CBS’s Ghosts season five, episode four welcomed back Trevor’s daughter, Abby (Gideon Adlon), who experienced the shock of her life when Sam let on that she sees ghosts. Abby’s now employed by Jay’s restaurant, and episode five will find Trevor discovering what it’s like to be a ghost girl dad. Episode five, “T-Daddy,” will air on Thursday, November 13, 2025 at 8:30pm ET/PT.
Season five stars Rose McIver as Sam, Utkarsh Ambudkar as Jay, Brandon Scott Jones as Isaac, and Richie Moriarty as Pete. Danielle Pinnock is Alberta, Asher Grodman is Trevor, Román Zaragoza stars as Sasappis, Rebecca Wisocky plays Hetty, Devan Chandler Long is Thorfinn, and Sheila Carrasco plays Flower.
“T-Daddy” Plot: Trevor’s relationship with his daughter is strained when he pushes her to follow a career in finance over poetry. Meanwhile, Jay confronts labor unrest at the restaurant. Rupinder Gill wrote the episode and Heather Jack directs.
Ghosts is a single-camera comedy about Samantha and Jay, a cheerful freelance journalist and chef from the city, respectively, who threw both caution and money to the wind when they decided to convert Woodstone Mansion, which Sam inherited, into a bed & breakfast—only to find it was inhabited by the many spirits of deceased residents who now call it home.
The departed souls are a close-knit, eclectic group that includes a saucy Prohibition-era lounge singer (Pinnock); a pompous 18th-century militiaman (Scott Jones); a ‘60s hippie fond of hallucinogens (Carrasco); an overly upbeat ‘80s scout troop leader (Moriarty); a cod-obsessed Viking explorer from 1009 (Chandler Long); a slick ‘90s finance bro (Grodman); a sarcastic and witty native from the 16th century (Zaragoza); and a society woman and wife of a 19th-century robber baron who is Sam’s ancestor (Wisocky), to name a few.
The opening of the B&B and Jay’s new restaurant are a source of intrigue, anxiety, and curiosity among the spirits, but they will gladly put up with the commotion as long as they can continue to interact with a living inhabitant.
Poster for the 2026 Grammy Awards (Photo Credit: CBS)
Kendrick Lamar tops the list of the 68th Annual Grammy Awards nominees, earning nine nominations in categories including Record of the Year, Album of the Year, and Song of the Year. Cirkut, Jack Antonoff, and Lady Gaga follow with seven nominations, while Bad Bunny, Leon Thomas, Sabrina Carpenter, and Serban Ghenea each collected six.
Andrew Watt, Clipse, Doechii, Sounwave, SZA, Turnstile, and Tyler, The Creator scored five nominations each. Winners will be announced during the 2026 Grammy Awards airing live from Los Angeles on Sunday, February 1st on CBS.
“The GRAMMY Awards are our opportunity to honor the people who make this community so vibrant and this year’s nominees remind us of the incredible talent that is driving music forward,” stated Harvey Mason jr., CEO of the Recording Academy. “From emerging talent to influential icons, these nominees reflect today’s broad and diverse musical landscape, and I am excited to celebrate them in the coming weeks ahead and on Music’s Biggest Night®.”
Eligible recordings were released between August 31, 2024 and August 30, 2025.
