CBS has set the premiere dates for its fall 2023 lineup. Paramount Network’s “Yellowstone” will kick off its broadcast on Sunday, Sept. 17 at 8:30 p.m.
14.07.2023 - 18:01 / variety.com
Joe Otterson TV Reporter “The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon” has officially set its premiere date on AMC and AMC+. The spinoff series starring Norman Reedus will officially debut on Sept. 10 at 9 p.m. ET/PT on the linear network and its streaming counterpart. Per the official logline of the series, “Daryl (Reedus) washes ashore in France and struggles to piece together how he got there and why. The series tracks his journey across a broken but resilient France as he hopes to find a way back home. As he makes the journey, though, the connections he forms along the way complicate his ultimate plan.”
Along with Reedus, the series also stars Clémence Poésy, Adam Nagaitis, Anne Charrier, Eriq Ebouaney, Laika Blanc Francard, Romain Levi, and Louis Puech Scigliuzzi. “The Walking Dead” chief content officer Scott M. Gimple executive produces along with series showrunner David Zabel, Reedus, Greg Nicotero, Angela Kang, Brian Bockrath, and Daniel Percival.
Upon its premiere, “The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon” will be the second spinoff of “The Walking Dead” to debut. AMC recently launched “The Walking Dead: Dead City” on June 18, with that show starring Lauren Cohan as Maggie and Jeffrey Dean Morgan as Negan. AMC is also currently prepping another spinoff, “The Walking Dead: Rick & Michonne.” Andrew Lincoln and Danai Gurira will star in that series. Lincoln was originally set to star in a series of “Walking Dead” films as Rick Grimes, but those plans have shifted into the “Rick & Michonne” limited series. That show does not have an official premiere date, but is expected to debut in 2024.
CBS has set the premiere dates for its fall 2023 lineup. Paramount Network’s “Yellowstone” will kick off its broadcast on Sunday, Sept. 17 at 8:30 p.m.
Amid two ongoing strikes, CBS kicks off its fall 2023 schedule with a broadcast run of Yellowstone, Paramount+’s SEAL Team, Ghosts UK — the comedy’s original BBC version — three new alternative series and expanded versions of reality series, primetime news programs and live sports.
Even though the Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos’s monster fable “Poor Things” has been confirmed to have its Venice premiere, Searchlight Pictures has postponed the cinema release of the film.
EXCLUSIVE: Tubi has picked up Underdeveloped, a mockumentary from Brian A. Metcalf, starring Thomas Ian Nicholas, Tom Arnold and Mark Pellegrino. It will premiere globally September 8 on Fox Entertainment’s free streaming service Tubi. As an independent production with no direct ties to members of the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television, it also is one of the latest projects to receive a waiver from SAG-AFTRA amid the actors strike, so filming can move forward.
The Walking Dead creator Robert Kirkman tried to kill off Rick Grimes (Andrew Lincoln) early in the TV series so audiences would “freak out”.During a panel at San Diego Comic-Con on Saturday (July 22), the comic writer and show producer recalled how he wanted to deviate from the comic source material as much as possible during the early days of The Walking Dead series.“With Walking Dead, I was much younger and much more reckless,” Kirkman said (via Entertainment Weekly). “I was an absolute lunatic.
Robert Kirkman almost changed television history.
While “The Walking Dead” may have come to an end after 11 seasons, the zombie-apocalypse drama has spawned plenty of spin-offs set within the show’s ever-expanding universe, with more on the way.
The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon has released the official trailer for its first season, which premieres Sunday, September 10 at 9 PM ET/PT on AMC and AMC+.
Earlier today, AMC Networks presented a Walking Dead Universe Fan Watch Party in Comic-Con International’s Hall H. Hosted by TV Guide’s Damian Holbrook, attendees were given a first look at trailers and teases from series in the Walking Dead Universe.
The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon has released the official trailer for its second season, which premieres Sunday, September 10 at 9 PM ET/PT on AMC and AMC+.
A brand new trailer for Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon is out!
