I have an intermittent problem with Prime Video. Several times, I have started watching a show, watch a few episodes, then start the next one, and exit. When I am on the Home Screen the next time, that show does not show up in Continue Watching. It happens when I start watching a show from the Search function, and sometimes when I start watching it from my Watchlist. 



Sorry I can't help, but I am seeing the same thing! It drives me NUTS! Sometimes it works for me, but many times it displays shows that I rarely watch but not a show I was watching 5 minutes ago! We watch the show The Middle, and in our experiments we have found the earlier seasons work and show in Continue Watching, but the later seasons don't! Let me know if you learn anything.


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I have a sharp Roku TV and for the last two weeks at least none of my thumbnail pictures are showing with the titles of my shows I've tried to reinstall the streaming channel on my TV everything that I can think of it only does this with prime video somebody can you please help fix this I went to settings and check for update there was no update available

I Have a Sharp Roku TV model # LC-43LB371U Manufactured April, 2015. I have had the same problem with Amazon Prime video icons being blank when I open the app. This has happened several times over the past year or so. I followed the suggestion to do a system restart on the TV and it worked. Sometimes restarting my Xfinity cable box has helped but not always. This time I went to the Home icon on my Roku remote then: SETTINGS -> SYSTEM -> POWER -> SYSTEM RESTART. When opening the Amazon Prime App, it took a few seconds but the icons came back. CMC, Denver CO 8/30/2020

I had this problem with my Amazon Prime app and I fixed it. Thankfully, another post mentioned that the older Roku devices - whether the box or the RokuTV - had limited memory for today's apps. That got me thinking.

I then removed 11 of the 19 installed apps - each of which of course takes up memory by being on the device. I then pulled out the power cord and allowed a bit for the electronics within to lose charge and voltage.

The issue is that the older Roku devices - standalone or TV - did not have enough memory within them to support the downloaded code within them getting larger. The code getting larger comes from two sources: as suppliers update their code from time-to-time they inevitably make the size of the code grow - and - as time goes on you add more access apps to your Roku to get more channels.

Both of these use more memory. When memory gets insufficient, the actual operation code of the device is protected so that it at least continues to work. Sacrificed is the nice pictures in the thumbnails.

The Solution. You cannot do anything about the bloat occurring in the apps, only the channel software providers can do that. But you can delete all those loaded apps that you don't really use or want. When I started the process, I had 23 apps loaded. I deleted entirely 12 of those, leaving the "essential" 11. Reset.

I only have a bare minimum of apps, maybe 10 so I don't think that's it. I still think it's a bug that needs to be fixed. Also this TV is only a few years old (4k/HDR) it's not an old ROKU device at all. I've tried everything from turning off fast-startup, removed as many apps as possible. It's been occurring for a while.. It's not consistent, but when I normally lose the icons is when I exit antenna viewing. When it happens, if I launch another app like YoutubeTV or Tablo the icons return when exiting those apps.

Fallout became Prime Video's most-watched premiere in history (thanks to its full-season binge drop), but it isn't just on top of the streamer's ratings records; it's also on top of our list of the best shows to watch on Prime Video. The Ella Purnell and Walton Goggins-led adaptation of the popular Bethesda Game Studios video games is an all-new story set in the familiar post-apocalyptic alternative future, and it retains the franchise's dark humor and splashy gore, making it one of the best game adaptations we've seen. If Walton Goggins without a nose is too much for you, there are plenty of other exciting new shows on Prime Video and Freevee, including Boat Story, Mr. & Mrs. Smith, and Reacher.

An important note about how this list was made: In order to keep the list as relevant as possible, we're emphasizing recent releases, Prime Video originals, and critics' favorites. But we're also putting our own personal spin on the list, with underrated gems we're recommending to our friends, classic favorites, and important selections that highlight diverse voices. We'll be updating the list regularly.

