For the first time ever, the NAACP Image Awards are getting into gaming.
The 57th NAACP Image Awards kick off a two-day stream of its virtual awards portion Monday at 8 p.m. on Youtube. Among the multiple digital content creator categories that will be announced out of the stream is Outstanding Digital Content Creator – Gaming/Tech, an honor that will go to one of five nominees: Berlin Edmond Jr., Cory Kenshin, Jay-Ann Lopez, Khleo Thomas or Gerard Williams, better known to fans as HipHopGamer.
“So I personally spoke with Derek Johnson, the president of the NAACP Image Awards, and he said it clear as day,” Williams told Variety ahead of Monday’s awards show livestream. “He said, yo, look, let me tell you right now, we wanted to open up this category — because he realizes that there’s a lot of people, there’s a lot of minorities, there’s a lot of Black people, period, that’s also in this area that we need to reach out to, that we need to talk to. And the only way that’s going to happen is we got to meet them where they are. So it was ideal to open up this category for the 57th NAACP Image Award. So that’s one of the reasons why they opened it, and also they understand the power of gaming and tech, AI, where everything is going. They need to be a part of that conversation as well, so they can have a lot of opportunity in the space, too.”
Williams first became interested in gaming when his late grandmother, Margaret Williams, introduced him to the hobby when he was a small child growing up in Brooklyn. Today, he’s known for his gaming journalism and weekly syndicated show with Hot97, as well as his community outreach, including Playmakers, a partnership with Chase Bank to expand financial literacy through gaming in New York City schools, and a Denzel Washington-backed gaming-focused rehabilitation program for inmates at Rikers Island.
Williams recently debuted as a character in the “Mutant Football League 2” video game, featuring his likeness, music and his own team, which includes some of the students and released inmates he has worked with.
“Being nominated for the first time ever that this category even exists — just this moment alone, it makes me just go right back to grandma when I was four years old,” Williams said. “That kid spirit just comes right out saying it was an honor. I was actually in a hotel in Vegas for something else and I got the email. I was jumping on the bed. It was crazy. It was very overwhelming.”
Up next, Williams will be the host for the Games Beat Summit at the GDC Festival of Gaming in March in San Francisco, and looking further ahead, his longterm aspirations include landing a Men’s Health and becoming a gaming anchor on “Good Morning America.”
Win or lose — though Williams is very clear he would love to win — at the NAACP Image Awards, Williams is so grateful the gaming category exists at all and sees it as a step toward more acknowledgement of the Black community’s presence in the gaming industry.
Williams recalls attending his first E3 (a now-ended but formerly impactful gaming convention) back in 2008, and the poor reception he received from some in the predominantly-white gaming journalism community, despite his self-proclaimed exuberant and friendly attitude.
“I got this big championship belt on me. I’m from East New York, Brooklyn, and I don’t code switch, meaning that I’m me wherever I go. This is what you get, but I know my stuff,” Williams said. “The way it was 15-20 years ago, oh my gosh, listen — it was bad. One of the reasons why I learned business so much so fast within the gaming industry is because I was met with racism, too. It’s crazy. But one thing about me, I don’t complain, I create. Period. Because you can get caught up in all of that racist stuff and be all mad, and then at the end of the day, you can only control what you can control. And if you allow the negativity to control your energy, then you become what you hate.”
Floyd “Money” Mayweather Jr. and Manny “Pac-Man” Pacquiao are stepping back into the ring to face each other one more time, and they’ll do it live on Netflix.
The two boxing legends are set to meet in a professional bout on Sept. 19, 2026 at The Sphere in Las Vegas, with Netflix streaming the event around the world. This will mark the first time Mayweather (50-0, 27 KOs) and Pacquiao (62-8-3, 39 KOs) have faced each other since their historic “Fight of the Century” back in 2015, which Mayweather won via unanimous decision.
