The CW Debuts ‘Frequency,’ ‘Supergirl,’ and ‘No Tomorrow’ Posters

Supergirl Season 2 Poster

The CW has unveiled new 2016 posters for season two of Supergirl, No Tomorrow, and Frequency. Frequency, based on the 2000 movie starring Jim Caviezel and Dennis Quaid, will be joining The CW primetime lineup on October 5th at 9pm ET/PT. No Tomorrow with Joshua Sasse and Tori Anderson is set to debut on October 4th at 9pm ET/PT, and Supergirl season two starring Melissa Benoist will kick off on October 10th at 8pm ET/PT.

Frequency starring Peyton List, Riley Smith, Devin Kelley, and Mekhi Phifer is executive produced by Supernatural‘s Jeremy Carver, Toby Emmerich, John Rickard, Dan Lin, and Jennifer Gwartz. In addition to Sasse and Anderson, No Tomorrow stars Jesse Rath, Amy Pietz, Jonathan Langdon, and Sarayu Blue. And Supergirl season two will introduce Tyler Hoechlin as Superman, starring alongside returning cast members Benoist, Mehcad Brooks, Jeremy Jordan, Chyler Leigh, David Harewood, Calista Flockhart, and Peter Facinelli.

Frequency Poster

Frequency Plot: Detective Raimy Sullivan (Peyton List) has always wanted to prove that she is nothing like her father. In 1996, when Raimy was eight years old, NYPD Officer Frank Sullivan (Riley Smith) left Raimy and her mother, Julie (Devin Kelley), behind when he went deep undercover, got corrupted, and got himself killed. Or so the story has always gone. Few people knew about the secret undercover sting operation Frank was really charged with, led by Stan Moreno (Anthony Ruivivar), who has now risen to Deputy Chief of Police. Frank’s former partner, Lieutenant Satch Reyna (Mekhi Phifer), is now Raimy’s mentor and friend, and he has urged her to let go of the hurt and anger she still feels about Frank’s disappearance and death, but the old pain still lingers. Raimy can barely bring herself to discuss Frank, even with her devoted boyfriend, Daniel (Daniel Bonjour), or her childhood friend, Gordo (Lenny Jacobson).

Now, twenty years later, Raimy is stunned when a voice suddenly crackles through her father’s old, long-broken ham radio – it’s Frank, somehow transmitting over the airwaves and through the decades from 1996. They’re both shocked and confused, but Raimy shakes Frank to the core when she warns him that the secret sting he is undertaking will lead to his death. Armed with that knowledge, Frank survives the attempt on his life. But changing history has dramatically affected Raimy’s life in the present – and there have been tragic consequences. Separated by twenty years, father and daughter have reunited on a frequency only they can hear, but can they rewrite the story of their lives without risking everyone they love?

No Tomorrow Poster

No Tomorrow Plot: Evie Callahan (Tori Anderson) appreciates order. Whenever she’s making a list, “make a list” is both the first thing on it and the first thing crossed off. Such a regimented life has its drawbacks. Her on-again/off-again romance with the sweet, but soft-spoken Timothy (Jesse Rath) has sputtered out, and her boss, Deirdre (Amy Pietz), a petty tyrant with breath that could kill a plant, laughs off her career ambitions. Then Evie meets charming, free-spirited Xavier Holliday (Joshua Sasse), and the attraction is immediate and electric. Xavier brings a jolt of joyful, rollicking romance into her life. Xavier encourages Evie to carpe that diem, because it’s more fun that way and also because, he says the apocalypse is, you know, nigh. He believes humankind has a mere eight months and twelve days until a runaway asteroid smacks us all into stardust. That’s why Xavier made an Apocalyst – a tally of every last thing he wants to do before the world goes kaput. So with the help of her friends – Hank (Jonathan Langdon), a diehard conspiracy theorist, and Kareema (Sarayu Blue), a droll nihilist – Evie must decide whether Xavier is certifiable and whether that even matters, if being with him means living her life more fully. Based on the International Emmy-nominated Brazilian format from Grupo Globo, No Tomorrow is a romantic comedy with the ultimate ticking clock.