Bethesda Game Studios' popular franchise follows in the footsteps of The Last of Us as game-to-TV adaptations that don't totally suck. This one is executive produced by Westworld's Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy and stars Yellowjackets' Ella Purnell and Justified's Walton Goggins in a story of survival in a post-nuclear apocalypse, in a retrofuturistic, alternate Los Angeles full of mutants, mech suits, and opportunists. Fans of the games do not need to worry: The sly and dark sense of humor translates to the screen perfectly (as does the V.A.T.S. comical gore), so grab your Pip-Boy and hop in. -Tim Surette [Trailer | Review | Everything we know about Fallout Season 2 | More shows like Fallout] 

Reacher is a TV adaptation of author Lee Child's paperback novels about Jack Reacher, a brolic former military policeman who wanders around the country using his brains and his brawn to solve crimes. He was previously played on the big screen by Tom Cruise, who is not built like TV's Reacher Alan Ritchson, who is built like Arnold Schwarzenegger if he played in the NFL. In Season 1, he gets off a bus in a small Georgia town and quickly gets caught up in a conspiracy of currency trafficking, political corruption, and murder, and helps two local cops unravel the mystery using his savant-like investigative skills and unfiltered willingness to say whatever he's thinking. And when he can't talk his way to a solution, he sure can punch, shoot, and headbutt his way to one. It's a workmanlike detective/action show that isn't very ambitious but is a lot of fun, especially for fans of Amazon's other dad-book adaptations Bosch and Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan. -Liam Mathews [Trailer | Review]

Upload feels a little like the Greg Daniels take on The Good Place you never knew you wanted. The sci-fi comedy is set in a technologically advanced future in which humans can be uploaded into a virtual afterlife when they're close to death. Robbie Amell stars as Nathan, a young app developer who dies in a self-driving car accident and whose consciousness ends up in the luxurious digital world known as Lakeview thanks to his shallow but wealthy girlfriend, Ingrid (Allegra Edwards). The series has a lot of fun taking jabs at our reliance on technology while imagining what the world of the future will look like, and Nathan's budding relationship with Nora (Andy Allo), his "angel," or more accurately, his customer service rep, is a real highlight. -Allison Picurro [Trailer]

Author Harlan Coben is already a streaming legend on Netflix, where several of his mystery books have been adapted into limited series. Now he's got one on Prime Video, the YA-leaning "this town is full of secrets" mystery Shelter. It follows Coben's character Mickey Bolitar (Colin in Black & White's Jaden Michael) as he searches for a missing classmate following the sudden death of Mickey's father. It's an interesting change of pace for Prime Video, which has lots of success with mysteries and thrillers adapted from books, as evidenced by its plethora of "dad shows," but not much in the young adult space. -Tim Surette [Trailer]

Amazon and the BBC's adaptation of Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett's beloved fantasy-comedy novel Good Omens is about a demon and an angel who team up to prevent the Antichrist from bringing about the end of the world because they've grown rather fond of Earth and its inhabitants, and it features some of the best casting television has ever seen. David Tennant as the hedonistic demon Crowley is so good it's like he was born solely for this purpose, and the way he plays off Michael Sheen's angel, Aziraphale, makes for a perfect odd-couple pairing that leads to the show's best moments. Although meant to be a six-episode limited series, Prime Video brought it back for a second season based on unrealized ideas from Gaiman and Pratchett, and a supporting cast that includes Michael McKean, Frances McDormand, and Jon Hamm makes it worth your while. A third season will wrap up the story. -Kaitlin Thomas [Trailer | Review]

To All the Boys I've Loved Before creator Jenny Han stays comfortably in her lane with this series about teenage love, teenage love triangles, and teenage love summers. Lola Tung plays Belly, a young woman who heads out on a summer vacation to her family beach house, where she's reunited with old friends and new potential boyfriends in the form of a friendly local and the eldest brother of her family friend. Things get complicated! In Season 2, the back-and-forth between boys continues, with the added specter of a potential sale of their precious beach house hovering over them. -Allison Picurro [Trailer | Review]

One Day at a Time's Justina Machado stars as a woman trying to make it in New York's Washington Heights neighborhood after spending 16 years in the clink to cover for her drug-dealing boyfriend. The only problem? People keep ending up dead around her. With the help from an old friend who runs an empanada shop, she figures out a way to hide the evidence, while also creating one of the hottest restaurants in the area. -Tim Surette [Trailer | Review] 152ee80cbc

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