Pacquiao has remained active as a professional boxer since then, fighting eight more matches in the intervening 10 years. He most recently fought to a majority draw against Mario Barrios in July 2025. Mayweather, meanwhile, has not fought professionally since he defeated MMA star Conor McGregor by TKO in 2017. He has fought several exhibition matches since then, though, including those against Logan Paul and John Gotti III among others.
Further details about the other fights on the card will be announced at a later date. The rematch was organized and will be produced by EverWonder Studio, Hidden Empire, and Limitless X Holdings. The event itself is being promoted by Manny Pacquiao Promotions and Mayweather Promotions in partnership with CSI Sports/Fight Sports.
“Floyd and I gave the world what remains the biggest fight in boxing history,” Pacquiao said. “The fans have waited long enough—they deserve this rematch, and it will be even bigger now that it will be streamed live globally on Netflix. I want Floyd to live with the one loss on his professional record and always remember who gave it to him. As always, I dedicate this fight to my fellow Filipinos around the world and to bringing glory to the Philippines.”
Mayweather added, “I already fought and beat Manny once. This time will be the same result.”
Mayweather vs. Pacquiao 1 was one of the most anticipated matchups in boxing history. The event drew a record 4.6 million pay-per-view buys and also set a world-record live gate of $72 million at the MGM Grand Garden Arena.
This will be the latest high-profile live fight Netflix has streamed. Most famously, the company aired the Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson event, which drew 108 million live global viewers. They followed that up with Katie Taylor vs. Amanda Serrano 3, after the two put on a dazzling performance during the Tyson-Paul card, as well as Canelo Álvarez vs. Terence Crawford. Netflix also streamed Anthony Joshua’s sixth round knockout of Paul back in December. Up next, Tyson “The Gypsy King” Fury will fight against Arslanbek Makhmudov on April 11.
Netflix is also beginning to move into MMA, with Ronda Rousey set to fight Gina Carano on May 16, with both women’s MMA legends coming out of retirement.
It’s the crossover no one knew they always needed: ABC’s “The Rookie” will air an episode “prominently” featuring the cast of “Game Changer,” a competition series from indie comedy platform Dropout (formerly CollegeHumor).
The upcoming episode of Season 8 of the Nathan Fillion-led police procedural, which will air March 2 at 10 p.m., is titled “Fun and Games.”
Along with “The Rookie” staples Fillion as John Nolan, Mekia Cox as Nyla Harper, Lisseth Chavez as Celina Juarez and Deric Augustine as Miles Penn, the episode will feature Dropout CEO and “Game Changer” host Sam Reich, as well as frequent Dropout collaborators Vic Michaelis (Peacock’s “Ponies”), Jacob Wysocki, Zac Oyama and Anna Garcia.
Per ABC’s official logline for the crossover episode, which was filmed in part at Dropout’s own studios in Los Angeles, “Harper and Miles feel the weight of their recent mistakes, while Harper is tasked with training Miles. Nolan and Celina are dispatched to a robbery call at the Dropout TV Studios where Nolan encounters a familiar face.”
After airing on ABC, the new “The Rookie” episode will be available to stream on Hulu the next day.
Ahead of announcing its “The Rookie” crossover on Monday, the home to “Game Changer,” “Very Important People,” “Dimension 20” and “Make Some Noise,” debuted its first-ever licensed series, the UK comedy “Don’t Hug Me I’m Scared.”
See first-look photos from “The Rookie”-“Game Changer” crossover episode below.
Hulu‘s revival of The X-Files is moving forward and the project has cast its first co-lead.
Danielle Deadwyler has landed one of the two coveted starring roles in the series.
In addition, Sinners filmmaker Ryan Coogler — who has long been attached to the show — is now confirmed to both write and direct the pilot, which has been officially greenlit.
The new show’s official description: “Two highly decorated but vastly different FBI agents form an unlikely bond when they are assigned to a long-shuttered division devoted to cases involving unexplained phenomena.”
