Though it debuted to little fanfare last month, Prime Video‘s six-part crime thriller Steal seems to have piqued audience interest in its first few weeks on the service.
The Sophie Turner-led limited series has now been among the Top 10 series on streaming in the U.S. for the past two weeks, according to Luminate.
Per the measurement company’s latest report, Steal was the 10th most-watched show on streaming in the U.S. from January 30-February 5, generating about 278 million minutes viewed in that time frame. That translates to roughly 949,000 streaming views (defined as total time watched divided by runtime).
That’s slightly down from the series’ first full week on Prime Video, January 23-29, when the series took No. 7 on Luminate’s rankings with 428M minutes viewed, or nearly 1.5M streaming views.
Interestingly, and likely due to the fact that all six episodes were released at once, Steal even managed to make Luminate’s Top 50 list just based on its first two days of viewing. From January 16-22, the thriller climbed to 35th place with just under 89M minutes watched or 302,000 streaming views.
So far, Amazon hasn’t released any of its own performance data for Steal. It’s possible that the series will also make an appearance on the Nielsen streaming charts at the end of February, since those reports are about a month delayed.
Steal faced some tough competition from streaming behemoths like Bridgerton, which returned with Season 4 at the end of January and dominated the Luminate chart last week. The Pitt Season 2 came in second place for the week of January 30, followed by The Traitors, His & Hers and Landman.
Prime Video had two appearances in the Top 10, thanks to another strong performance from the second season of Fallout. That series faltered slightly upon its December return, in large part because Amazon changed the release strategy for Season 2, but it has slowly but surely strengthened week-over-week to put up impressive audience totals in the beginning of the year.
Wonder Man, the first season of The Pitt and Hulu’s 2016 series 11.22.63 (which has been thrust back into relevancy after it recently landed on Netflix) rounded out the top shows last week.








English (US) ·