How to Use it
After you download the free app from the iOS App Store, Watchworthy will present you with TV shows and ask you to swipe right on the shows you like, swipe left on the ones you don’t like, and swipe up on shows you’re not sure about. After just thirty seconds of swiping, the app will give you TV recommendations targeted specifically at you based on your responses. Each show on the list of recommendations will feature a “worthy” score that indicates just how probable it is that you’ll love it.
Click on the plus sign to add recommendations to your Watchlist. If you’ve seen the shows we recommend, you can “like” or “dislike” them, helping the app to continue learning about your preferences. You can also set your services (Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, etc.) on the app and refine your results to only get shows that you have access to. Once you’ve selected a show you want to watch, you can either start watching it directly from your device or screencast it to your TV. We’ll be adding movie recommendations to the app later on this year, as well as the ability to have your Watchlist on a smart TV, Roku, Apple TV, Amazon Fire, and Chromecast, as well as an Android app.
How Ranker Is Involved
How does Watchworthy know what shows you’ll fall in love with? We may not know you personally, but we do know what Ranker TV fans love.
There are over 50,000 votable lists about entertainment on Ranker.com — our data scientists have found millions of correlations in how people vote on those different lists. Some of those correlations aren’t so surprising: for example, we’ve found that people who vote up Ozark are more likely to also vote up other gritty crime dramas like Mindhunter and Bosch. But some correlations might not be so obvious. You probably wouldn’t have guessed that Ozark fans are ALSO drawn to shows about breaking the glass ceiling, like The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel and Glow!
Watchworthy takes all these correlations and uses them to predict what shows are just right for you — not the shows that one TV critic likes or the shows that streaming services are trying to promote, but the shows that are actually most likely to be worthy of your precious time.