Hulk Hogan docuseries edges out WWE Raw in Netflix global top ten

Hulk Hogan Real American | Netflix

The four-part Hulk Hogan: Real American docuseries on Netflix edged out last Monday’s WWE Raw in total global viewers, according to Netflix’s weekly Tudum rankings.

The Hogan series, co-produced by WWE, brought in 3.1 million global viewers in its second week on the list, up from the prior week’s three million in its debut week. Like the prior week, it was fifth overall globally and had 12.9 million global hours viewed.

The Monday, April 27 edition of Raw did 2.8 million global viewers (sixth overall) and 5.2 million global hours viewed. The viewers are a dip of 500,000 from the post-WrestleMania Raw while the global views were down 1.4 million from the prior week — partially due to a lower runtime and the drop in viewers.

The global views and global hours viewed were both Raw’s lowest since March 9.

The Hogan doc was a top ten show in 14 countries while Raw was in the top ten in 12 countries.

The leader of the week was the first season of Man on Fire (11 million global views) followed closely by the first season of Should I Marry a Murderer? (10.6 million global views).

The difference between fourth place and the Hogan series in fifth place was 3.6 million.

Last reported 10 weeks of WWE Raw on Netflix viewership:

Episode date (ascending)Global ViewsGlobal Hours
April 27, 20262.8 million5.2 million
April 20, 20263.3 million6.6 million
April 13, 20262.9 million5.6 million
April 6, 20262.9 million5.5 million
March 30, 20263.0 million5.5 million
March 23, 20262.9 million5.5 million
March 16, 20263.0 million5.9 million
March 9, 20262.8 million5.0 million
March 2, 20263.0 million5.4 million
February 23, 20262.8 million5.6 million
Average for last 10 weeks (rounded)2.9 million5.6 million
Josh Nason
Josh Nason

Since 2011, Josh has been a contributing editor to Wrestling Observer/F4WOnline.com and also hosts the Punch-Out podcast. He has also written for Fight Magazine, Bloody Elbow, Bleacher Report, and other websites. He's a 2000 graduate of the University of Maine, worked in pro sports, and once was an indie ring announcer.