This logline is slightly different from the premise of Fox’s original, which debuted in 1993 and ran for nine seasons and spawned two movies. The original series kicked off with Agent Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) being assigned to the paranormal division to help debunk true believer Agent Fox Mulder’s (David Duchovny) work.
Jennifer Yale (See, The Copenhagen Test) will serve as showrunner. The X-Files‘ original creator and showrunner, Chris Carter, will be a non-writing executive producer on the series. Sev Ohanian and Zinzi Coogler, who are Coogler’s partners at their Proximity Media banner, are also non-writing EPs on the show.
Coogler is a great get for Hulu, with the Black Panther director red hot after delivering last year’s most celebrated surprise hit with Sinners, which is nominated for 16 Oscars.
Deadwyler has appeared in The Woman in the Yard and Netflix’s adaptation of The Piano Lesson (and earned a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination for best supporting actress for the latter). She is also set to appear in HBO’s upcoming third season of Euphoria and star in HBO’s upcoming comedy series Rooster.
The X-Files will be produced by Onyx Collective and 20th Television and is returning amid a widespread surge of interest in aliens and UFOs. The topic has received congressional attention with several hearings devoted to UAP (Unidentified Aerial Phenomena), recent headlines with presidents Barack Obama and Donald Trump weighing in on the topic, and Steven Spielberg’s upcoming film, Disclosure Day, having a premise that sounds straight out of The X-Files.
Yale is repped by CAA, Brillstein Entertainment Partners, and Hansen Jacobson. Carter is repped by CAA and Gang, Tyre, Ramer, Brown & Passman, Inc.
With nine total NBA Champion rings — five as a player and four (thus far) as head coach of the Golden State Warriors — Steve Kerr is a bonafide NBA legend. But what would be truly legendary is if Kerr’s bright mind could help change gun culture in America.
Kerr’s father Malcolm Kerr was assassinated by a pair of gunmen in 1984 at the American University of Beirut, where he served as president. Malcolm Kerr allowed Lebanese residents to use the college’s vacant buildings to avoid an Israeli assault on West Beirut. What he did not allow was for Israeli officers to inspect those he sheltered. Kerr’s assassination was claimed by the Islamic Jihad Organization, a militant organization close to Hezbollah.
Steve Kerr is a natural shooter — he still holds the NBA record for career 3-point shooting percentage. Given his family tragedy, Kerr has also naturally transitioned into an advocate for common sense gun safety. His two pursuits crossed paths just a few months ago when John Beam, the athletic director at Laney Community College and the head football coach on season five of Netflix docuseries Last Chance U, was shot and killed on campus some 12 miles from where the Warriors play.
At a press conference for just another NBA game in November, Kerr used his platform to honor Beam and pushed for a change in our unfortunate culture of American gun violence. Kerr’s message brought him to Joshua Seftel’s All the Empty Rooms documentary, a short film chronicling the bedrooms of children murdered by gun violence that is now on Netflix and in Oscar contention, as an executive producer. That’s where The Hollywood Reporter began its Q&A, recorded on the Friday of NBA All-Star Weekend, with Kerr.
What did you actually do here as an executive producer?
My joke, which is the dead truth, is that executive producer is a fancy way of saying, “I had nothing to do with it.” But I support it. I was asked maybe a year ago if I would be interested in being an executive producer, and immediately said, “Yes,” because I think— number one, I think it’s brilliant. I think it’s so powerful, and I think it speaks to everybody, and it cuts through all the political bullshit. And I think it’s so important. I mean, I have two granddaughters who are going to be heading off to school in the next couple of years. You know, the thought of them having to go through these active shooter drills, it’s just heartbreaking. So I just think there’s got to be ways to get through to people that this is an issue that we can tackle, and we don’t have to be pitted against each other on political lines.
What is your solution to gun violence in America?
