Saturday, July 4, 2026

 
HomeMOVIESApple TV Sci-Fi Series Skyrockets To No.1 On Streaming After Returning With...

Apple TV Sci-Fi Series Skyrockets To No.1 On Streaming After Returning With Perfect Rotten Tomatoes Score


An Apple TV sci-fi series returns with a perfect Rotten Tomatoes as it dominates streaming.

After launching the platform with For All Mankind in 2019, Apple TV gradually went on to become the undisputed streaming destination for science-fiction shows. Along with For All Mankind, which has been renewed for a sixth and final season, the service also features Severance, Silo, Dark Matter, Foundation, Pluribus, Murderbot, Invasion, and Monarch: Legacy of Monsters. Pluribus is Apple TV’s most-watched show of all time, and the record was previously held by Severance.



















Now Playing · Sound On
How Well Do You Know Apple TV+?
“Believe.”

🍪Ted
Lasso
Biscuits with the boss

🧠SeverancePraise Kier

🐎Slow
Horses
Slough House

Morning
Show
Live from NYC

🚀For All
Mankind
What if…?

01

Apple TV+’s breakout comedy about a relentlessly optimistic American football coach hired to manage an English Premier League team won the Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Comedy Series back-to-back in 2021 and 2022. Who plays Ted?




✓ Correct! Jason Sudeikis — the former SNL cast member who originally played Ted in 2013 NBC Sports Premier League promos. He co-created the series with Brendan Hunt (who plays Coach Beard), Bill Lawrence, and Joe Kelly. Sudeikis won back-to-back Emmys for Best Actor in a Comedy. A Season 4 is officially in production for 2026.

✗ Cut it off! The answer is Jason Sudeikis. Jon Hamm is Mad Men (and later showed up as himself in Ted Lasso Season 2). Will Ferrell hasn’t done an Apple TV+ show. Brendan Hunt plays Coach Beard — Ted’s silent assistant — and was a co-creator, but Sudeikis is the title character and won two Best Actor Emmys for the role.

02

Ben Stiller-directed sci-fi thriller Severance became a cultural phenomenon with its eerie Macrodata Refinement floors and “praise Kier” cultishness. What is the name of the sinister biotech corporation at its centre?




✓ Correct! Lumon Industries — the unsettling corporation founded by the cult-like Eagan family, whose “severance procedure” surgically splits an employee’s work memories from their outside life. Weyland-Yutani is from Alien; Umbrella Corp is Resident Evil; Apex is fictional but not this show. Lumon’s retro-futuristic aesthetic (beige Macbook-era CRTs and long hallways) has become instantly iconic.

✗ Cut it off! The answer is Lumon Industries. Weyland-Yutani is the Alien franchise’s evil megacorp. Umbrella Corp runs Resident Evil. Apex isn’t a recognisable fictional company. Lumon is the creepy biotech behind Severance — with its Kier Eagan cult of personality, waffle parties, and surgically separated “innies” and “outies.”

03

In March 2022, Apple TV+ made streaming history when one of its films became the first from any streaming service to win the Academy Award for Best Picture. Which film was it?




✓ Correct! CODA (Children of Deaf Adults) — Sian Heder’s drama about a hearing daughter of a deaf family in Massachusetts — won Best Picture at the 94th Academy Awards, beating The Power of the Dog (the heavy favourite). Troy Kotsur’s supporting-actor win was the first for a deaf male actor. The Morning Show is a TV series, Greyhound is Apple’s Tom Hanks WWII film, Killers is an Apple film but was released later.

✗ Cut it off! The answer is CODA. The Morning Show is a series. Greyhound is Apple’s 2020 Tom Hanks WWII film (a solid hit but not an Oscar winner). Killers of the Flower Moon — Scorsese’s 2023 Apple release — was nominated for 10 Oscars but won none. CODA’s 2022 Best Picture win made Apple the first streamer to break through in the category.

04

The scruffy, flatulent, ruthlessly cynical MI5 exile Jackson Lamb — running the Slough House dumping ground for disgraced spies — is one of modern TV’s most acclaimed performances. Which veteran actor plays him?




✓ Correct! Gary Oldman — Oscar winner for Darkest Hour — plays Jackson Lamb opposite Kristin Scott Thomas’ glacial Diana Taverner. The series adapts Mick Herron’s Slough House novels and has become Apple’s most quietly successful long-running drama, renewed through at least Season 6. Oldman has repeatedly called Lamb his favourite role of his career.

✗ Cut it off! The answer is Gary Oldman. Anthony Hopkins hasn’t done an Apple TV+ series of this prominence. Colin Firth was reportedly in contention for different spy roles (including Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy’s George Smiley, which Oldman also played). Jim Broadbent appears elsewhere. Oldman’s Lamb is one of TV’s most delightfully unpleasant protagonists.

05

Apple TV+’s flagship prestige drama on launch day — a #MeToo-era newsroom saga about the on-air partners of a fictional morning TV show — was anchored by two huge Hollywood names as its co-leads and producers. Who are they?




✓ Correct! Jennifer Aniston and Reese Witherspoon — both also executive producers — anchor the show as Alex Levy and Bradley Jackson. Reportedly each earned a then-record $1.1 million per episode. Steve Carell co-stars as the disgraced anchor whose firing kicks off the entire series. Aniston earned her first Emmy nomination for dramatic work for the role in 2020.

✗ Cut it off! The answer is Jennifer Aniston & Reese Witherspoon. Witherspoon & Dern did Big Little Lies (on HBO). Kidman was also in Big Little Lies. Meryl Streep joined The Morning Show in later seasons (a supporting role). Aniston and Witherspoon lead and produce — both reportedly making $1.1M per episode in one of streaming’s richest-ever deals.

