Here's what's worth streaming in June 2026 on Netflix, Hulu, HBO Max and more

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MW Here's what's worth streaming in June 2026 on Netflix, Hulu, HBO Max and more

By Mike Murphy

HBO's 'House of the Dragon,' Hulu's 'The Bear' and Apple's 'Cape Fear' will try to compete with the World Cup

Harry Collett stars as dragon-riding Prince Jacaerys Velaryon in Season 3 of HBO's "House of the Dragon."

Only dragons dare challenge the World Cup in the battle for streaming viewers this June.

OK, that might be an exaggeration. But with a handful of notable exceptions - such as HBO's "House of the Dragon," Apple's "Cape Fear" and Hulu's "The Bear" - streaming services are largely backing off on programming in June, ceding primetime to the World Cup, which happens to be the most-watched sporting event on the planet.

And in a first for English-language viewers in the U.S., the entire soccer tournament can be streamed this year. The Fox One service will have all 104 World Cup matches in 4K, running from June 11 through the final on July 19. (Note: Fox and MarketWatch parent News Corp share common ownership.)

Fox One has a three-day free trial, but to watch all the matches, you'll need to subscribe, for $19.99 a month. (Of course, matches will also be broadcast on Fox and the FS1 cable channel.) Telemundo's Spanish-language broadcasts of all the matches can also be streamed on Peacock, which is a cheaper alternative.

Pro tip to save a few bucks: Skip the first week of group play, which are largely mismatches, and sign up for Fox One on June 19 (in time for USA vs. Australia) so your subscription runs out right after the final.

June's lighter streaming lineup might make it easier to plan for strategic churning - that is, adding and dropping services month to month - so you can still catch the best shows while keeping your monthly streaming budget around $50. Keep in mind that a billing cycle starts when you sign up, not necessarily at the beginning of the month. And it's always worth watching out for time-sensitive deals and money-saving bundles.

Also read: There may be a secret winner of the streaming wars, and it could end up saving you money

Each month, this column offers tips on how to maximize your streaming and your budget - rating the major services as "play," "pause" or "stop," similar to investment analysts' traditional ratings of buy, hold and sell - and picks the best shows to help you make your monthly decisions.

Here's a look at what's coming to the various streaming services in June 2026, and what's really worth the monthly subscription fee:

Apple TV ($12.99 a month)

Apple's $(AAPL)$ a curious case in June. On one hand, it has arguably the best two shows currently streaming (more on that below). On the other hand are a pair of very, very questionable series about to premiere.

One is the remake of the classic psychological thriller "Cape Fear" (June 5), starring Amy Adams and Patrick Wilson as married attorneys and Javier Bardem as the psychopath who's bent on revenge for their having helped lock him up for a murder he didn't commit. The story has twice been made into great movies. But - and this is an ongoing problem with many Apple shows - what can a 10-episode series deliver that a two-hour movie could not? It'd be shocking if this thing isn't a bloated, exhausting mess, with the plot stretched way beyond its limits.

And then there's Season 2 of "Sugar" (June 19), starring Colin Farrell as a throwback private eye with a big secret. Season 1 worked fairly well as a stylish, L.A. noir story in the vein of "Chinatown" until a heavy-handed, eye-rolling twist toward the end that marred the whole experience by turning it into an entirely different show - which the Season 2 trailer doesn't even acknowledge until a throwaway final line. What is even happening? Are they pretending that twist didn't happen? The choices this show makes are baffling. The trailer looks great, by the way, so maybe there's still potential to steer out of this deathspin, but it'll be tough. Approach with caution.

Meanwhile, as mentioned above, Apple has a killer lineup of returning shows. "Widow's Bay" (season finale June 17) may be the best (and is certainly the most fun) new series of the year, a wildly entertaining comedy/horror hybrid that balances laugh-out-loud moments with legit scares, with a pitch-perfect cast led by Matthew Rhys, Kate O'Flynn and Stephen Root. "Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed" is also a joy to watch, with Tatiana Maslany bouncing from one crisis to another in a relentlessly propulsive dark-comedy crime thriller. "Your Friends and Neighbors" (season finale June 5) still had some bumps in its second season, but the addition of James Marsden as this season's Big Bad has spiced things up, and the cast's inherent likeability (particularly Jon Hamm, Amanda Peet and Hoon Lee) really makes up for the fact that they're playing largely unsympathetic characters. And "Star City," the Soviet-set "For All Mankind" spinoff, just got underway but is intriguing enough to see where it goes (even for viewers who missed the first couple of seasons of "For All Mankind").

