True Detective Season 1 with Woody Harrelson and Matthew McConaughey
Warner Bros.
While HBO has tried to recapture the magic of season 1 of True Detective, including tying Night Country back to elements of the original, nothing has topped it yet. But now, its two actors are returning for another series, though one that will play out quite differently.
Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson are heading to Apple TV for a new show, Brothers, which involves no murders and is meant to be rather heartwarming.
In Brothers, the two are playing fictionalized versions of themselves, in fact, a pair of friends who discover that they may actually be long-lost brothers. The show creates some fictional drama with Woody attempting to find answers at Matthew’s ranch after his daughter’s wedding falls apart. Matthew, meanwhile, is thinking about running for Governor of Texas.
Yes, they are…actually playing themselves. In real life, McConaughey has sometimes teased a run for Texas Governor, though nothing has come of that. The overall concept, however, is also true to life.
For years, there were rumors that Harrelson and McConaughey could be related in real life, with the two theorizing about it for a long while without, at least publicly, producing some sort of DNA test to confirm it. It’s not a random thought based on mannerisms and appearance. The idea is that they could, in fact, be half-brothers due to a relationship between McConaughey’s mother and Harrelson’s father in the past. Maybe they do a grand reveal that it’s actually true at the end of the show? Good marketing.
Apple has announced that the show will premiere on Wednesday, September 23, this fall. The two actors are producers, while the show is put together by Lee Eisenberg, who wrote on The Office for six seasons and was a co-executive producer. He and Gene Stupinsky, his Office collaborator, also created the recent hit Jury Duty.
Apple TV has had an astonishing batting average for high-quality programs since its inception. It has far fewer series than its rivals, but they have a much higher chance of actually being good. This year alone, Apple has produced what might be the best show of 2026 so far, Widow’s Bay, which just aired its finale. It’s also gotten praise for Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed, Your Friends and Neighbors, Margo’s Got Money Troubles and Cape Fear. Again, all this year. And it stands to reason that with this kind of talent attached to Brothers, Apple is likely to find another hit this fall with its two A-listers.
We will see how the drama plays out onscreen and whether we might get some real-life confirmation of the concept this fall.
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