild Country and 2023’s Love Has Won: The Cult Of Mother God will be unsurprised by the premise of the new four-part series Breath of Fire. The series follows the story of Katie Griggs, a millennial YouTube astrologer who rebranded herself as Kundalini yoga master Guru Jagat in 2013, leveraging her social media popular into a multi-million dollar empire with thousands of devoted followers. Extremely popular among celebrities (the doc’s trailer refers to her as the “Kim Kardashian of spirituality,”) Griggs promised her followers wealth and physical health (in addition to spiritual enlightenment), much to their eventual detriment. Based on a Vanity Fair story by Hayley Phelan, the docu-series also explores the history of Kundalini yoga in America, from the late 1960s to present day.

Will & Harper

Release date: September 27 on Netflix

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When Will Ferrell’s close friend, former Saturday Night Live head writer Harper Steele, comes out as a trans woman, the pair set out together for a two-week cross-country road trip from New York to Los Angeles, stopping in dive bars, Walmart parking lots and national parks along the way. The ensuing film is filled with deep conversations and lots of laughter—during the trip, they also talk to their famous friends, including Tina Fey, Will Forte, Kristen Wiig, and Seth Meyers. The Sundance premiere of the film received multiple standing ovations, resonating with audiences as a testament to the unique journey of self-discovery and connection that lifelong friendship provides.

Look Into My Eyes

Release date: In theaters September 6; streaming date TBD

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Director Lana Wilson took a break from documenting the lives of mega-celebrities like Taylor Swift and Brooke Shields to dive into the intimate world of a handful of working New York City psychics with Look Into My Eyes. The tender yet clear-eyed portrayal of this interconnected group of clairvoyants is both a hyper-specific glimpse into the private lives of these readers and mediums (including one particularly talented pet psychic) and also a meditation on the way grief can act as a catalyst toward spiritual investigation, interpersonal connection and growth.

Chimp Crazy

Release date: August 18 on Max

Photograph by Courtesy of HBO

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From the creator of pandemic era-hit Tiger King comes another story about a person obsessed with wild animals—in this case, exotic animal broker Tonia Haddix, who spends her day caring for chimpanzees in captivity. The “Dolly Parton of chimps,” as she refers to herself, Haddix is larger-than-life in both her pastel pink, bleach blonde aesthetic and her devotion to her beloved great ape pets. The four-part series is both funny and sad in its examination of the unique bonds humans and animals can form, and what it takes to maintain them in a society that doesn’t always understand.

Elizabeth Taylor: The Lost Tapes

Release date: August 3 on Max

Image Courtesy of Frank Worth/HBO

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Another entry in 2024’s blossoming canon of documentaries about great 20th-century female icons, Elizabeth Taylor: The Lost Tapes, allows the silver screen star to narrate her life story with unprecedented access to her personal archive. An additional 40 hours of newly discovered intimate audio interviews (with journalist Richard Meryman) add to the film, which promises an in-depth look at the inner life of the Hollywood Golden Age legend.

Simone Biles Rising

Release date: July 17 on Netflix

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Simone Biles shocked the world when she withdrew from the Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympics, but as she told the public at the time, she needed to attend to something even more important than athletic excellence: her mental health. This four-episode docuseries follows the gymnast four years later as she puts in the mental, physical and emotional effort to train for her comeback at the Paris Summer Games.

FAYE

Release date: July 13 on Max

With her Academy Award-nominated roles in Bonnie & Clyde, Chinatown, and Network (for which she won Best Actress in 1977), Faye Dunaway became an emblem of the vaunted New Hollywood era of American filmmaking. At 83, the actress gets the documentary treatment for the first time. From director Laurent Bouzereau (Natalie Wood: What Remains Behind), FAYE gives Dunaway space to reflect on her expansive career and enduring legacy in film and fashion (her icy blonde bob remains a mood board classic), from the highs of her massive stardom to the lows of her infamous starring role in now-camp classic Mommie Dearest. She’ll also discuss her struggles with mental health issues and bipolar disorder, her upbringing in small-town Florida, and the intensity of the characters she’s played. Like many brilliant women, Dunaway has been called “difficult,” a label rarely given to her male counterparts—this is her chance to address those claims once and for all.

