As the weather cools down, the streaming slate is heating up โ and this week offers a perfect mix of political intrigue, sports storytelling, small-screen reinvention, and cinematic reflection. From Keri Russellโs return in Netflixโs The Diplomat to an inside look at NBA life in Starting Five, a new chapter of crime and conscience in Boston Blue, and an intimate documentary on the legendary Martin Scorsese, thereโs no shortage of binge-worthy stories to dive into. Hereโs whatโs new on our streaming radar this week.
The Diplomat
For fans of high-stakes political dramas, Netflix is back with a third season of its incredibly bingeable series The Diplomat. Keri Russell returns as Kate Wyler, who has just accused the Vice President of the United States, Grace Penn (played by the wonderfully talented Allison Janney), of orchestrating a terrorist plot โ setting the stage for a volatile new chapter.
As the dust settles, the President is dead, and Penn now occupies the Oval Office. To make matters worse, Kateโs husband Hal (Rufus Sewell) may have played a role in the Presidentโs demise. With loyalties shifting and ambitions colliding, Season 3 explores a haunting question: does getting what you want also come with a nightmare attached?
The Diplomat Season 3 streams this week on Netflix.
Starting Five
Also streaming on Netflix, just in time for the upcoming NBA season, comes Starting Five โ a new docu-series that delivers the kind of access sports fans crave. Think of it as Hard Knocks for the hardwood.
The series follows five elite players through the 2024โ2025 NBA season: Jaylen Brown of the Boston Celtics, the newest Houston Rocket Kevin Durant (documented during his final Phoenix Suns campaign), Shai Gilgeous-Alexander of the Oklahoma City Thunder, who just led his team to an NBA Championship, Tyrese Haliburton of the Indiana Pacers, and the ever-enigmatic former Rocket, James Harden.
What makes Starting Five compelling isnโt just the highlight-reel action โ itโs the human side of these athletes. We see their routines, struggles, and moments of doubt as they balance fame, fatigue, and personal sacrifice. Like actors or any working professional, they have to check their emotions at the door and perform at an elite level, even when life off the court tests them the most.
Starting Five streams this week on Netflix.
Boston Blue
Debuting this week is Boston Blue, the anticipated spinoff of CBSโs long-running hit Blue Bloods. Donnie Wahlberg reprises his role as Detective Danny Reagan โ this time relocating from New York to Boston. There, he joins the Boston Police Department and partners with Detective Lena Silver (Sonequa Martin-Green), the eldest daughter of a storied law-enforcement family.
Lenaโs grandfather is Reverend Peters, portrayed by the legendary Ernie Hudson, who brings both spiritual weight and moral complexity to the role. When I spoke with Hudson, he said that Boston Blue is โas much about family and faith as it is about forensics โ a show where the badge isnโt the only thing that defines you.โ
He says the show stands apart because it doesnโt shy away from the complicated relationship between police and community. โA lot of police shows focus on the difficulties of policing โ trying to be fair, trying to get justice,โ Hudson explains. โBut the community often sees it from a different perspective. Sometimes the police come down hard without taking a lot of factors into consideration. Communities that feel disadvantaged need someone to champion them, to be heard. Itโs the letter of the law, yes โ but itโs also about balance and empathy.โ
He continues, โMy character sort of represents that humanity we all share. Itโs easy to judge people and separate them โ to say, โTheyโre not like us, they deserve this.โ But when we see ourselves in others, that changes everything. Television can remind us of that.โ
Hudson adds that the showโs power lies in its depiction of family as a microcosm of America itself. โOn Boston Blue, youโve got this family with all these different backgrounds โ my characterโs a Baptist reverend, Donnieโs Catholic, my daughter married a Jewish man โ and yet they still find common ground. Thatโs real life. Thatโs real America.โ
Like its predecessor, the show balances crime-solving with deeper themes of legacy, loyalty, and personal conviction. Boston Blue premieres October 17 on CBS and streams on Paramount+.
Mr. Scorsese
Rounding out this weekโs lineup is Mr. Scorsese, a five-part documentary on one of cinemaโs true icons: Martin Scorsese. Directed by Rebecca Miller, the series charts the filmmakerโs life and work โ from his student films to his modern masterpieces โ exploring how his experiences, influences, and worldview shaped his distinctive cinematic voice.
Featuring reflections from Scorsese himself, never-before-seen archival footage, and commentary from some of his closest collaborators, the doc paints a vivid portrait of an artist in constant evolution. With classics like Goodfellas, Casino, The Irishman, and The Departed behind him, Mr. Scorsese offers a rare, introspective look at a director who has spent a lifetime redefining storytelling on screen.
Mr. Scorsese premieres this week on Apple TV+.
This article appears in Jan 1 โ Dec 31, 2025.




