Hulu’s schedule this month is a bit quiet in the summer, but there are some gems in store if you dig a little deeper. There’s a new season of Futurama, for example, and a number of shark-based specials airing as part of National. Sharkfest Geographic. Si you’re a demon like me, you can also see some new and engaging true crime presentations: Sasha Reid and the Midnight Order and Mastermind: To Think Like a Killer.
Futurama, the iconic sci-fi cartoon by Matt Groening and David X. Cohen, returns this month for a twelfth season, with 10 new episodes to come. Fry, Bender, Leela, and everyone else will return to discover Bender’s secret. ancestors, learn about the history of coffee and make sardonic jokes about the offer, although it takes place in the year 3,000 approximately. If you’ve never watched Futurama, you have almost the entire month to catch up on the last 12 seasons — they’re also available on Hulu.
It begins airing on July 29.
Do you know why they don’t call it “Shark Week” anymore?Because it lasts a damn total month. Hulu will offer a bunch of streaming specials in July related to humanity’s underwater enemies, adding Attack of the Red Sea Sharks, Baby Sharks in the City, Shark Attack 360, Shark Beach with Anthony Mackie, Shark vs. Ross Edgley, Sharks Gone Viral. , Big sharks, and when, after all, are we going to kill all those damn sharks?(I invented the latter. )
It begins airing on July 1.
If you’re a true crime fan, don’t miss Sasha Reid and Midnight Order. Reid is a psychologist with a singular obsession: catching killers. She then recruited an organization of like-minded women from various disciplines and backgrounds, called them “The Midnight Order,” and began tracking down criminals. Midnight Order works outdoors with the formula and uses state-of-the-art knowledge skills and forensic wisdom to heat up cold cases, like Batman, but not fake ones. This series takes the audience on her most intriguing investigations and introduces us to the women who have made justice their profession.
It begins streaming on July 10.
In 1978, psychiatric nurse Ann Burgess won a call that would replace her life. It was the FBI’s behavioral science unit and they sought his help in investigating the minds of serial killers. Mastermind: To Think Like a Killer explores this anonymous woman who helped create profiles of criminals and delve into the main points of the killers who informed Burgess’s work, adding notorious criminals like Ed Kemper and Ted Bundy, as well as lesser-known monsters like the Ski. Rapist mask.
It begins streaming on July 11.
The hero of Hit-Monkey is a Japanese snowmonkey who teams up with the ghost of an American killer to become the “killer of killers” and take down Japan’s most fearsome killers. Season 2 discovers the duo in New York City who are looking to escape their dark existences, but it’s not easy to give up that kind of life. Hit-Monkey is based on a Marvel comic book, and the first season of the animated action series has garnered rave reviews from critics and enthusiasts alike, so whether you’re a hero, action, cartoon, or just wonderful stuff, check this one out.
It begins streaming on July 15.
Hulu’s critically acclaimed and fan-favorite series The Bear returns for a heartwarming and edgy third season. Now that they’ve opened The Bear, their ideal luxury restaurant, Carmy (Jeremy Allen White), Sydney (Ayo Edebiri), Richie (Ebon Moss-Bachrach) and the rest of the team will have to navigate Chicago’s treacherous and ferocious culinary scene. Expect things to get stressful.
It begins airing on June 27.
Before he became a legend and a fashion icon, Karl Lagerfeld was just a guy named Karl; This Hulu original bioseries, Becoming Karl Lagerfeld, explores this remarkable transformation. The series follows Lagerfeld, played by Daniel Brühl, as he navigates the Parisian haute couture scene of the 1970s. He meets his fierce rival Yves Saint Laurent (played by Arnaud Valois), the bureaucracy. a business partnership with Pierre Bergé (Alex Lutz) and develops a more private relationship with the bon vivant Jacques de Bascher (Théodore Pellerin). If you are fascinated by fashion or the jet-set lifestyle, becoming Karl Lagerfeld is a must. -see.