Play, pause or stop? Play, at least until "Widow's Bay" ends its run. The new additions really need to prove themselves first.

Hulu ($11.99 a month with ads, or $18.99 with no ads)

FX's "The Bear" (June 25) is back for its fifth and final season. But too much inconsistency has tempered once-sky-high expectations. At its best, the restaurant drama can be sublime, possibly the best thing on TV; but the past two seasons have felt like a wasted opportunity, with the story largely spinning its wheels. The end of Season 4 at least reset the table, with Carmy (Jeremy Allen White) leaving the restaurant to his work family, including Sydney (Ayo Edebiri) and Richie (Ebon Moss-Bachrach), but the closing moments of the surprise episode that dropped in early May (search Hulu for "Gary") could throw a curveball to all that. Can "The Bear" stick the landing? We'll soon find out. Like previous seasons, all eight episodes will drop at once.

Hulu's also got a new "Friends"-like comedy from Mindy Kaling, "Not Suitable for Work" (June 2), about five work-obsessed 20-somethings in Manhattan; Season 13 of the hit British dating-competition show "Love Island" (June 4), while the U.S. version drops June 2 on Peacock; "Alice & Steve" (June 8), an "anti-rom-com" about two longtime friends (Nicola Walker and Jemaine Clement) whose relationship hits the rocks after one starts dating the other's daughter (some heavy lifting will be required to make that not super creepy); a livestream of the Bonnaroo music festival (June 11-14); and "Never Change" (June 17), a "Billy Madison"-esque comedy movie from John Reynolds ("Search Party") about a group of 30-somethings forced to go back and finish high school because a tornado suddenly ended their senior year.

There's also Season 2 of the crime comedy "Deli Boys," which dropped in May and is an absolute blast and an easy six-episode binge; Season 2 of the '80s-set British soap "Rivals" (season finale June 5); and new episodes of FX's soccer docuseries "Welcome to Wrexham" (season finale June 25), which somehow remains gripping five seasons in and knowing what happens at the end.

Play, pause or stop? Play. Trust that the "The Bear" finale will be worth it. And even if not, Hulu's got a deep library.

HBO Max ($10.99 a month with ads, $18.49 with no ads, or $22.99 'Ultimate' with no ads)

After a two-year layoff, the "Game of Thrones" prequel "House of the Dragon" (June 21) is back for its third season. Hopefully viewers remember where it left off (and there's a lot to remember). The good news is, after a plodding start over two seasons, the action is set to really pick up with an all-out Targaryen civil war - the season premiere will jump right into the epic Battle of the Gullet, pitting a naval fleet vs. dragons, which showrunner Ryan Condal recently told Entertainment Weekly is "arguably the craziest episode of television ever made." Expect the action to come fast and furiously, if for no other reason than the series (and its dragons) will conclude with Season 4, probably coming in 2028.

There's also "Life, Larry and the Pursuit of Unhappiness" (June 26), a sketch comedy show depicting twists on American history, from Larry David ("Curb Your Enthusiasm") and Barack and Michelle Obama; the music documentary "Earth, Wind & Fire (To Be Celestial vs. That's the Weight of the World)" (June 7), from Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson; and "Bring Me the Beauties: A Model Cult" (June 1), a three-episode documentary about a cult that preyed on young models in New York City in the '80s.

On the sports front, the Warner Bros. Discovery $(WBD)$ streamer has Major League Baseball every Tuesday night, French Open tennis (June 1-7), U.S. soccer (men vs. Germany on June 6 in a World Cup tune-up and a pair of women's matches vs. Brazil on June 6 and 9), NASCAR from Sonoma (June 27-28), Savanah Bananas games and AEW.

Play, pause or stop? Pause and think it over. How much do you like "House of the Dragon"? That's the key question, since there's not a lot else coming in June. Though HBO's extensive library is always appealing.

Paramount+ ($8.99 a month with ads, $13.99 a month Premium with no ads)

The slow-burn spy thriller "The Agency" (June 21) returns for its second season, with Michael Fassbender playing a compromised CIA agent in London desperate to save his lover (Jodie Turner-Smith), who's being held prisoner in Sudan. Jeffrey Wright, Richard Gere and Katherine Waterson round out a top-notch cast in this adaptation of Eric Rochant's brilliant French series "Le Bureau des Legendes."

