New TV Trailers! The Pitt: S2, Fallout: S2, Black Rabbit, Mayor of Kingstown: S4, and The Morning Show: S4
Take a peek at some of the latest trailers for upcoming TV shows.
✪ “The Pitt: Season 2” Teaser Trailer: New Season... New Day! Noah Wyle’s Gritty HBO Medical Drama Returns in January 2026
When the Noah Wyle–starring medical drama The Pitt premiered back in January, comparisons to his former long-running series ER came fast and loose. While there’s certainly a resemblance to the classic NBC drama, The Pitt has now earned its place on its own merits, and Noah Wyle might have delivered one of his strongest performances to date as senior attending physician Dr. Michael “Robby” Robinavitch at the Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center.
And while it may have started with accusations of being an ER clone, the now 12-time Emmy–nominated The Pitt is carving out its own identity as a compelling medical drama—breaking new ground in realism and cutting straight to the human drama and trauma that doctors and nurses face every day on grueling 15-hour shifts.
One could be so bold as to say that ER never came this close to tackling the issues that doctors, nurses, and medical staff confront on a daily basis—the pressure, the anxiety, and the fear that must constantly be suppressed. But then again, it’s a different time, and the world of medicine—and television—has changed dramatically. So, it feels only fitting that The Pitt has taken the baton as it pushes the medical drama genre into more brutally honest territory—one where every show that follows is bound to pale in comparison.
In other words, sorry ER, but The Pitt might just have claimed your throne as the best medical drama of them all. And you can count us among the fans and HBO viewers who not only consider it one of the best shows of the year, but also can’t wait to see what Season 2 has in store for us.
And here’s some great news: like a well-oiled machine, The Pitt will be back sooner than you think. Unlike many original streaming shows that often take long breaks between seasons, it seems Season 2 of The Pitt will be up and ready by next January. This time, the action unfolds over the Fourth of July weekend—a tidbit reported earlier by Noah Wyle himself, who is not only the lead actor but also an executive producer and one of the show’s writers.
There will be a slight time jump following the events of the first season. Many of the original cast members (including Katherine LaNasa, Tracy Ifeachor, Taylor Dearden, Patrick Ball, Isa Briones, Fiona Dourif, Supriya Ganesh, Shabana Azeez, Gerran Howell, and Shawn Hatosy) will return for Season 2, now stepping into their roles as second- or third-year residents or established physicians, while a new crop of doctors arrives for a crash course in the ER department of one of Pittsburgh’s busiest hospitals.
It will once again unfold over a 15-hour shift, with each episode representing a single hour in the day. But now that fans know a bit of the characters’ personal histories, we can only imagine those backstories will play an even bigger role this time around—most notably the ongoing drug rehab journey of Dr. Frank Langdon (Patrick Ball).
The Pitt: Season 2 premieres January 2026. So, have those scrubs ready.
✪ “Fallout: Season 2” Teaser Trailer: Ella Purnell and Walton Goggins Traverse the Vegas Wasteland in New Season of Jonathan Nolan & Lisa Joy’s Videogame-based Post-Apocalyptic Sci-fi Epic — Premiering December 17th on Prime Video
Fallout is one of those streaming shows based on a video game franchise that managed to create its own compelling universe, using the source material as a jumping-off point for a deeper exploration of survival in a post-apocalyptic world. Compared to something like The Last of Us, which is also set in a post-apocalyptic landscape, Fallout feels more visually arresting and brighter in tone, standing apart from the grim seriousness that defines most shows in the genre.
That’s not to say the show doesn’t deliver its fair share of scares, monsters, and human-made conspiracies—all staples of series like these. But Fallout just might be that rare show that blends so many styles and genres together into one seamless package. Retro-futurism, westerns, vintage Hollywood, post-apocalyptic wastelands, mech robots, and the looming atomic threat—all collide in this show, creating a world that feels both familiar and unlike anything else on television.
Fallout also features an exceptional performance from Walton Goggins as Cooper Howard, a former Hollywood actor who once served as the spokesman for the sinister corporation Vault-Tec just before the atomic bombs fell. Now, in the aftermath of a nuclear holocaust, Cooper roams the barren wasteland that was once America as the Ghoul—a mutated, post-human gunslinging bounty hunter.