Mastermind

Release date: July 11 on Hulu

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From sisters and producing partners Dakota and Elle Fanning comes this documentary about Dr. Ann Burgess, a psychiatric forensic nurse researcher, and prominent Boston College professor who played a critical role in developing the FBI’s department for psychologically profiling—and catching—serial killers. (The character Wendy Carr from Netflix’s 2017 series Mindhunter was based on Burgess). In Mastermind: To Think Like a Killer, Burgess recalls how she helped solve some of the biggest true-crime cases of the 21st century, using her interviews with murderers like Ted Bundy and Ed Kemper and her past work with survivors to piece together what happened, and why. As the only woman, at times, at the FBI, Burgess also had to be a champion of herself in order to accomplish the important work before her. While true crime is in such boom times we’re nearly ready for a bust, Burgess’s story offers deep and applicable psychological insight into human nature.

I Am: Celine Dion

Release date: June 25 on Prime Video

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In December 2022, Céline Dion canceled her world tour, revealing that she’d be diagnosed with Stiff-Person Syndrom (SPS), a rare neurological disorder that causes severe and persistent muscle spasms and sensitivity to loud noises. A consummate professional and dedicated artist, Dion was devastated to deliver the news to fans, and a new documentary, I Am: Céline Dion, is clearly a love letter to those who love her. Directed by Oscar-nominee Irene Taylor, the documentary gives an insider look into Dion’s daily life as she reflects on her prolific, decades-long career and promises to return to the stage as soon as possible.

Diane von Furstenberg: Woman in Charge

Release date: June 25 on Hulu (US) and Disney+ (internationally)

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At 77, Diane von Furstenberg is known worldwide for her iconic wrap dress and initialed (DVF) fashion line. Now, a documentary by Oscar-winner Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy (who will also direct the next Star Wars film) delves into Furstenberg’s life story, detailing her Belgian childhood as the daughter of a Holocaust survivor, her marriage into (and subsequent divorce from) German royalty, the creation of her fashion empire, and her extensive philanthropy. The doc premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival before landing on streamers, featuring interviews with famous friends of Furstenberg—like Marc Jacobs, Hillary Clinton, and Oprah. Read W’s review of Woman in Charge here.

America’s Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders

Release date: June 20 on Netflix

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With women’s sports becoming more popular than ever, the seven-episode Sweethearts series focuses on the incredible physical and mental pressures of being part of the iconic Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders. The docuseries comes from the team behind Cheer and Last Chance U, and follows the squad through the entire 2023-2024 NFL season, from grueling auditions, to training camp, to cheering at the games themselves. Despite a cozy relationship with the NFL, the series tries to expose some of the more problematic sides of professional cheerleading—like its very thin, very white beauty standards and the unsettling degree to which the cheerleaders are underpaid. Like Cheer, it also delves into the personal lives of its main subjects, uncovering the dancers’s motivations behind pursuing the dream of professional cheerleading and the lives they build once that dream is fulfilled.

Slave Play. Not a Movie. A Play.

Release date: June 20 on HBO Max

Photograph by Courtesy of HBO

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Debuting on Broadway in 2019 to both critical acclaim (it received 12 Tony nominations) and critical commentary, Slave Play is one of the most talked-about plays in recent memory. Its playwright, Jeremy O. Harris, recreates the show’s beginnings with this new super-meta documentary, which premiered at Tribeca Film Festival and brings together a cast of talented actors to do a live reading of the play. The result is a lively look behind the curtain of a Broadway production and Harris’s creative process, as well as commentary on the interconnecting forms of documentary, live theater, and the internet (at one point, Harris sits in an editing bay, watching footage of himself from moments before). With the play currently making its West End debut, it’s a fitting time to revisit the conversations this show sparked. Read W’s interview with Jeremy O. Harris here.

BRATS

Release date: June 13 on Hulu

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In BRATS, director (and Brat-Packer himself Andrew McCarthy takes a fond and thoughtful look back at the group of bright young movie stars ruling the ’80s, and the resulting moniker that haunted them for the rest of their lives. Interviews with Demi Moore, Rob Lowe, Emilio Estevez, Lea Thompson and more reveal the actors’s thoughts on their swift and heady rise to fame, with the clarity of several decades of space between them. At one point, McCarthy sits down with writer David Blum, who coined “Brat-Pack” (the “nepo-baby” of its day) for a 1985 New York Magazine cover story, and adjacent ’80s icons like Bret Easton Ellis add cultural context for the massive phenomenon that the Brat-Pack and their star-making films became.