2026 Grammy Awards Nominees (Select Categories):
Record Of The Year
“DtMF” – Bad Bunny
“Manchild” – Sabrina Carpenter
“Anxiety” – Doechii
“WILDFLOWER” – Billie Eilish
“Abracadabra” – Lady Gaga
“luther” – Kendrick Lamar With SZA
“The Subway” – Chappell Roan
“APT.” – ROSÉ, Bruno Mars
Album Of The Year
DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS – Bad Bunny
SWAG – Justin Bieber
Man’s Best Friend – Sabrina Carpenter
Let God Sort Em Out – Clipse, Pusha T & Malice
MAYHEM – Lady Gaga
GNX – Kendrick Lamar
MUTT – Leon Thomas
CHROMAKOPIA – Tyler, The Creator
Song Of The Year
“Abracadabra” – Lady Gaga, Henry Walter & Andrew Watt, songwriters (Lady Gaga)
“Anxiety” – Jaylah Hickmon, songwriter (Doechii)
“APT.” – Amy Allen, Christopher Brody Brown, Rogét Chahayed, Omer Fedi, Philip Lawrence, Bruno Mars, Chae Young Park, Theron Thomas & Henry Walter, songwriters (ROSÉ, Bruno Mars)
“DtMF” – Marco Daniel Borrero, Scott Dittrich, Benjamin Falik, Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, Hugo René Sención Sanabria, Tyler Thomas Spry & Roberto José Rosado Torres, songwriters (Bad Bunny)
“Golden [From “KPop Demon Hunters”]” – EJAE & Mark Sonnenblick, songwriters (HUNTR/X: EJAE, Audrey Nuna, REI AMI)
“luther” – Jack Antonoff, Roshwita Larisha Bacha, Matthew Bernard, Scott Bridgeway, Sam Dew, Ink, Kendrick Lamar, Solána Rowe, Mark Anthony Spears & Kamasi Washington, songwriters (Kendrick Lamar With SZA)
“Manchild” – Amy Allen, Jack Antonoff & Sabrina Carpenter, songwriters (Sabrina Carpenter)
“WILDFLOWER” – Billie Eilish O’Connell & Finneas O’Connell, songwriters (Billie Eilish)
Best New Artist
Olivia Dean
KATSEYE
The Marias
Addison Rae
sombr
Leon Thomas
Alex Warren
Lola Young
Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical
Dan Auerbach
Cirkut
Dijon
Blake Mills
Sounwave
Songwriter Of The Year, Non-Classical
Amy Allen
Edgar Barrera
Jessie Jo Dillon
Tobias Jesso Jr.
Laura Veltz
Best Pop Duo/Group Performance
“Defying Gravity” – Cynthia Erivo & Ariana Grande
“Golden [From “KPop Demon Hunters”]” – HUNTR/X: EJAE, Audrey Nuna, REI AMI
“Gabriela” – KATSEYE
“APT.” – ROSÉ, Bruno Mars
“30 for 30” – SZA With Kendrick Lamar
Best Pop Vocal Album
SWAG – Justin Bieber
Man’s Best Friend – Sabrina Carpenter
Something Beautiful – Miley Cyrus
MAYHEM – Lady Gaga
I’ve Tried Everything but Therapy (Part 2) – Teddy Swims
Best Dance Pop Recording
“Bluest Flame” – Selena Gomez & benny blanco
“Abracadabra” – Lady Gaga
“Midnight Sun” – Zara Larsson
“Just Keep Watching (From “F1® The Movie”)” – Tate McRae
“Illegal” – PinkPantheress
Best Rock Song
“As Alive as You Need Me to Be” – Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross, songwriters (Nine Inch Nails)
“Caramel” – Vessel1 & Vessel2, songwriters (Sleep Token)
“Glum” – Daniel James & Hayley Williams, songwriters (Hayley Williams)
“NEVER ENOUGH” – Daniel Fang, Franz Lyons, Pat McCrory, Meg Mills & Brendan Yates, songwriters (Turnstile)
“Zombie” – Dominic Harrison & Matt Schwartz, songwriters (YUNGBLUD)
Best Alternative Music Album
SABLE, fABLE – Bon Iver
Songs Of A Lost World – The Cure
DON’T TAP THE GLASS – Tyler, The Creator
moisturizer – Wet Leg
Ego Death At A Bachelorette Party – Hayley Williams
Best R&B Performance
“YUKON” – Justin Bieber
“It Depends” – Chris Brown Featuring Bryson Tiller
“Folded” – Kehlani
“MUTT (Live From NPR’s Tiny Desk)” – Leon Thomas
“Heart Of A Woman” – Summer Walker
Best Rap Album
Let God Sort Em Out – Clipse, Pusha T & Malice
GLORIOUS – GloRilla
God Does Like Ugly – JID
GNX – Kendrick Lamar
CHROMAKOPIA – Tyler, The Creator
Best Country Solo Performance
“Nose On The Grindstone” – Tyler Childers
“Good News” – Shaboozey
“Bad As I Used Ro Be [From “F1® The Movie”]” – Chris Stapleton
“I Never Lie” – Zach Top
“Somewhere Over Laredo” – Lainey Wilson
Best Americana Album
BIG MONEY – Jon Batiste
Bloom – Larkin Poe
Last Leaf On The Tree – Willie Nelson
So Long Little Miss Sunshine – Molly Tuttle
Middle – Jesse Welles
Best Latin Pop Album
Cosa Nuestra – Rauw Alejandro
BOGOTÁ (DELUXE) – Andrés Cepeda
Tropicoqueta – KAROL G
Cancionera – Natalia Lafourcade
¿Y ahora qué? – Alejandro Sanz
Best Score Soundtrack For Visual Media (Includes Film And Television)
How To Train Your Dragon – John Powell, composer
Severance: Season 2 – Theodore Shapiro, composer
Sinners – Ludwig Göransson, composer
Wicked – John Powell & Stephen Schwartz, composers
The Wild Robot – Kris Bowers, composer
Best Pop Solo Performance Daisies – Justin Bieber
Manchild – Sabrina Carpenter
Disease – Lady Gaga
The Subway – Chappell Roan
Messy – Lola Young
Emmy nominee Tom Hiddleston promises we’ll see the Ice Age as we’ve never seen it before in Apple TV’s Prehistoric Planet: Ice Age. “Journey back a million years to the Ice Age. From the big freeze to the great thaw, life finds a way,” says Hiddleston, narrator of the latest chapter of the natural history series.
