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A reboot of the Emmy-winning series 'Friday Night Lights' lands at Peacock

Earl Hopkins, The Philadelphia Inquirer on

Published in Entertainment News

PHILADELPHIA — A reboot of the Emmy-winning series "Friday Night Lights" has found a home on the NBCUniversal streamer, Peacock.

"Friday Night Lights," the 2006 TV series, was inspired by a 1990 nonfiction book by former Inquirer reporter and contributing Vanity Fair editor H.G. "Buzz" Bissinger, who divides his time between Philadelphia and southwest Washington state. The book chronicled the Permian High School football team in Odessa, Texas, as they rose to become state champions.

Before turning into a TV series, Bissinger's book was a bestseller which was then adapted into a 2004 feature film directed by Peter Berg starring Billy Bob Thornton.

Back in August, when asked if he finds it strange that people still talk about "Friday Night Lights," Bissinger said, "It's ridiculous. It's absolutely amazing. It's like the pesticide-resilient cockroach, it just won't go away."

While writing for The Inquirer, the author won a Pulitzer Prize in 1987 for a six-part investigation of the corruption in the Philadelphia court system.

 

The original TV series, which followed a high school football team in a fictional town in West Texas, was also directed by Berg, and aired on NBC for two seasons. It starred Kyle Chandler and Connie Britton and won several awards including a Peabody and an Emmy for outstanding casting for a drama series. The show also served as a launchpad for stars such as Jesse Plemons, Minka Kelly, Scott Porter, Aimee Teegarden and Michael B. Jordan.

According to Deadline, a bidding war for the TV reboot was won by NBCU-owned platform, Peacock, beating out players like Netflix. Jason Katims, the 2006 series' showrunner will helm the project along with Berg and producer Brian Grazer.

The developing reboot will again be set in Texas in the aftermath of a devastating hurricane. It will follow the journey of a "rag tag high school football team and their damaged, interim coach" as they make an "unlikely bid for a Texas High School State Championship and become a beacon of light for their town," Deadline reported.


(c)2024 The Philadelphia Inquirer Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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