Ren Faire

Release date: Premieres June 2 on Max with episodes 2&3 streaming on June 9

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Leave it to the Safdie brothers to co-produce a documentary that’s really a docu-fantasy. HBO’s Ren Faire tells a fantastical three-part tale about the succession drama of the storied Texas Renaissance Festival, as its 86-year-old “King” George Coulam makes plans to step down. As the elected mayor of the town he incorporated and the employer of the thousands of hard-working people—including artists, vendors, jesters, wizards, and jousters—working at the faire, Coulam is the most powerful person at the festival. As he plans to retire and focus on the pursuit of love, Coulam must find a successor, and Ren Faire’s partly fictional plot follows six eager competitors in a Games of Thrones-style showdown for the faire’s crown.

Queen of the Deuce

Release date: May 24 in theaters and on Amazon Prime and Apple TV+

Courtesy of the Wilson family
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HBO’s three-season drama The Deuce was centered on denizens of the booming sex trade in 1970s Times Square—a neighborhood also known as “The Deuce,” but a new documentary tells the real-life story of an actual entrepreneur at the heart of the scene, Chelly Wilson. The Greek immigrant, who barely escaped the Holocaust and landed in New York City, ran an empire of her own from the late ’60s to the early ’80s, building a porn theater and becoming a central figure in an era categorized by the sexual revolution, feminist movement and explosion of queer culture. Filmmaker Valerie Kontakos examines Wilson’s enigmatic life and legacy in the world of adult cinema amidst this historically significant backdrop.

Power

Release date: May 17 on Netflix

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In 2020, Oscar-nominated director Yance Ford watched with the rest of the world as the murder of George Floyd ignited mass protests and renewed conversation about the role of police in America. He set out to better understand the evolution and purpose of the institution, and the result is Power, a documentary that connects the historical origins of the United States’ current police force, from 1700s slave patrols to the uprisings of the 1960s and 2020s. It examines how money and political power have worked together over centuries to create policing as we know it today through archival footage, interviews, and academic research.

Catching Fire: The Story of Anita Pallenberg

Release date: May 3 in theaters and on VOD

© Michael Cooper. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures
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Eternal moodboard muse Anita Pallenberg is the subject of a new documentary, which draws heavily from the words of her unpublished memoir (voiced in the film by Scarlett Johansson). The German-Italian model, actress, and multi-hyphenate creative rose to fame in the 1960s and 1970s after becoming embedded with the Rolling Stones. First dating Brian Jones and later Keith Richards (with whom she had three children), Pallenberg was an integral part of the iconic rock band, inspiring many of its songs and providing backing vocals and critical feedback on production. Though she faced her fair share of misogynistic scrutiny (being accused, for instance, of trying to break up the band), Pallenberg was a cultural force in her own right. She also led a complex personal life, shown in this intimate film through private home videos and family photographs.

Call Me Country: Beyoncé and Nashville’s Renaissance

Release date: April 26 on Max

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Now that she’s become the first Black woman to ever top Billboard’s Hot Country Songs chart, Beyoncé has once again set the culture wars ablaze. But even before the album dropped in March, a conversation was brewing about who traditionally white, male-dominated country music belongs to. This film from the CNN FlashDocs unit examines the impact of Cowboy Carter on the genre, as well as the Black artists in Nashville (like Rhiannon Giddens) who have been quietly laying the groundwork for a vibe shift that’s been a long time coming.

High & Low: John Galliano

Release date: April 26 on Mubi

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High & Low charts John Galliano’s rise to the highest of heights as he became one of the most influential fashion designers of his time, to his staggering fall from grace after a series of his anti-Semitic and racist rants went viral in 2011. The doc takes into account Galliano’s upbringing in Spain and England, his difficult relationship with his father, and his entry into celebrity society as he became a designer to the stars—and the usual struggles that come with the trappings of fame, like excessive partying and the extreme pressure of the international fashion schedule. With interviews from Galliano himself, along with well-known figures from the fashion world (including Naomi Campbell, Anna Wintour, and Robin Givhan), High & Low asks viewers to decide for themselves whether the designer is worthy of redemption and why genius so often seems to beget trouble. Read W’s review of High & Low here.