I do work with Brady — you’ve probably heard of them. And one of the things I like about Brady is that they’re named after a Republican, and they are very much nonpartisan in their quest to protect people and save lives. But it almost sounds funny saying that, because it so clearly is a partisan issue. What Brady tries to do is cut through the political lines, and I do think that there are ways to do that. And one of the the campaigns that they have is called End Family Fire. It’s basically a nationwide campaign for gun owners to safely store their guns. So you’re really reaching out to gun owners, not far left people in San Francisco. You’re talking to directly to people who have guns. Eight kids a day are shot by un-stored guns. Seventy-five percent of school shootings happen with unsecured guns.
And so this is a really simple campaign that Brady has embarked on. This is not about the Second Amendment — it’s about gun responsibility. And in the old days, the NRA was all about gun safety. They taught gun safety. They encouraged good habits, and they were a completely different organization than they are now — now they’re just basically a wing of the gun lobby trying to increase sales. But when they first started, they were trying to teach gun owners how to be safe. And so even that alone is saving lives already.
Like most social-impact documentaries, this one was a very hard watch at times. Is there one story or scene that is particularly tough for you to watch?
Gosh, I mean, I cried several times. You know, I’ve seen it several times, and I’ve cried every time. I think the SpongeBob characters in the room (was the hardest for me). That was really, really tough … Seeing the rooms, I think, is so real because — you know, I have three kids, and they’re all grown now, but it’s like those rooms could have been my kids rooms or your kids rooms. I think that’s what hits home, is that anybody with children, it really reminds you that this is about human loss. It’s not about a statistic or political issue. And that’s the power of the movie.
You know they never mention guns one time in the film. They don’t even talk about solutions. It just focuses on the loss. And I think the most beautiful part of the film is just how deeply moved and empathetic (journalist) Steve Hartman and (photographer) Lou (Bopp) both are. Like, the juxtaposition of them going home to their own kids, and how respectful they are, you know, taking their shoes off before they go into the room. I just thought it was so beautifully done. And I don’t know that it could have happened without those two guys and their humanity and how prominent that was.
It was interesting to me that, to a family, each of the kids rooms were untouched — for some that included not picking up after and cleaning dirty laundry. No judgment on my end because far be it for anyone not in that terrible situation to say what they would or wouldn’t do, but it struck me.
Yeah, yeah. I totally agree. I thought that was really interesting, too. And it seemed to be the common thread that all the parents just wanted to preserve everything so that they could go in there and just feel the presence of their children. You’re young enough where you haven’t experienced it yet, but for every family who’s an empty nester, you go into your kid’s room after they leave for college and you sit in there sometimes and you reminisce and you think about their childhood — and they’re alive. So imagine the power of that room if the children are no longer with you. So, yeah, it was really, really something — so difficult to watch and yet so necessary to watch.
What would an Oscar mean for this film and the subject matter?
Well, I don’t really know, because it’s not my world. It’s something that I’ve thought about, and I don’t really know what to make of it. I would hope that it would just increase viewership. I think the more people who watch it, the more impact it will have. And that’s the main thing for me, is — what I want is, I want people to act, I want people to be proactive with this issue. I think Steve Hartman talks about it in the beginning of the movie, he says that human nature is to go numb and to look away — but the point of the movie is for people not to look away. It’s to address it and understand it. What my hope is, if they can address it and understand it a little bit, then they’ll be more willing to act on it.
Like a lot of issues that society has — it’s kind of a movement that has to happen. It’s not going to be, you know, all of a sudden people in Congress are going to come to their senses and say, “Oh, OK, maybe [we’ll change gun laws].” It’s going to be a movement. It’s going to be people sort of demanding it. It’s the turning of the cruise ship, is the analogy. So hopefully this will, you know, help turn the cruise ship.
7 May 1996: John Starks (left) of the New York Knicks puts a hand in the face of guard Steve Kerr of the Chicago Bulls during the Bulls 91-80 round 1 Eastern Conference Playoff win at the United Center in Chicago, Illinois.