Superproducer Tyler Perry has a couple of shows returning: the fifth and final season of the Atlanta strip-club drama "All the Queen's Men" (June 10), and the sixth season of the cult drama "Ruthless" (June 30).

MW Here's what's worth streaming in June 2026 on Netflix, Hulu, HBO Max and more

By Mike Murphy

HBO's 'House of the Dragon,' Hulu's 'The Bear' and Apple's 'Cape Fear' will try to compete with the World Cup

Harry Collett stars as dragon-riding Prince Jacaerys Velaryon in Season 3 of HBO's "House of the Dragon."

Only dragons dare challenge the World Cup in the battle for streaming viewers this June.

OK, that might be an exaggeration. But with a handful of notable exceptions - such as HBO's "House of the Dragon," Apple's "Cape Fear" and Hulu's "The Bear" - streaming services are largely backing off on programming in June, ceding primetime to the World Cup, which happens to be the most-watched sporting event on the planet.

And in a first for English-language viewers in the U.S., the entire soccer tournament can be streamed this year. The Fox One service will have all 104 World Cup matches in 4K, running from June 11 through the final on July 19. (Note: Fox and MarketWatch parent News Corp share common ownership.)

Fox One has a three-day free trial, but to watch all the matches, you'll need to subscribe, for $19.99 a month. (Of course, matches will also be broadcast on Fox and the FS1 cable channel.) Telemundo's Spanish-language broadcasts of all the matches can also be streamed on Peacock, which is a cheaper alternative.

Pro tip to save a few bucks: Skip the first week of group play, which are largely mismatches, and sign up for Fox One on June 19 (in time for USA vs. Australia) so your subscription runs out right after the final.

June's lighter streaming lineup might make it easier to plan for strategic churning - that is, adding and dropping services month to month - so you can still catch the best shows while keeping your monthly streaming budget around $50. Keep in mind that a billing cycle starts when you sign up, not necessarily at the beginning of the month. And it's always worth watching out for time-sensitive deals and money-saving bundles.

Also read: There may be a secret winner of the streaming wars, and it could end up saving you money

Each month, this column offers tips on how to maximize your streaming and your budget - rating the major services as "play," "pause" or "stop," similar to investment analysts' traditional ratings of buy, hold and sell - and picks the best shows to help you make your monthly decisions.

Here's a look at what's coming to the various streaming services in June 2026, and what's really worth the monthly subscription fee:

Apple TV ($12.99 a month)

Apple's (AAPL) a curious case in June. On one hand, it has arguably the best two shows currently streaming (more on that below). On the other hand are a pair of very, very questionable series about to premiere.

One is the remake of the classic psychological thriller "Cape Fear" (June 5), starring Amy Adams and Patrick Wilson as married attorneys and Javier Bardem as the psychopath who's bent on revenge for their having helped lock him up for a murder he didn't commit. The story has twice been made into great movies. But - and this is an ongoing problem with many Apple shows - what can a 10-episode series deliver that a two-hour movie could not? It'd be shocking if this thing isn't a bloated, exhausting mess, with the plot stretched way beyond its limits.

And then there's Season 2 of "Sugar" (June 19), starring Colin Farrell as a throwback private eye with a big secret. Season 1 worked fairly well as a stylish, L.A. noir story in the vein of "Chinatown" until a heavy-handed, eye-rolling twist toward the end that marred the whole experience by turning it into an entirely different show - which the Season 2 trailer doesn't even acknowledge until a throwaway final line. What is even happening? Are they pretending that twist didn't happen? The choices this show makes are baffling. The trailer looks great, by the way, so maybe there's still potential to steer out of this deathspin, but it'll be tough. Approach with caution.

Meanwhile, as mentioned above, Apple has a killer lineup of returning shows. "Widow's Bay" (season finale June 17) may be the best (and is certainly the most fun) new series of the year, a wildly entertaining comedy/horror hybrid that balances laugh-out-loud moments with legit scares, with a pitch-perfect cast led by Matthew Rhys, Kate O'Flynn and Stephen Root. "Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed" is also a joy to watch, with Tatiana Maslany bouncing from one crisis to another in a relentlessly propulsive dark-comedy crime thriller. "Your Friends and Neighbors" (season finale June 5) still had some bumps in its second season, but the addition of James Marsden as this season's Big Bad has spiced things up, and the cast's inherent likeability (particularly Jon Hamm, Amanda Peet and Hoon Lee) really makes up for the fact that they're playing largely unsympathetic characters. And "Star City," the Soviet-set "For All Mankind" spinoff, just got underway but is intriguing enough to see where it goes (even for viewers who missed the first couple of seasons of "For All Mankind").