Executive produced by Jon Favreau and Mike Gunton, Prehistoric Planet: Ice Age will premiere on November 26, 2025. BBC Studios Natural History Unit produced the series, and Hans Zimmer, Anže Rozman, and Kara Talve for Bleeding Fingers Music wrote the original score.
A scene from ‘Prehistoric Planet: Ice Age’ (Photo credit: Apple TV)
Apple TV (which no longer goes by Apple TV+) offers this description of what you’re seeing in the trailer and can expect from the new chapter:
“The new trailer takes viewers into the Pleistocene era, millions of years after the extinction of the dinosaurs, as it has never been seen before. It features strange cycles of hot and cold that create shifting landscapes and a wide variety of mammals with complex behaviors, many resembling animals alive today, fighting to survive. Fans get their first look at clashes between woolly rhinos and saber-toothed cats, based on scientific knowledge gained from fur, soft tissues, and stomach contents preserved in permafrost and only recently discovered.
Alongside the era’s most iconic animals, like woolly mammoths and Dire wolves, viewers will explore five new astonishing habitats to encounter many incredible creatures that adapted to this strange new world, including the Columbian mammoth, a warm-weather relative of the woolly mammoth with curved tusks over 16 feet wide and sparse hair (Mammuthus columbi); 14-foot-tall bears, the largest to ever exist (Arctotherium angustidens); armadillos bigger than cars (Doedicurus clavicaudatus); and tiny elephant relatives (Stegodon sumbaensis) preyed upon by enormous giant storks (Leptoptilos robustus).
Reconstructed with the latest scientific knowledge, Prehistoric Planet: Ice Age combines current science with cinematic visuals to showcase the intelligence and complex social behaviors of the Pleistocene’s iconic species. This season will explore vast tundras, deserts, expanding grasslands, and melting permafrost as these creatures struggle for survival amid extreme climates, the beginning of The Big Freeze, and eventually, The Big Melt.”
Sarah Snook as Marissa Irvine and Jake Lacy as Peter Irvine in ‘All Her Fault’ (Photo by Sarah Enticknap/PEACOCK)
Emmy winner Sarah Snook (Succession) stars in Peacock’s gripping thriller All Her Fault, based on Andrea Mara’s bestseller. The eight-episode series premiered on November 6, 2025, and follows Sarah Snook as Marissa, a successful, self-made wealth manager whose young son, Milo, disappears while on a playdate with a classmate. Or at least that’s where Marissa and her husband, Peter (Jake Lacy, Apples Never Fall), believed their son to be until Marissa tries to pick him up and discovers he’s vanished.
Snook, who also serves as an executive producer, recently participated in a press conference in support of the Peacock series. Discussing the challenges of taking on the role, Sarah Snook said she needed to find a way to portray the reality of the traumatic situation.
“It is high drama, but like getting into this hysterical, histrionic overreacting … like finding the kernel of truth in these things. Like, ‘What is it like to have your child go missing? What is that like?’ For this person like that, that was the hardest thing to constantly make sure that we were delving down into what is the truthful version of this.”
