“One Day,” Netflix’s new romantic drama series based on the David Nicholls novel, debuted in the third position on the streamer’s weekly rankings. During the Feb. 5-11 viewing window, its first four days of availability, the series hit 5.3 million views.
It followed “Griselda,” the No. 1 title for the third week in a row with 10.3 million views, and Season 1 of “The Tourist” with 6.8 million views. The BBC comedy series first appeared on the Top 10 last week, when it was added to Netflix after previously being dropped by Max. Netflix will debut a second season on Feb. 24.
The No. 4 title was “Alexander: The Making of a God,” which hit 3.5 million views in its first full week of availability. Next was “Fool Me Once,” which last week landed in ninth place on Netflix’s list of the Top 10 most popular English-language TV series of all time. The series reached 3.3 million views during the Feb. 5-11 viewing window, boosting it to a total of 88.2 million views since launching on Jan. 1.
“American Nightmare” had its fourth week on the chart, making sixth place with 3 million views. No. 7 was Season 1 of “House M.D.,” hitting 2.3 million views after being added to Netflix in multiple territories worldwide, excluding the U.S. The same was true for “Regular Show,” with Season 8 hitting 1.6 million views.
The streaming bump of “Young Sheldon,” caused by its addition to Netflix after previously only being available on Max, continues. Season 6 had its second week on the chart, taking ninth place with 1.5 million views. “Love on the Spectrum” Season 2 rounded out the bottom of the chart with 1.2 million views in its second full week of availability.
Of note on the movies chart was “Despicable Me 3,” which was the most-watched title on Netflix during this viewing window. The 2017 children’s film hit 15.9 million views in its first full week on the streamer after becoming available on Feb. 1.
See Netflix’s Top 10 lists for the week of Feb. 5-11 below, beginning with English-language series and followed by non-English-language TV shows, English-language movies and then non-English-language movies.