Doug Pens/Getty Images
If you’ll indulge me, I’d love to talk some hoop here too.
Of course.
Your Warriors contract expires in a few months — what are you thinking for next season?
I love what I do. I love coaching and so this is something I want to keep doing. But you know, it has to line up organizationally, and, and I’m completely at ease with that fact. These jobs all have expiration dates on them, and you don’t know exactly when that is. But, it’s important for me that this ends in a really healthy way. So if it’s not right for next year and I move on, I’ll be very happy and grateful for the opportunity. And if it works out, great, then I’ll keep going — but we all have to be on the same page.
You were a pretty good 3-point shooter in your day and still hold the record for highest career three-point percentage. You have a guy on your team who can shoot a bit as well — is there anything you’ve personally taught Steph Curry about shooting?
I’m not touching it — I haven’t touched it. I’ve never, ever given him one bit of shooting advice.
When I was growing up, there was a commercial about the Maytag repairman. The Maytag repairman just had nothing to do all day because Maytags run perfectly. I am the Maytag repairman (with Steph).
Last week (at the time of this interview), Fox Sports talking head Nick Wright said the way to fix the NBA All-Star Game is white players vs. Black players. Thoughts?
First, I thought it was hilarious, and I’m glad we’re getting back to being allowed to tell politically incorrect jokes. But maybe he was actually serious. I don’t really know.
The Oscar-winning performer will portray former President Abraham Lincoln in Lincoln in the Bardo, a feature adaptation of author George Saunders’ best-selling 2017 novel.
Duke Johnson is directing the film that is a hybrid of live-action and stop-motion animation. Hanks will appear as a live-action version of the 16th U.S. President for the film that is currently in production in London.
Johnson, who co-directed the Oscar-nominated 2015 animated feature Anomalisa, helms Lincoln in the Bardo from a script by Saunders. Lincoln in the Bard centers on Lincoln’s relationship with his recently deceased 11-year-old son Willie Lincoln.
Producers include Hanks and Gary Goetzman for Playtone, along with Johnson, Devon Young Rabinowitz and Paul Young for Starburns Industries. Saunders, Steven Shareshian and Aaron Mitchell are executive producing. Saunders’ acclaimed novel won the 2017 Booker Prize.
Hanks’ recent features include The Phoenician Scheme, Here and Freaky Tales. He reprises his voice role of cowboy Woody in Pixar’s Toy Story 5, set for release this summer from Disney, and also stars in director Aaron Schneider’s forthcoming World War II drama Greyhound 2.
Lincoln’s legacy has remained in the forefront of popular culture in recent years. Hamish Linklater played the commander in chief in the 2024 Apple TV+ series Manhunt, while the Broadway play Oh, Mary!, a comedic examination of the politician’s personal life, won multiple Tony Awards last year.
Hanks is represented by CAA and Greenberg Glusker.
Oscar-winner Tom Hanks is set to portray President Abraham Lincoln in the upcoming film adaptation of “Lincoln in the Bardo” from Starburns Industries.
In addition to starring as the 16th U.S. President, Hanks will also produce the project, based on George Saunders’ bestselling novel, via his Playtone label with partner Gary Goetzman. Saunders is adapting the novel with Oscar-nominated filmmaker Duke Johnson (“Anomalisa”) set to direct and produce.
This is far from Hanks’ first time portraying a real-life figure, with his filmography ranging from astronaut Jim Lovel (“Apollo 13”) to hero pilot Chesley ‘Sully’ Sullenberger (“Sully”), as well as Washington Post editor Ben Bradlee (“The Post”), Fred Rodgers (“A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood”) and Walt Disney (“Saving Mr. Banks”), but it is the actor’s first time portraying a U.S. President. [Note: Hanks narrated and hosted the 2013 docudrama,”Killing Lincoln,” and the two are distant relatives on Lincoln’s maternal side.]