Snook added, “We’re during the first read through and I write on the first page: ‘Must find different ways to cry.’ Because I was crying all the time, dealing with what’s happening. Finding different levels of like, ‘Okay, this is level 10. This is a guilt cry. This is a shame cry. This is a fear cry. This is a sorrow cry.’ You know, finding ways to create light and shade with a palette like that is tricky.”
Snook describes her character, Marissa, as ambitious, smart, and someone who’s made a name for herself in a male-dominated profession. She also loves being a mother. “[…] She definitely wants to be a parent and wants to be a mom, wants to be present as being a mom,” said Snook. “I think that’s something that’s a part of me as well. I mean, it probably doesn’t come out in this so much because of the content and the thriller aspect and what she’s dealing with. But I wanted to be able to play a character that is closer to me, in terms of warmth. [Who] is just naturally friendly and wants things to go well and has an intention to help that happen. Marissa has bad things happen to her. So, that’s what makes it an interesting story.”
Most parents can relate to momentarily losing sight of their child and the panic that ensues. Snook recalls that director Minkie Spiro shared her experience of when her daughter briefly went missing in a supermarket and the white-hot fear that followed. And as a mom herself, Snook can relate to that fear.
“I have had it just for a moment in that way. You sort of think that she was on this side. She turns out she’s on this side and gone. And you can expand that imaginatively into a world [where] it’s a couple of days. It’s a couple of nights. The worst can happen,” said Snook. “And watching the interviews of the parents who were pleading for the public to have any information. It’s just so raw. And so, it’s the worst thing that could ever happen, to have no knowledge of where the child is. So imaginatively, you go to the worst place, I guess.”
Sarah Snook as Marissa Irvine and Dakota Fanning as Jenny Kaminski in ‘All Her Fault’ (Photo by: Sarah Enticknap/PEACOCK)
Hot off the success of Succession, Snook was ready for something different. All Her Fault marks her first real thriller, which was part of her attraction to the series. “It had a really great twist that I was excited to be into,” explains Snook. “You engage with all the drama and all these scenes, and then also just playing a mom who is very successful and also wants to be a mom. Often, we see on screen women who are successful and then child rearing is kind of like a pain in the ass. But in this, she wants to be present for both. And how do you balance that?”
Marissa forms a close bond with another mom, played by Dakota Fanning, and it’s that female friendship that really stood out to Snook among the series’ themes. “That’s something that’s really strong and present in my life currently and something that I really lean on: female friendship. I think it’s really nice to see that on screen. We’re not sort of competitive women. You have a right to sort of get into a blame game of saying, ‘It’s her fault, it’s her fault,’ blah, blah, blah. And yet they don’t do that. They choose to stick together and be stronger for it.”
All eight episodes of All Her Fault are now streaming on Peacock. The series also stars Michael Peña, Sophia Lillis, Abby Elliott, Daniel Monks, and Jay Ellis.
Robert Carlyle returns as Sherlock on CBS’s Watson season two, episode five, “Lucky.” Directed by Guy Ferland, episode five will air on Monday, November 10, 2025 at 10pm ET/PT.
Morris Chestnut leads the cast as Dr. John Watson, Eve Harlow stars as Dr. Ingrid Derian, and Peter Mark Kendall returns as Dr. Stephens Croft and Dr. Adam Croft. Ritchie Coster plays Shinwell Johnson, Inga Schlingmann is Dr. Sasha Lubbock, and Rochelle Aytes is Dr. Mary Morstan.
“Lucky” Plot: While visiting another hospital, Watson becomes convinced that a coma patient is suffering from locked-in syndrome and has been mistaken for a coma patient for over a decade. After the patient is transferred to UHOP for treatment, he shocks the team with chilling messages. Meanwhile, Sherlock is back in town and is staying with Watson.
Watson is a medical show with a strong investigative spine, starring Morris Chestnut as Dr. John Watson, in a modern version of one of history’s greatest detectives as he turns his attention from solving crimes to solving medical mysteries. While Watson’s team of “doc-tectives” may have defeated Moriarty last season, they remain determined in season two in their mission to investigate and treat the world’s most rare diseases for their clinic’s patients.
