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TV in 3: Sheridan Meets Cindy Holland’s Hammer; USA’s Post-Peacock Playbook

Plus: ‘The Pitt’ grabs a quick season 3 renewal as streaming series increasingly move to a broadcast beat

Lesley Goldberg's avatar
Lesley Goldberg
Jan 09, 2026
∙ Paid
DRAMA From left: Tracking the shifts at, from left, The Pitt, Mayor of Kingstown and The Rainmaker. (The Ankler illustration; image credits below)

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I recently spoke to showrunner Alex Kurtzman about his Paramount+ Star Trek universe, laid out the stakes for 20 buzzy new series premiering this year and interviewed the Bell Media execs who bet on breakout hit Heated Rivalry. I’m lesley.goldberg@theankler.com

Welcome back to TV in 3, my weekly take on the industry’s latest. Today’s main attraction is a follow-up of sorts to my August report about USA Network’s renewed efforts in scripted. But first, a look at how Paramount is corralling Taylor Sheridan and the impact The Pitt is having when it comes to getting other shows back on the air on an annual basis.

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Sheridan’s Shrinking Universe

Mayor of Kingstown will not get to the seven seasons that Hugh Dillon, the series’ co-creator alongside Taylor Sheridan, originally envisioned. Paramount earlier this week announced that the Jeremy Renner-led drama, which premiered in 2021 as Sheridan’s first non-Yellowstone series, will end with an abbreviated eight-episode fifth season (down from its standard order of 10). While Kingstown is the lowest-rated of all the Sheridan shows, the move still comes as somewhat of a surprise given the master showman’s upcoming move from Paramount to NBCUniversal come 2029 — you might expect his current home to squeeze every programming minute out of him that it can.


Related:
She’s Back! Cindy Holland at ‘New Paramount’ is About to Shake Up TV (Again)

She’s Back! Cindy Holland at ‘New Paramount’ is About to Shake Up TV (Again)

Lesley Goldberg
·
July 9, 2025
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Instead, the decision to cap the series at five seasons illustrates a willingness by the new Paramount+ regime — led by Netflix alum Cindy Holland — to make hard decisions even if they disappoint a high-value talent.

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