While President Lincoln’s life — leading the country through the Civil War and abolishing slavery, as in Steven Spielberg’s “Lincoln,” for which Daniel Day Lewis won the best actor Oscar — and his 1865 assassination are more often explored in cinema and other forms of media, “Lincoln in the Bardo” centers on Lincoln’s relationship with his recently deceased 11-year-old son. To capture one of the most intimate aspects of the politican’s life, the production will blend stop-motion animation and live-action to explore “themes of love, empathy and human capacity in the face of unimaginable grief” via an ensemble of characters, “both living and dead, historical and invented.”
Johnson, Paul Young and Devon Young Rabinowitz are producing for Starburns Industries, with the project as the first to go into production since the studio announced its film fund. Steven Shareshian, Aaron Mitchell and Saunders will serve as executive producers. Production will take place in London.
Hanks is repped by CAA and Greenberg Glusker. Deadline first reported his involvement in the project.
As 20th Century Studios and New Regency prepare to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Alejandro G. Iñárritu’s The Revenant, Insight Editions has announced a new publishing effort centered on the Oscar-winning frontier survival epic and its behind-the-scenes.
But this are no mere making-of book. Insight, working hand-in-hand with Iñárritu and in partnership with New Regency, is putting out a premium luxury book set aimed at the ultra cinephile and film book collector. Upping the collectibility factor, the package comes signed not only by Iñárritu but by star Leonardo DiCaprio as well.
The Making of The Revenant limited edition set is housed in a bespoke clamshell box, the clothbound collection includes two debossed, foil-stamped hardcover volumes, as well as a traditionally bound facsimile of the original shooting script.
One volume is a facsimile of Iñárritu’s rare photography book, originally created as a personal wrap gift for cast and crew and reproduced exclusively for this volume.
The second volume is the actual The Making of The Revenant tome by author Gina McIntyre, offering an in-depth look at the film’s production, creative vision, and behind-the-scenes journey through detailed commentary and striking images by on-set photographer Kimberly French.
The limited edition set is restricted to only 500 numbered copies, signed by Iñárritu, DiCaprio, and cinematographer Emmanuel “Chivo” Lubezki, each of whom received an Academy Award for their work on the film.
While that alone should make the set highly coveted, within that batch is the so-called Signed Print Edition of The Making of the Revenant. This one has the above books and script but also comes with an exclusive 16” x 20” giclée print on archival Hot Press Bright paper, signed by DiCaprio.
Those editions, in which the collector is receiving a double dose of DiCaprio signatures, are limited to the first 150 of the 500 numbered copies.
20th Century and New Regency are bringing back Revenant to select Imax theaters nationwide on February 26 and March 1. It will also be re-released internationally in the U.K., France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Australia, New Zealand, and Mexico.
To celebrate the film’s 10th anniversary, Iñárritu will participate in a special Q&A panel discussion Feb. 26, where he will be joined by the film’s star DiCaprio via Zoom. A few tickets still remain for that event but they are going fast.
The final numbers are in for fall, and CBS’ “Tracker” continues its winning streak — leading the Eye’s dominance among broadcast networks when both linear and 35 days of streaming viewership of non-sports series fare is tallied.
Of course, add the streamers to the mix, and the final season of “Stranger Things” was no match for the competition: The Netflix series dominated the fall, with an average of 32.86 million viewers. That was followed by Netflix’s blockbuster docuseries “Sean Combs: The Reckoning” (20.64 million) and Paramount+’s surging “Landman” (19.64 million). “Tracker” was next, with 16.65 million — making it tops among broadcast series — followed closely by ABC’s “High Potential” (16.07 million).