Play, pause or stop? Play, at least until "Widow's Bay" ends its run. The new additions really need to prove themselves first.

Hulu ($11.99 a month with ads, or $18.99 with no ads)

FX's "The Bear" (June 25) is back for its fifth and final season. But too much inconsistency has tempered once-sky-high expectations. At its best, the restaurant drama can be sublime, possibly the best thing on TV; but the past two seasons have felt like a wasted opportunity, with the story largely spinning its wheels. The end of Season 4 at least reset the table, with Carmy (Jeremy Allen White) leaving the restaurant to his work family, including Sydney (Ayo Edebiri) and Richie (Ebon Moss-Bachrach), but the closing moments of the surprise episode that dropped in early May (search Hulu for "Gary") could throw a curveball to all that. Can "The Bear" stick the landing? We'll soon find out. Like previous seasons, all eight episodes will drop at once.

Hulu's also got a new "Friends"-like comedy from Mindy Kaling, "Not Suitable for Work" (June 2), about five work-obsessed 20-somethings in Manhattan; Season 13 of the hit British dating-competition show "Love Island" (June 4), while the U.S. version drops June 2 on Peacock; "Alice & Steve" (June 8), an "anti-rom-com" about two longtime friends (Nicola Walker and Jemaine Clement) whose relationship hits the rocks after one starts dating the other's daughter (some heavy lifting will be required to make that not super creepy); a livestream of the Bonnaroo music festival (June 11-14); and "Never Change" (June 17), a "Billy Madison"-esque comedy movie from John Reynolds ("Search Party") about a group of 30-somethings forced to go back and finish high school because a tornado suddenly ended their senior year.

There's also Season 2 of the crime comedy "Deli Boys," which dropped in May and is an absolute blast and an easy six-episode binge; Season 2 of the '80s-set British soap "Rivals" (season finale June 5); and new episodes of FX's soccer docuseries "Welcome to Wrexham" (season finale June 25), which somehow remains gripping five seasons in and knowing what happens at the end.

Play, pause or stop? Play. Trust that the "The Bear" finale will be worth it. And even if not, Hulu's got a deep library.

HBO Max ($10.99 a month with ads, $18.49 with no ads, or $22.99 'Ultimate' with no ads)

After a two-year layoff, the "Game of Thrones" prequel "House of the Dragon" (June 21) is back for its third season. Hopefully viewers remember where it left off (and there's a lot to remember). The good news is, after a plodding start over two seasons, the action is set to really pick up with an all-out Targaryen civil war - the season premiere will jump right into the epic Battle of the Gullet, pitting a naval fleet vs. dragons, which showrunner Ryan Condal recently told Entertainment Weekly is "arguably the craziest episode of television ever made." Expect the action to come fast and furiously, if for no other reason than the series (and its dragons) will conclude with Season 4, probably coming in 2028.

There's also "Life, Larry and the Pursuit of Unhappiness" (June 26), a sketch comedy show depicting twists on American history, from Larry David ("Curb Your Enthusiasm") and Barack and Michelle Obama; the music documentary "Earth, Wind & Fire (To Be Celestial vs. That's the Weight of the World)" (June 7), from Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson; and "Bring Me the Beauties: A Model Cult" (June 1), a three-episode documentary about a cult that preyed on young models in New York City in the '80s.

On the sports front, the Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) streamer has Major League Baseball every Tuesday night, French Open tennis (June 1-7), U.S. soccer (men vs. Germany on June 6 in a World Cup tune-up and a pair of women's matches vs. Brazil on June 6 and 9), NASCAR from Sonoma (June 27-28), Savanah Bananas games and AEW.

Play, pause or stop? Pause and think it over. How much do you like "House of the Dragon"? That's the key question, since there's not a lot else coming in June. Though HBO's extensive library is always appealing.

Paramount+ ($8.99 a month with ads, $13.99 a month Premium with no ads)

The slow-burn spy thriller "The Agency" (June 21) returns for its second season, with Michael Fassbender playing a compromised CIA agent in London desperate to save his lover (Jodie Turner-Smith), who's being held prisoner in Sudan. Jeffrey Wright, Richard Gere and Katherine Waterson round out a top-notch cast in this adaptation of Eric Rochant's brilliant French series "Le Bureau des Legendes."