It begins airing on June 7.
Saw’s videos are like prepared food for horror fans. From its humble beginnings with James Wan’s low-budget indie horror film Saw in 2004, the franchise has a pillar of horror with 10 feature films, a AAA (bad) video game, and more products that are likely to come together in 10 lifetimes. Some are better than others, but all of Saw’s videos are diversified on the theme of a madman who puts other people in devious traps so that we can watch them die, escape, and/or take revenge on their torturer. . Hulu is streaming the first seven videos of the series to celebrate the beginning of summer, a fact that will delight horror fans, although it horrifies everyone.
It begins airing on June 1.
Queenie Jenkins, the heroine of the Hulu original comedy series Queenie, is a British Jamaican living in the UK who suffers a quarter-life crisis, a bad breakup, as well as the horror and general annoyance of city life in 2024. With the colourful yet challenging landscape of South London as a backdrop, Queenie struggles to navigate her dual cultural identity and position in the world. If you like witty and fresh character studies that touch on themes of race and identity, Queenie is a must-see.
It begins airing on June 7.
This documentary tells the story of how young Black and Brown people in New York’s poorest neighborhoods have sparked a global musical and cultural revolution through dance, music, and fashion. On August 15, 1981, New York breakdancing outfits Rocksteady Crew and Dynamic Rockers performed at the Out-of-Doors Festival to settle their differences with a climactic war. The repercussions of it reverberated around the world and Breaking on The One explores this epic break war and the importance of breakdancing and hip-hop through archival footage and interviews with the dancers, DJs, MCs, B-boys and women who were there. If you love hip-hop or are fascinated by how cultural revolutions begin, check out Breakin’ on the One.
Starts streaming on June 24.
Trans icon Candis Cayne puts on a grass display like no other. In their comedy, DIY, and “literally revolutionary” lawn display, Cayne and his friends will teach everyone how to turn their home and lawn into a magical place. Considered as a visually whimsical place. A surprising delight that combines Candis Cayne’s real-life gardening experience with a playful and imaginative world, each episode of Secret Garden features another DIY task designed to motivate your mind and motivate you to design your lawn and your house’s magic.
It begins airing on June 9.
For young people in the 1980s, no one is cooler, sexier, or better known than The Brat Pack, that organization of young actors who starred in each and every youth movie and seemed to run Hollywood. Directed by original director Andrew McCarthy, Brats gives us an inside look at the famous fishbowl through interviews with brat Demi Moore, Rob Lowe, Emilio Esteves, Ally Sheedy and more. (Spoiler: being part of the Brat Pack isn’t as fun as you probably imagined. )
It begins streaming on June 13.
This National Geographic documentary series examines the history, impact, and other people behind Jim Jone’s terrifying cult of the People’s Temple. Told through never-before-seen footage and interviews with survivors and eyewitnesses, Cult Massacre: One Day in Jonestown explores the rise of the organization and the imaginable mass killings/suicides in Guyana, shedding light on the motives for this macabre day that rocked the world.
It begins airing on June 17.
Stephen Johnson is a contributor to Lifehacker, where he covers pop culture and adds two weekly columns, “The Guide for Adults Disconnected from Children’s Culture” and “What People Get Wrong This Week. “She graduated from Emerson College with a bachelor’s degree in writing, literature, and literature. Publication.
Previously, Stephen was editor-in-chief of NBC/Universal’s G4TV. At G4, he won a Telly Award for writing and was nominated for a Webby Award. Stephen has also written for Blumhouse, FearNET, Performing Songwriter magazine, NewEgg, AVN, GameFly. , Art Connoisseur International magazine, Fender Musical Instruments, Hustler magazine and other media. His paintings have been exhibited at Comedy Central and screened at the Sundance International Film Festival, the Palm Springs International Film Festival, and the Chicago Horror Film Festival. He lives in Los Angeles, California.