Viewers are raving about a new Netflix documentary that many are watching all in one go.
Wild Wild Country debuted on the streaming service last week, and has quickly become a cult favourite amongst bingers.
That's apt, because the doco followers controversial Indian guru Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh and the events surrounding a cult commune built in America in the mid-80s.
Spoiler warning: One of the show's producers, Mark Duplass, has warned viewers to go into it cold, saying: "Don't Google this one."
The show's earned rave reviews, with The Atlantic calling it "jaw-dropping" and many praising the doco's unbelievable twists and turns.
"To describe Wild Wild Country as jaw-dropping is to understate the number of times my mouth gaped while watching the series, a six-part Netflix documentary about a religious community in Oregon in the 1980s," wrote The Atlantic reviewer.
The Hollywood Reporter agreed. "Screened at the Sundance Film Festival in one exhausting, gripping gulp, it's a slice of partially forgotten history in which real life just keeps getting more and more outlandish and implausible. ... Wild Wild Country a worthwhile thought experiment in addition to a yarn that is, as the title promises, doubly wild."
Indiewire gave it a five-star review. "It's a challenging piece that requires the viewer to acknowledge their own reactions and then question them. In that, Wild Wild Country may be even more vital to a divided nation. It demands you see the other side."
Viewers have quickly latched onto the show, with many saying they're watching all six episodes in one sitting.