Joe Otterson TV Reporter “The Walking Dead” spinoffs “Dead City” and “Daryl Dixon” have both been renewed for second seasons at AMC. The announcement was made at San Diego Comic-Con on Friday. For “Dead City,” the renewal comes ahead of the first season finale on July 23. Lauren Cohan and Jeffrey Dean Morgan star in the series as Maggie and Negan respectively. “The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon,” which stars Norman Reedus, is due to debut in September. “This next chapter in the ‘Walking Dead’ Universe continues to thrive with a terrific inaugural season for ‘Dead City’ and highly anticipated new journey for fan-favorite character Daryl Dixon coming in September,” said Dan McDermott, president of entertainment and AMC Studios for AMC Networks. “We can’t wait to bring ‘Dead City’ fans back to the epicenter of Manhattan for more zip-lining action with Maggie and Negan. And, ahead of its debut, we’re thrilled to double down on Daryl as we bring the apocalypse to France, transforming Notre Dame, Pont du Gard and other iconic locales into an apocalyptic landscape unlike anything we’ve seen before.”
AMC is keeping the zombie apocalypse alive.
Fans of the great Rob McElhenney and Ryan Reynolds’ Welcome to Wrexham underdog story won’t have to wait too much longer for Season 2.
The Walking Dead spin-off Dead City, where we discover Maggie’s real intentions.In Dead City’s fifth episode titled Stories We Tell Ourselves, a flashback sequence revealed Maggie (Cohan) planned to hand over Negan (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) to the Croat (Željko Ivanek) all along in exchange for her kidnapped son Hershel (Logan Kim). Prior to this, it’s been assumed Maggie needed Negan’s help in saving her son due to his history and knowledge of the Croat.Maggie’s deception has been discovered by Ginny (Mahina Napoleon), who scribbled the word “liar” in blood across the wall of a New York City subway tunnel.Speaking to Entertainment Weekly about the twist, Cohan said: “I was so glad when [showrunner Eli Jorne] came with this story and that this was the twist.
Talk about respecting a theatrical window: Disney has set a Disney+ global premiere date for Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 of Aug. 2, that’s 90 days after the pic’s theatrical release of May 5.
The Walking Dead spinoff Daryl Dixon has confirmed its release date after the release of a number of teasers.The spin-off comes after the end of the franchise’s original show and The Walking Dead: World Beyond have come to an end, and as we approach the final season of Fear The Walking Dead.The show has been teased as existing in “a wholly different world” to others in the franchise and has now been confirmed for a release later this year.As confirmed by AMC, Daryl Dixon will premiere on September 10, and new images have also been shared.A synopsis for the show says it will see Daryl “wash ashore in France and struggle to piece together how he got there and why. [Journeying] across a broken but resilient France as he hopes to find a way back home, the connections he forms along the way complicate his ultimate plan.”A post shared by The Walking Dead (@amcthewalkingdead)In recent weeks, first-look teasers have been shared during episodes of the Maggie and Negan-focused show Dead City.
The Walking Dead.Williams (Everybody Hates Chris) was introduced in season five of the zombie apocalypse show as Noah, a character Beth Greene (Emily Kinney) helps rescue from the Atlanta hospital.Noah wasn’t long for that world, however, as he wound up being viciously ripped apart by walkers in one of the show’s most gruesome deaths.Speaking to The Hollywood Reporter, Williams said that fans are still upset about his character’s early exit. However, the actor himself admitted that he has no reservations.“People are still really upset with how that went,” he said. “Really upset.
AMC Networks has set Sunday, September 10 at 9 PM for the premiere of The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon on AMC and AMC+, the latest spinoff in TWD universe, starring Norman Reedus.
Michael Schneider Variety Editor at Large Remember AMC’s “The Walking Dead”? You know, the biggest series on TV at one time. Most-watched basic cable show in history, and I can guarantee that will never be topped. But yet, an Emmy dud. The series (which will live on via a frenzy of spin-offs) ended its run last November after 11 seasons… and it’s still ignored by TV Academy voters, failing to pick up a single nomination on Wednesday. And yet… this may have been the most successful year at the Emmys ever for “The Walking Dead.” That’s because two of the franchise’s most beloved actors, Steven Yeun and Jon Bernthal, picked up their first-ever Emmy nominations. Granted, it’s not for “The Walking Dead” — Yeun is nominated in lead limited/anthology actor for “Beef” and Bernthal is a comedy guest actor nominee for “The Bear” (which is about… Chicago’s “Beef” restaurant) — but at least it’s a belated victory for two actors that made a name for themselves by fighting zombies.