Superproducer Tyler Perry has a couple of shows returning: the fifth and final season of the Atlanta strip-club drama "All the Queen's Men" (June 10), and the sixth season of the cult drama "Ruthless" (June 30).

(MORE TO FOLLOW) Dow Jones Newswires

May 31, 2026 12:00 ET (16:00 GMT)

MW Here's what's worth streaming in June 2026 on -2-

There's also "Devotion: Obedience Or Betrayal" (June 2), a docuseries about a New Zealand religious commune that has striking similarities to "The Handmaid's Tale"; the annual Tony Awards (June 7), hosted by Pink; the "UFC at the White House" event (June 14); and weekly episodes of "The Chi," "RuPaul's Drag Race: All Stars" and the hit "Yellowstone" spinoff "Dutton Ranch," which Paramount has said is the most-watched original series launch in its short history.

Paramount $(PSKY)$ also has a full slate of golf, WNBA, UFC and boxing.

Play, pause or stop? Pause. "Dutton Ranch" will definitely scratch that "Yellowstone" itch, and "The Agency" is worth a watch. Still, patient viewers can save by waiting a couple months and binging the full seasons of both.

Peacock ($10.99 a month with ads, or $16.99 with no ads)

The dating-competition show "Love Island USA" (June 2) is back for another season of fun summer trashiness (and for the real addicts, the latest British season is on Hulu this month too), along with the streaming premiere of "Lorne" (June 5), a documentary about "Saturday Night Live" creator Lorne Michaels; Season 3 of the British conspiracy thriller "The Capture" (June 18); and the psychological thriller "Strung" (June 26)

There's also the season finale of Bravo's "Top Chef" (June 9), along with new episodes of broadcast and cable shows such including "Below Deck," "Jeopardy," "Real Housewives," "Summer House" and "The Valley."

Sports-wise, Comcast's $(CMCSA)$ Peacock has Spanish-language broadcasts of all the World Cup matches, along with highlights and studio shows; a full slate of Major League Baseball; WNBA, golf (men's U.S. Open starts June 18), motorsports, cycling and track & field.

Play, pause or stop? Pause. This season's "Top Chef" has fizzled toward the end, but "Love Island USA" and "Summer House" will provide hours of brainless summer enjoyment, and the Telemundo broadcasts provide another (and cheaper) option for World Cup viewing.

Netflix ($8.99 a month for standard with ads, $19.99 standard with no ads, $26.99 premium with no ads)

It's even a relatively slow month for Netflix $(NFLX)$, with only a handful of big-name debuts.

Topping that list is "Office Romance" (June 5), a raunchy rom-com movie starring Jennifer Lopez as a high-powered CEO flaunting the HR rules by having a secret fling with a workaholic company lawyer (Brett Goldstein). There's also "Voicemails for Isabelle" (June 19), a rom-com about a woman (Zoey Deutch) whose confessional voicemails to her deceased sister get redirected to a stranger (Nick Robinson), who falls for her (which is also more than a little creepy). Oscar Isaac plays dual roles as the 14th-century poet Dante and a modern-day author who gets caught up in a literary crime in director Julian Schnabel's "In the Hand of Dante" (June 24), with an big-name cast that include Gal Godot, Gerard Butler and John Malkovich. And then there's "Little Brother" (June 26), starring John Cena as a successful realtor whose life is upended when his chaotic "little brother" (Eric Andre) re-enters his life.

Netflix also has "Michael Jackson: The Verdict" (June 3), a three-part documentary dissecting the 2005 criminal trial; the "Survivor"-wannabe survival competition series "Outlast: The Jungle" (June 10); "The Rest Is Football" (starting June 10), a daily studio show recapping the World Cup, featuring some English soccer legends; Season 5 of the hit small-town drama "Sweet Magnolias" (June 11); "I Will Find You" (June 18), a Harlen Coben mystery starring Sam Worthington as a father wrongly convicted of killing his son, who must break out of prison and go searching when he discovers his son may still be alive; "The American Experiment" (June 24), a five-part documentary about the founding of America, executive produced by Tom Hanks; Season 2 of the hit live-action fantasy "Avatar: The Last Airbender" (June 25); and "Chris & Martina: The Final Set" (June 26), a documentary about the decades-long tennis rivalry and enduring friendship between Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova.