The Jinx—Part Two

Release date: April 21 on HBO and Max

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In 2015, filmmaker Andrew Jarecki’s Emmy-winning docuseries The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst became a true crime hit and resulted in the arrest of its titular subject for murder. A New York billionaire real estate heir, Durst had evaded responsibility for decades for the murders of his first wife, a longtime friend, and a neighbor, eventually facing suspicion for several other cold cases. The Jinx—Part Two picks up where the first series left off—with Durst in jail, facing trial (Durst died a prisoner in Stockton, California in 2022, which the film also covers). Jarecki remained in close contact with Durst over the years, and in addition to interviews with him, the six-episode Part Two features witnesses who had not previously come forward, Durst’s prison calls, interviews with law enforcement involved in the investigations, and unseen material related to the murder cases.

Brandy Hellville & The Cult of Fast Fashion

Release date: April 9 on Max

Danny Rozenblit/Courtesy HBO

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With its “one size fits all” tagline, Brandy Melville has become both a beloved shopping destination for teenage girls and primed for controversy. Those who watched White Hot: The Rise and Fall of Abercrombie and Fitch won’t be surprised to learn that one of that 2000s-era’s successors in the teen space has its own murky practices, from its participation in the global fast fashion industry to the allegedly toxic culture it fosters behind its shiny exterior. Brandy Hellville captures it all.

Kim’s Video

Release date: April 5 in theaters

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Kim’s Video is many things, including, in the first section, a look at the history of the famous New York movie rental store, which opened in 1987 and expanded to five Manhattan locations (with the most well-known being on St. Mark’s Place) before eventually closing in 2007 (its extensive archive of VHS tapes and DVDs was sent to be tended to in Sicily). A nostalgic tribute to the store’s singular influence on downtown New York culture and cinema nerds everywhere, the documentary then takes on a more thriller vibe, playing with genre as it goes on a wild goose chase to find the aforementioned archives in Italy and to dig deeper into the enterprising, young South Korean immigrant who started the operation in the first place, Youngman Kim.

Girls State

Release date: April 5 on Apple TV+

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In a climate of extreme political polarization, it’s difficult to have genuine conversations. Girls State, however, follows 500 teenage girls from across the battleground state of Missouri as they gather for a week-long experiment in democracy, where they build a government from the ground up, campaign for office, and form a Supreme Court to weigh on the divisive issues of the day. Rather than being the subject of discussions and policies, the girls get to decide their future, at least in theory, while making friends along the way.

The Synanon Fix

Release date: April 1 on Max

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Given the public’s fascination with cults, it’s no surprise that Synanon, the California treatment center that grew from a respected rehabilitation program in the late 1950s into an abusive communal living experimental, is getting the documentary treatment. The Synanon Fix (from the filmmakers who created the enlightening Downfall: The Case Against Boeing) is told mainly through first-person accounts of former Synanon members and traces the organization’s history from a radical therapeutic community to one plagued with criticisms of child abuse, assault, and even attempted murder. It also carefully examines its charismatic and controversial founder, Charles “Chuck” Dederich.

STEVE! (martin) A Documentary in 2 Pieces

Release date: March 29 on Apple TV+

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Beloved as he is, Steve Martin is an enigmatic figure in entertainment and A24 and Tremolo Production’s STEVE! (martin) a documentary in 2 pieces aims to peel back the curtain on the comedian and actor’s life and personality. The first part, “Then,” chronicles Martin’s early success in standup, which he walked away from at 35, and “Now” focuses on the 78-year-old’s current enjoyment of the fruits of his labor, all while tracing his personal and artistic transformation.

Carol Doda Topless at the Condor

Release date: March 22 in theaters

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This new documentary tells the story of Carol Doda, a young San Francisco cocktail waitress who upended social norms against the backdrop of the 1964 Republican Convention with her topless act atop a white baby grand piano at a North Beach nightclub—challenging conventions, celebrating the beginning of the sexual revolution and becoming one of the most popular tourist attractions in the city. The doc is both a look at Doda’s life and legacy and a tour of the boisterous, vibrant world of North Beach, San Francisco at that time.