Cooper soon crosses paths with Lucy MacLean, a Vault 33 Dweller played by Ella Purnell. Lucy is a human survivor untouched by radiation after spending most of her life in an elaborate system of underground bunkers—until a brutal slaughter of her people forces her to venture to the surface world for the very first time. And in the upcoming second season, Lucy and Cooper form an unlikely partnership as they journey together through the Las Vegas desert in search of answers.
For Lucy, it’s about uncovering the truth regarding her father, Hank MacLean (played by Twin Peaks’ Kyle MacLachlan). For Cooper, however, the truth is already known—he’s all too aware of Hank’s role in dropping the bomb and destroying everything he once held dear. His journey, however, might be one of redemption and forgiveness, having once been the face (no pun intended) of the very corporation that led the world to its doomed fate.
Executive produced by Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy, the husband-and-wife team behind HBO’s Westworld, and also starring Aaron Moten, Moisés Arias, Xelia Mendes-Jones, with Justin Theroux joining the cast as RobCo Industries CEO Robert Edwin House, Fallout: Season 2 aims to up the stakes, the scale, and the spectacle—while digging even deeper into the twisted history that shaped its wasteland world. The new season arrives on Prime Video starting Wednesday, December 17th.



✪ “Black Rabbit” Trailer: Jude Law and Jason Bateman Face Off as Brothers Torn Between Loyalty and Survival in Gritty New Crime Thriller Series — Premieres September 18th on Netflix
They say you can’t choose your family, because they’re the only ones you’ve got. But you can choose how tightly you hold on to them... or how far you keep your distance. Jude Law finds himself wrestling with this notion when his no-good, loser brother comes crashing back into his life in this gritty new crime thriller series for Netflix.
In Black Rabbit, Law plays Jake Friedken, the sharp-suited owner of Black Rabbit, a high-end restaurant and VIP lounge on the verge of becoming Manhattan’s crown jewel. But just as his future is about to peak, Jake’s carefully built world is thrown into chaos when his estranged brother Vince suddenly shows up in town—bringing with him a whole mess of trouble.
Returning to Netflix after his acclaimed run on Ozark, a long-haired and bearded Jason Bateman takes on the role of Vince, a degenerate gambler whose debts have been piling up to the point of no return. After years of dodging payments to a family of ruthless New York loan sharks, Vince turns to the only person he has left to lean on... his brother Jake.
After all, Jake has a successful big-time business—surely he can fork over a down payment. Right?
Little does Vince know, Jake is drowning in debt himself. His marriage is on the rocks, his family is on the verge of collapse, and his business is hanging by a thread. The last thing Jake needed right now was seeing Vince’s face—bloodied, bruised, and wearing no shoes.
But in a city that never sleeps, neither do the demons you thought you left behind. And as Vince slinks back into the picture, this brotherly reunion isn’t so much heartwarming as it is heart-stopping. Old wounds reopen, debts pile higher, and soon the neon glow of success gives way to the shadows of New York’s underworld. Jake thought launching his restaurant was the hardest part—but with his brother’s troubles now bleeding into his own, it seems the real challenge will be making it out alive.
Created and executive produced by Oscar-nominated screenwriter Zach Baylin (King Richard, Creed III, The Order) and producer Kate Susman (The Order), Black Rabbit also stars Oscar-winner Troy Kotsur, Cleopatra Coleman, Amaka Okafor, Sope Dirisu, Abbey Lee, Odessa Young, and Robin De Jesús. With Law and Bateman also serving as executive producers, the series is set to premiere Thursday, September 18th on Netflix.
✪ “Mayor of Kingstown: Season 4” Teaser Trailer: Jeremy Renner Battles for Control as Edie Falco Shakes Up Taylor Sheridan and Antoine Fuqua’s Acclaimed Crime Series — Returning October 26th on Paramount+
When Jeremy Renner had his near-death accident with a snowplow that crushed his body and broke 38 bones, it occurred between Seasons 2 and 3 of his acclaimed crime series Mayor of Kingstown. It looked like the show was finished, as it would take years to recover from an accident that severe and life-threatening. But with the determination and will of a real-life superhero, Renner came back to work in record time. And aside from a few occasional stiff movements, the average TV watcher would never guess he had ever been injured at all—let alone confined to a hospital bed for months.