With his eyes fixed on the future, Watson faces an unexpected twist when Sherlock Holmes, who was presumed dead, resurfaces, forcing him to confront a buried secret from his past—one that lies hidden within his own body.
Rami Malek and Russell Crowe in ‘Nuremberg’ (Photo Credit: Scott Garfield / Sony Pictures Classics)
How does one dissect evil? Can sane men commit horrific acts? These are some of the questions army psychiatrist Dr. Douglas Kelley (Rami Malek, The Amateur) is seeking to answer in the historical war film Nuremberg.
At the end of World War II, the Allies chose to hold the first international war crimes tribunal, putting 24 of the captured highest-ranking officers of the Third Reich on trial. The U.S. Army brings Kelley to Nuremberg, where the trial is to be held and the prisoners are being kept, to determine if they are sane enough to stand trial.
Kelley spends hours talking to the Nazi prisoners, but the one he is fascinated with the most is Hitler’s right-hand man, Hermann Göring (Russell Crowe, The Exorcism). “He’s highly intelligent, charming, and a narcissist,” warns Kelley his superiors and Associate Justice of the Supreme Court Robert H. Jackson (Michael Shannon, Death by Lightning), the prosecutor representing the United States in the trial.
As Kelley sits in Göring’s cell speaking with and studying the war criminal, he finds himself fascinated with this killer. Worse, he begins to develop an unhealthy and disturbing bond with Göring. Kelley also starts to realize almost too late that Justice Jackson isn’t ready to go up against Göring in the courtroom. It’s possible that justice will fail and Göring, the man behind the “Final Solution to the Jewish Question” and the murders of six million Jewish people, will not be held responsible.
Written and directed by James Vanderbilt (Truth), Nuremberg is a historical war drama that immerses viewers in the aftermath of World War II Europe. While the cinematography is excellent, the film falters due to a lackluster script and uneven pacing.
Rami Malek delivers a strong performance as Dr. Douglas Kelley, the psychiatrist who becomes obsessed with Göring and with trying to define and understand evil. Malek portrays Kelley’s initial belief that the interviews with Göring and the other Nazi war criminals are his ticket to writing a bestselling novel and potential fame. As events unfold, Kelley loses his way and begins to develop a genuine bond and respect for Göring.
Russell Crowe delivers a scenery-chewing performance as Hermann Göring. Crowe perfectly captures the man’s arrogance, charm, and cavalier attitude about the situation he’s in and about his upcoming trial. Crowe steals every scene, even the ones with Malek. Michael Shannon delivers an effective performance as Robert H. Jackson, the associate justice who is in way over his head but is determined to show the world what these Nazi war criminals did and to hold them accountable.
The film’s production design, costumes, and overall look are excellent, bringing to the big screen the battered and mostly destroyed parts of war-torn Europe. The uniforms, suits, and vehicles all ring true to 1946.
The strongest moments are the courtroom scenes, which don’t take place until well into the third act of the film. The conversations between Kelley and Göring are the true focal point but lack the intensity and psychological depth needed to truly engage the audience. Nuremberg is a commendable film, highlighted by the powerful performances of Crowe and Malek, but ultimately it does not fully become the courtroom epic it aims to deliver.
GRADE: B-
Rating: PG-13
Running Time: 2 hours 28 minutes
Release Date: November 7, 2025
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
Disney+ finally released the full trailer for Percy Jackson and the Olympians season two and it was worth the wait. The action-packed two-minute trailer shows the demigod and his friends venturing into the Sea of Monsters.
Walker Scobell returns to lead the cast in the title role. Leah Sava Jeffries returns as Annabeth Chase, Aryan Simhadri is back as Grover Underwood, Charlie Bushnell plays Luke Castellan, Dior Goodjohn is Clarisse La Rue, and Daniel Diemer plays Tyson. Recurring guest stars include Lin-Manuel Miranda, Jason Mantzoukas, Glynn Turman, Timothy Simons, Virginia Kull, Courtney B. Vance, Andra Day, Adam Copeland, Sandra Bernhard, Margaret Cho, Kristen Schaal, Tamara Smart, Rosemarie DeWitt, and Toby Stephens.
The series premiered in December 2023, and season two will debut with the release of the first two episodes on December 10, 2025. Filming is currently underway on season three.