06

Ronald D. Moore’s alt-history space epic For All Mankind — one of Apple TV+’s original launch titles — jumps forward in time each season. What is the show’s central point of divergence from real history?




✓ Correct! The Soviets beat Apollo 11 to the Moon in June 1969 — keeping the Space Race alive and turning NASA into a permanently ascendant institution. That single change cascades across decades: women astronauts are pushed early, lunar bases are built in the 1970s, Mars is reached in the 1990s, and so on. Each season time-jumps ahead a decade, showing how this different history snowballs.

✗ Cut it off! The answer is the Soviets landing on the Moon first — June 1969, beating Apollo 11. That single change drives everything: continued funding, expanded NASA, women astronauts, a permanent lunar base by the 1980s, Mars missions in the 1990s. Aliens aren’t in the show. Mars gets colonised, but much later. NASA remains public throughout the series.

07

Apple TV+ launched with a small lineup of nine originals — including The Morning Show, See, Dickinson, and For All Mankind — at the aggressively low price of $4.99 a month. When did the service officially go live?




✓ Correct! Apple TV+ launched on November 1, 2019 — just before Disney+ beat it to market by 11 days. Apple went in with a tiny roster of about nine originals (versus Disney+’s massive back catalogue) but compensated with $1 billion in original content spend and a one-year free trial for Apple hardware buyers. Its quality-over-quantity bet has since paid off in awards and prestige.

✗ Cut it off! The answer is November 2019 — specifically November 1st, just 11 days before Disney+ launched (a deliberate piece of scheduling brinkmanship). Apple launched with only nine originals and priced at $4.99/month to try to get ahead of Netflix and Disney. The service went live just before the pandemic turbocharged streaming growth everywhere.

08

Apple TV+’s post-apocalyptic thriller Silo — starring Rebecca Ferguson in a 10,000-person underground society — adapts a bestselling series of novels originally self-published as a 2011 short story. Who wrote them?




✓ Correct! Hugh Howey self-published Wool as a short story on Amazon in 2011; word-of-mouth turned it into a trilogy (Wool, Shift, Dust) and eventually a publishing phenomenon. Apple’s adaptation, retitled Silo, premiered in 2023. Andy Weir wrote The Martian and Project Hail Mary. Blake Crouch wrote Dark Matter and Recursion. Ted Chiang wrote the novella that became Arrival.

✗ Cut it off! The answer is Hugh Howey. Andy Weir is The Martian/Project Hail Mary. Blake Crouch is Dark Matter/Recursion (also recently adapted to Apple TV+, hence the mix-up). Ted Chiang is Arrival’s source. Howey’s Wool trilogy — Silo’s source — started as a self-published Amazon short story in 2011 before exploding into a bestseller.

End Credits · Autoplay Paused
Your Apple TV+ Rank

🍏

/ 8

Cupertino completionist — or still on the free trial?

Apple TV’s Silo has now returned for season 3 and is both a critical and streaming hit. The dystopian series based on Hugh Howey’s novels debuted with a 100% Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes, and the score has remained perfect with 17 reviews now added to the aggregation site. This surpasses seasons 1 and 2, which respectively have critics’ scores of 88% and 92%.

Now, only a day after the season 3 premiere, Silo is number one on Apple TV’s global and U.S. streaming charts. It is in first place for 97 different countries, including Australia, Brazil, Colombia, France, India, Japan, Mexico, South Korea, and Ukraine. The shows behind it in the worldwide top 10 are Cape Fear, Sugar, Widow’s Bay, Your Friends & Neighbors, Star City, Ted Lasso, Severance, Margo’s Got Money Troubles, and Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed.

Silo is set in a future where Juliette Nichols (Rebecca Ferguson) and thousands of other individuals live underground in a 144-level silo. Season 3 sees Juliette back in Silo 18, where she is now the mayor, but she has no memory of what happened before her return. In addition to this present-day story, the series explores a past timeline that is beginning to reveal why the silos were created, what happened to the outside world, and who is actually in power.

In ScreenRant‘s Silo season 3 review, Felipe Rangel gave it eight out of 10 stars, praising how the series “goes for something completely fresh three seasons into its run, and it pays off.” Seasons 1 and 2 take place in the present, which makes the new focus on U.S. Congressman Daniel Keene (Ashley Zukerman), investigative journalist Helen Drew (Jessica Henwick), and Senator Thurman (Laura Innes) new territory for the show.

This is a different approach from Howey’s Silo books, as the second installment, Shift, is set entirely in the past, until it catches up with the present-day timeline at the very end in order to set up the third and final book. Rather than spend almost an entire season without Juliette and following all-new characters, the adaptation has chosen to alternate between the two timelines. This has already led to some other significant changes from the source material, including the whole storyline of Juliette’s memories being suppressed, which does not happen in the novels.

Silo was simultaneously renewed for seasons 3 and 4, the latter of which will be the end of the series. The two seasons were filmed back-to-back as they adapt the events of Shift and the third book, Dust. Graham Yost serves as the showrunner, with a cast that also includes Harriet Walter as Martha Walker, Avi Nash as Lukas Kyle, Common as Robert Sims, Alexandria Riley as Camille Sims, Chinaza Uche as Paul Billings, Shane McRae as Knox, Remmie Milner as Shirley, Rick Gomez as Patrick Kennedy, and Steve Zahn as Solo.

Silo season 3 releases new episodes on Fridays on Apple TV.



Release Date

May 5, 2023

Network

Apple TV

Showrunner

Graham Yost

  • Headshot Of Rebecca Ferguson In The World Premiere of

    Rebecca Ferguson

    Juliette Nichols

  • HeaDSHOT oF Common




This story originally appeared on Screenrant

RELATED ARTICLES

Most Popular

Recent Comments