20 Days in Mariupol

Release date: Available now on Prime Video

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At a time when journalists around the world face increasing threats and barriers to producing their work, 20 Days in Mariupol highlights the importance—and danger—of reporting from combat zones. The Academy Award-winning Frontline documentary follows an AP team of Ukrainian journalists trapped in the besieged city of Mariupol, Ukraine; the only international reporters remaining in the city, they are left to capture the devastation around them at immense personal cost.

Four Daughters

Release date: Available now on Netflix and Prime Video

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The Oscar-nominated Four Daughters tells the true story of Tunisia native Olfa Hamrouni and her four daughters after the eldest two were radicalized as teenagers, leaving their home to fight alongside the Islamic State in Libya. Hamrouni drew international attention in 2016 when she criticized the Tunisian government for not stopping her daughters from leaving and for preventing her from going to find them in Libya. Four Daughters is a mix of documentary and fiction, bringing in actors to play the two missing daughters to reconstruct the family’s story.

God Save Texas

Release date: Available now on Max

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God Save Texas is told in trilogy form, with each of the three episodes highlighting a different issue currently facing the state of Texas. Three award-winning filmmakers (and Texan natives), Richard Linklater, Alex Stapleton, and Iliana Sosa, return to their hometowns, telling the history of each city and connecting the themes to the broader story of America today. The border, the prison industrial complex, and the oil industry are all investigated, as each city depicted—Hunstville, El Paso, and Houston—is used to examine the past, present, and future of the Lone Star State.

The Greatest Love Story Never Told

Release date: Available now on Prime Video

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An accomplished, global multihyphenate superstar, Jennifer Lopez still had one project she wanted to complete: independently producing a new album and an original film to explore her “twenty-year journey to self-love.” The resulting documentary is a highly personal look at Lopez’s process of recording her latest album, This Is Me…Now, bringing viewers into the most intimate parts of her life through interviews with her inner circle and candid moments at home with her family, friends, and of course, Ben Affleck.

Lil Nas X: Long Live Montero

Release date: Available now on Max

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Lil Nas X hit the ground running this year with Long Live Montero, which follows the Grammy award-winning rapper, singer, and songwriter as he prepares for his first-ever headlining U.S. tour. For anyone curious about the artist behind the controversy and the memes—it’s also a highly personal look at the pressures of creating a tour.

Frida

Release date: Available now on Prime Video

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Frida, from first-time director Carla Gutiérrez, was a hit with critics and audiences when it premiered at Sundance this year, and for good reason. While Frida Kahlo is best known for her iconic paintings and especially self-portraits, the artist was also a prolific writer, documenting her life in diaries, letters, and essays. Frida is narrated completely in Kahlo’s own words, drawing from these sources (and interviews she gave) to showcase her work while providing an intimate glimpse into her thoughts, feelings, and romantic life.

Quiet On Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV

Release date: Available now on Max

Christopher Polk/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty Images

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Investigation Discovery’s four-part documentary series, Quiet On Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV, dives deep into the “golden era” of iconic late 1990s and early 2000s Nickelodeon shows, uncovering the deeply toxic and abusive environments that flourished behind the scenes. Shows like All That, The Amanda Show, Zoey 101, and Drake and Josh are examined as actors, writers, directors, and parents from that time are interviewed about bad behavior they witnessed or experienced, ranging from mildly uncomfortable to illegal. It’s a disturbing watch, with former Nick star Drake Bell sharing for the first time his experience of being abused by convicted sex offender Brian Peck—and another entry into the canon of series that exposes the darkness behind seemingly very successful industries.

Freaknik: The Wildest Party Never Told

Release date: Available now on Hulu

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Hulu

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Ever since news of Freaknik: The Wildest Party Never Told dropped on social media, those who attended the iconic Atlanta spring break party in the ’80s and ’90s have been bracing themselves for previously unseen footage of the wild times of hookups and legendary parties that made the titular event famous—and ultimately led to its downfall. Yet Freaknik, executive produced by Luke Campbell, Jermaine Dupri, and 21 Savage, is a celebratory, nostalgic look at the Freaknik’s origins, with a focus on how it brought attention to Atlanta and American Black culture and why its infamous legacy still resonates today.

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