Mayor of Kingstown, which falls under executive producer Taylor Sheridan’s deal with Paramount+ with filmmaker Antoine Fuqua serving as an EP, showcases Jeremy Renner’s acting chops as a man constantly under immense pressure, never letting the stress break him before the job is done. He plays Mike McLusky, an ex-convict who was once a shot-caller in prison but, now on the outside, uses his close relationships and family ties with the local police to become an off-the-books mediator—someone who can move freely, setting up deals between cops and street gangs to keep the peace.
As the so-called “Mayor,” Mike constantly finds himself caught in the middle of a brewing street war between rival gangs, mafias, and the police, scrambling across town to hold the line and maintain a fragile truce before the city erupts into total chaos. And as the Mayor, Mike is expected to deliver on what’s promised—but it never goes as planned. And it never goes the way Mike wants it, keeping him on his toes and forcing him to adapt at every turn.
In Season 4, Mike will once again have to adapt to whatever’s thrown in front of him. This time, his power is being tested like never before as Emmy-winning Sopranos actress Edie Falco joins the cast. Falco takes on the role of Nina Hobbs, the no-nonsense new Warden of the Kingstown prison—which doesn’t just house the city’s most dangerous criminals, but also the leaders of every gang in town. So if Mike doesn’t have access to the prison, he doesn’t have the power to negotiate—halting his entire job in its tracks. And a city without Mike in charge just might be a city waiting to explode.
Also starring Taylor Handley, Tobi Bamtefa, Nishi Munshi, and Derek Webster—with rocker-turned-actor Hugh Dillon (who also co-created the series with Taylor Sheridan) returning as Lt. Ian Ferguson—Season 4 will also welcome Lennie James and Laura Benanti to the cast.
Mayor of Kingstown returns Sunday, October 26th, exclusively on Paramount+.
✪ “The Morning Show: Season 4” Trailer: Jennifer Aniston and Reese Witherspoon Return with Marion Cotillard, Billy Crudup, and Jeremy Irons in Apple’s Star-Powered Series — Returning September 17th on Apple TV+
Jennifer Aniston and Reese Witherspoon are not only the stars of The Morning Show but also its executive producers—and, if we’re being honest, likely the main reason Apple has kept the series going. Their names alone have attracted an impressive lineup of guest actors each season to chew up the show’s scenery. Because, truthfully, the show often feels more like a soap opera than a prestigious drama—and perhaps more of a vehicle for top names to drop in for a season or two, snag an Emmy nomination as a guest star, and move on.
The series originally started as an exploration of the modern workplace in the midst of the #MeToo movement, riffing off the Matt Lauer sexual misconduct scandal that led to his firing from the popular Today morning news show.
But now, as the Apple series returns with its fourth season next month, it feels more like a classic prime-time soap in the vein of Dynasty and Dallas—where powerful figures lock horns over money, influence, and the messy entanglements of their personal lives.
The only difference is, the setting is a media corporation—where news programs have become battlegrounds for power, ego, and survival in an industry that never stops spinning. But then again, if you actually read the news, corporate networks seem to be dying, becoming less and less relevant every day.
So perhaps Season 4 will touch on the shifting balance of declining ratings, as everyday viewers turn to streaming, independent outlets, and social media over traditional TV. But don’t hold your breath on that, as the producers seem clearly fixed on the melodramatic elements of a show like this—where tension runs high but bears little resemblance to the real world.
Marion Cotillard and Jeremy Irons join Season 4, while favorites like Billy Crudup, Mark Duplass, Greta Lee, and Jon Hamm return for another round. The cast also includes Karen Pittman, Nicole Beharie, Nestor Carbonell, Aaron Pierre, William Jackson Harper, and Boyd Holbrook.
The Morning Show: Season 4 is set to premiere Wednesday, September 17th on Apple TV+.