We still don't have Ask Me What You Want (2024)viewership numbers for most Netflix content, but the streamer just added a Top 10 feature to highlight its most popular shows and films based on location.
The new feature was announced Monday in a Netflix blog post and went live in the following days. The homepage shows an overall Top 10 of what's popular throughout the site, while the TV and Movie tabs have their own respective lists.
On the homepage, users will still see specific recommended titles, but this time they'll have a label indicating if they fall in the Top 10. They'll also have a Top 10 badge if you search them elsewhere on the site.
Per the press release, Netflix will update the lists every day, and their position on any given page will depend on how relevant the titles are to each user.
It's unclear what metrics Netflix is using to designate any given top 10 — how many people are currently streaming, how many complete views, list adds, clicks, etc. — but it's more insight than users have ever had into what trends and how on this platform.
Plus, it gives you a good jumping off point for your next binge.
Topics Netflix
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
The best day to book your flight, according to Google
Men, Women, Dante, and Other News by Sadie Stein
Everything They Cook Takes Five Hours: An Interview with Director Alexa Karolinski by Tim Small
The missing Titanic sub might have used this old game controller
Samsung Unpacked stream is set for May 12, 2025
Car Trouble, Part 2 by Pamela Petro
Paris Was Yesterday by Sadie Stein
Jimmy Ernst, Untitled, 1976 by The Paris Review
AMD Radeon RX 550 + Intel Pentium G4560
'Final Fantasy XVI' review: Being different is fine
Q&A with tendercare founder and CEO Shauna Sweeney
Newest luxury sex toy is a real innovation in suction stimulation
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。