Your daily adult tube feed all in one place!
Netflix's critically acclaimed Baby Reindeer, has been knocked off the UK's top spot on the streaming platform by a true story docu series that fans are dubbing 'wild'.
Comedian Richard Gadd, 34, based the hit limited series on his real life and it quickly became a word-of-mouth sensation.
The talked-about 'real-life' show hogged the number one spot on Netflix's most-watched list for almost a month and has only recently dropped down the rankings.
The series sees Richard's character Donny Dunn fall victim to a relentless stalking campaign by 'Martha' (Jessica Gunning), which starts after he serves her in a London pub while working as a bartender.
Over four and a half years, the star says he received 41,071 emails, 744 tweets, letters totalling 106 pages and 350 hours of voicemail messages from his stalker which he claims happened in real life.
Netflix's critically acclaimed hit sensation, Baby Reindeer, has been knocked off the UK's top spot on the streaming platform by a true story docu series that fans are dubbing as 'wild' and 'crazy'
Richard Gadd, 34, based the hit limited series about his real life stalking experience and it quickly became a word-of-mouth sensation
Since its release in April, Baby Reindeer has had 60 million views on Netflix and achieved worldwide acclaim - it was knocked off the top spot in the US two weeks ago following the release of A Man in Full on May 2.
Pushing Baby Reindeer off the top spot in the UK though, is the new documentary Ashley Madison: Sex, Lies, And Scandal.
The explosive new docuseries revealed that Ashley Madison employees catfished men looking to cheat on their spouses by creating fake profiles for women - and made users pay to read messages sent by bots.
The controversial dating site Ashley Madison was launched in 2001 and was designed for married men and women looking to have affairs to connect with one another.
Internet hackers stole the customer data for all 37 million of Ashley Madison's users — and posted it online in August 2015.
And moreover, former employees have now admitted that many male users weren't actually talking to real women on the site.
CEO Noel Biderman once insisted that there was 'no communication' between members that was 'anything other than organic,'
In the shocking new show that dethroned Baby Reindeer, numerous ex-staffers opened up about some of the shady tactics that were used to lure in new customers.
Not only did the former employees confess to creating fake profiles, but they also said they would use AI to send out tens of thousands of messages to guys.
Despite only being released on May 15, Netflix fans have already flooded social media with their opinions on the 'crazy' new show.
Netflix's explosive new docuseries has revealed that Ashley Madison employees catfished men looking to cheat on their spouses by creating fake women's profiles
Viewers took to X (formerly Twitter) to write:
'I'm enjoying this #AshleyMadison Netflix documentary.
'I still remember when the story broke out but it always makes me laugh when the men that risked their marriage and wasted money find out the women they thought they were talking to weren't real.'
'Y'all... I'm watching this documentary on @netflix about #AshleyMadison... and I'm shocked that people who were having secret affairs are upset that people found out that they were having secret affairs.'
'Watching #ashleymadison docuseries on Netflix. Wild.'
'Damn this #ashleymadison documentary is crazy, the man said he was sexually satisfied with his wife, but he doesn't know why he joined the site - whilst his wife is waking up extra early to prepare food for him to show she loves him since he feels distant. This is so messed up.'
'Binge watching #AshleyMadisonNetflix #AshleyMadison.'
'This #AshleyMadison documentary is INSANE How do people truly believe infidelity is defensible?! Shocking.'
Despite only being released on May 15, Netflix fans have already flooded social media with their opinions on the 'crazy' new show
Before the hack, CEO Noel Biderman (seen) continuously boasted about the company's commitment to protecting its members in interviews
The controversial dating site Ashley Madison was launched in 2001 and was designed for married men and women looking to have affairs to connect with one another
Christian YouTube star Sam Rader has been brutally slammed online over his shocking cheating admissions in the new Netflix docuseries about Ashley Madison
'Baybeeee that #AshleyMadison docuseries had me shook!'
'Not the customer service people participating in the catfishing too?! This whole thing is WILD #AshleyMadison'.
Christian YouTube star Sam Rader has been brutally slammed online over his shocking cheating admissions in the new Netflix docuseries.
Back in 2015, Sam's wholesome image as a devoted husband and father was shattered after it was revealed that he had signed up for Ashley Madison when someone hacked the platform and leaked the name of every member online.
While Sam, now 38, admitted at the time that he had signed up for the site, which was designed to help married people have affairs, he insisted that he never actually met up with anyone and that he did not cheat on his wife, Nia Rader, now 35.
Now, however, the vlogger has laid bare his infidelities in the explosive show admitting that not only was he unfaithful to Nia, but that he even came on to some of his wife's closest friends.