Also of note: Netflix is adding all five seasons of CBS's "Hawaii Five-O" (June 1), Season 22 of ABC's "Grey's Anatomy" (June 6), Season 4 of Syfy's underrated "Resident Alien" (June 6), all three seasons of Hulu's "Shrill" (June 8), and five seasons of "Beavis & Butt-head" (June 16). Meanwhile, say goodbye to "Kim's Convenience," "Brockmire," "Blindspot" and "Sex and the City," all leaving by month's end.

Checking in: The British crime drama "Legends," which dropped in early May, was a pleasant surprise. Created by Neil Forsyth ("The Gold"), it tells the real-life story of a small team of undercover and poorly trained customs agents tasked with disrupting the flow of heroin into Britain in the early 1990s. Steve Coogan is terrific in a rare dramatic role, as is Tom Burke as cop teetering on the edge as he falls dangerously deep into his undercover persona. The Nordic-noir mystery "The Chestnut Man: Hide and Seek" is predictably bleak and gripping, but annoyingly follows too many of the same beats as its first season. "Bandi," from creators Capucine and Eric Rochant ("Le Bureau"), is a solid family/drug-gang drama set on the French island of Martinique, though it was recently canceled, leaving a number of plotlines unresolved. And "The Boroughs," a "Stranger Things"-meets-"Cocoon" sci-fi/horror thriller series set at a retirement community, has the cozy yet mysterious feel of a 1980s Amblin movie (no surprise, the Duffer Brothers are executive producers). While fairly light, it's just compelling enough, thanks largely to its fantastic cast, led by Alfred Molina, Geena Davis and Alfre Woodard.

One thing leads to another: Watching the mesmerizing new music video for "Storm I & II," from GENER8ION and Yung Lean, opened a rabbit hole that led me to discovering director Romain Gavras' 2022 action movie "Athena," about an anti-police uprising after a boy is beaten to death in a French housing block. It's a visually stunning, wildly propulsive and tragic thriller that's worth a watch. (There's also a corresponding "Making of" short that's a must-see, and Netflix also just bought Gavras' latest film, the "eco-satire" "Sacrifice," starring Chris Evans, Anna Taylor-Joy and Selma Hayek Pinault, for release later this year.)

Play, pause or stop? Stop. You can always find something on Netflix. But if you're on a budget, this isn't a bad month to skip - you won't miss much.

Amazon's Prime Video ($14.99 a month with ads, $8.99 without Prime membership, both +$4.99 to avoid ads)

Amazon (AMZN) does YA romantic dramas very well, and will roll out another surefire hit with "Every Year After" (June 6). Adapted from the novel by Carly Fortune, the series follows a couple's evolving relationship over six summers at a lakeside resort town. Viewers can also catch up on the hit college-hockey romance "Off Campus," which Prime Video says is now its third-most-watched debut series ever.

There's also Season 4 of the animated fantasy "The Legend of Vox Machina" (June 3), and Nicolas Cage's unhinged superhero take in "Spider-Noir," which dropped in late May.

On the sports front, there's WNBA, NASCAR, the NWSL Challenge Cup (June 26) and Yankees games every Wednesday for viewers in the New York metro area.

Play, pause or stop? Stop. There's just not enough there this month.

Disney+ ($11.99 a month with ads, $18.99 with no ads)

Disney's $(DIS)$ got the streaming premiere of "Avatar: Fire and Ash" (June 24), the third installment of James Cameron's blockbuster movie franchise; "Adventure Time: Side Quests" (June 29), a spinoff of the hit animated series, following the further adventures of Finn and his magical dog Jake; a livestream of the Bonnaroo music festival (June 11-14, and also on Hulu), which includes performances from The Strokes, Turnstile, Kesha and Skrillex, among many others; and Savannah Bananas games, along with other programming from ABC, Hulu, ESPN and other Disney-owned channels.

There's also the director's cut of Chris Carter's 2008 movie "The X-Files: I Want to Believe" (June 11), which restores some scarier stuff that Fox execs reportedly rejected at the time in order to make it PG-13; and the first of three exclusive episodes of "The Simpsons" coming this summer, with "Extreme Makeover: Homer Edition" (June 17). Disney's also got all 36 seasons of "The Simpsons" in its library.

Play, pause or stop? Stop. There's not enough to justify a subscription. Make the kids play outside instead.

Need more? Catch up on previous months' picks at What's Worth Streaming.

-Mike Murphy

This content was created by MarketWatch, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. MarketWatch is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.

 

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May 31, 2026 12:00 ET (16:00 GMT)

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