CBS, which returns its schedule with new originals this week (now that the Olympics competition has wrapped on NBC), led the fall top ten among broadcast with eight shows (“Tracker,” “Matlock,” “Sheriff Country,” “Ghosts,” “60 Minutes,” “Boston Blue,” “NCIS,” “Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage”) — with “Sheriff Country” and “Boston Blue” as the fall’s top two most-watched new series in broadcast. The Eye net also boasted nine of the top 20 series among both linear and streaming.
Streaming is continuing to help expand eyeballs for broadcast fare: “Tracker,” for example, averaged 11.4 million viewers on linear, then another 5.2 million in streaming. “High Potential” was nearly a 50/50 split: 8.3 million viewers on linear, and 7.8 million on streaming. “Abbott Elementary” actually attracts more viewers in streaming on Hulu (4.4 million) than on ABC linear (3.8 million).
These lists don’t include sports, of course, which would add even more broadcast heft to the rankers. But even without sports, the broadcast networks did quite well in the fall. Now, on to midseason — where several additional high performers, like ABC’s “Will Trent” and “The Rookie,” will be added to the mix too.
Here are the fall 2025 rankers:
Fall 2025 Multiplatform 35-Day Ranker: Broadcast+Streaming Originals
Rank
Title (Network/SVOD)
Total 35-Day Viewing
1.
Stranger Things (Netflix)
32.86 million
2.
Sean Combs: The Reckoning (Netflix)
20.64 million
3.
Landman (Paramount+)
19.64 million
4.
Tracker (CBS)
16.65 million
5.
High Potential (ABC)
16.07 million
6.
Fallout (Prime Video)
14.85 million
7.
Monster: The Ed Gein Story (Netflix)
13.36 million
8.
The Beast in Me (Netflix)
12.74 million
9.
Matlock (CBS)
12.21 million
10.
Sheriff Country (CBS)
11.09 million
11.
Ghosts (CBS)
10.59 million
12.
60 Minutes (CBS)
10.27 million
13.
Boston Blue (CBS)
10.26 million
14.
NCIS (CBS)
10.12 million
15.
Chicago Fire (NBC)
10.07 million
16.
Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage (CBS)
9.89 million
17.
Dancing With the Stars (ABC)
9.81 million
18.
Wayward (Netflix)
9.74 million
19.
Elsbeth (CBS)
9.50 million
20.
Nobody Wants This (Netflix)
9.40 million
Source: Source: Nielsen Panel+ Big Data P2+ Prime AA, L+35, 9/14/2025-1/04/2026 + Nielsen SCR, 35-Day Total Flight for streaming. Does not include specials, finales, or sports that fall within FSD. Does not include series or specials with less than 4 telecasts.
Fall 2025 Multiplatform 35-Day Ranker: Broadcast Originals
Rank
Title (Network)
Broadcast+Streaming Average Viewers Per Episode
1.
Tracker (CBS)
16.7 million
2.
High Potential (ABC)
16.1 million
3.
Matlock (CBS)
12.2 million
4.
Sheriff Country (CBS)
11.1 million
5.
Ghosts (CBS)
10.6 million
6.
60 Minutes (CBS)
10.3 million
tie
Boston Blue (CBS)
10.3 million
8.
NCIS (CBS)
10.1 million
tie
Chicago Fire (NBC)
10.1 million
10.
Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage (CBS)
9.9 million
11.
Dancing With the Stars (ABC)
9.8 million
12.
Elsbeth (CBS)
9.5 million
13.
9-1-1 (ABC)
9.3 million
tie
Best Medicine (Fox)
9.3 million
tie
Chicago Med (NBC)
9.3 million
tie
Chicago PD (NBC)
9.7 million
17.
Law & Order: SVU (NBC)
8.8 million
tie
FBI (CBS)
8.8 million
19.
9-1-1: Nashville (ABC)
8.5 million
20.
Abbott Elementary (ABC)
8.3 million
Source: Source: Nielsen Panel+ Big Data P2+ Prime AA, L+35, 9/14/2025-1/04/2026 + Nielsen SCR, 35-Day Total Flight for streaming.