“After Camp Half-Blood’s protective border is breached, Percy Jackson embarks on an epic odyssey into the Sea of Monsters in search of his best friend Grover and the one thing that may save the camp—the legendary Golden Fleece,” reads Disney+’s synopsis. “With help from Annabeth, Clarisse, and his newfound cyclops half-brother Tyson, Percy’s survival becomes essential to stopping Luke, the Titan Kronos, and their impending plan to bring down Camp Half-Blood—and ultimately, Olympus.”
Season two is based on Rick Riordan’s Percy Jackson book, The Sea of Monsters. Riordan and Jonathan E. Steinberg created the series. Executive producers include Rick Riordan, Dan Shotz, Rebecca Riordan, Craig Silverstein, Ellen Goldsmith-Vein, Bert Salke, Jeremy Bell, D.J. Goldberg, James Bobin, Jim Rowe, Albert Kim, Jason Ensler, and Sarah Watson.
During the 2025 San Diego Comic-Con, Walker Scobell and Daniel Diemer teamed up to discuss what fans can expect from the new season.
The 59th Annual CMA Awards host, Lainey Wilson, is also confirmed to perform on the awards show airing on Wednesday, November 19, 2025 on ABC at 8pm ET/PT. Wilson, BigXthaPlug, Luke Combs, Ella Langley, and Megan Moroney are among the first batch of performers announced. The list also includes Shaboozey, Zach Top, Tucker Wetmore, and Stephen Wilson Jr.
Three-time nominee Luke Combs is expected to perform his latest single, “Back in the Saddle,” and Ella Langley—up for six awards—will sing “Choosin’ Texas.” 2024’s winner for CMA New Artist of the Year, Megan Moroney, is scheduled to perform her hit single “6 Months Later.”
Zach Top, nominated in five categories, will sing “Guitar,” and New Artist of the Year nominee Tucker Wetmore will perform “Wind Up Missin’ You.” Fellow New Artist of the Year nominee Stephen Wilson Jr. is set to sing Ben E. King’s “Stand By Me.”
BigXthaPlug and Luke Combs will collaborate on “Pray Hard,” and Shaboozey and Stephen Wilson Jr. will entertain with “Took A Walk” from The Long Walk.
The Country Music Association production is executive produced by Robert Deaton. Alan Carter will direct the awards show, and Jon Macks will serve as the head writer.
The Stranger Things world expands with the animated series Stranger Things: Tales from ’85. Netflix celebrated “Stranger Things Day,” an annual event marking the day that Will Byers went missing, by releasing a first-look video and two stills.
The animated series was one of Ross and Matt Duffer’s first ideas when considering how to expand Stranger Things. “Our story takes place between seasons two and three, but we soon learn that nothing is quite as they thought it was. So get your flashlights. Get your backpack. It’s going to be amazing,” says showrunner and executive producer Eric Robles.
The new animated series will premiere in 2026. Matt Duffer, Ross Duffer, Hilary Leavitt, Shawn Levy, and Dan Cohen serve as executive producers.
“Welcome back to Hawkins in the stark winter of 1985, where the original characters must fight new monsters and unravel a paranormal mystery terrorizing their town in Stranger Things: Tales From ’85, an epic new animated series,” reads Netflix’s synopsis.
The voice cast includes Brooklyn Davey Norstedt as Eleven, Jolie Hoang-Rappaport as Max, Luca Diaz as Mike, Elisha “EJ” Williams as Lucas, Braxton Quinney as Dustin, Ben Plessala as Will, and Brett Gipson as Hopper. Odessa A’zion, Janeane Garofalo, and Lou Diamond Phillips also lend their voices to the animated series.
ABC’s 9-1-1 had to delay its Halloween episode to finish up the four-part season nine premiere. Now that Athena and Hen are finally back on Earth, the spooky episode five—”Dia de los Muertos”—will air on Thursday, November 6, 2025 at 8pm ET/PT.
Returning series stars include Angela Bassett as Athena Grant, Jennifer Love Hewitt as Maddie Han, Oliver Stark as Evan “Buck” Buckley, and Kenneth Choi as Howie “Chimney” Han. Aisha Hinds stars as Henrietta “Hen” Wilson, Ryan Guzman plays Eddie Diaz, and Gavin McHugh is Christopher Diaz.
“Día de los Muertos” Plot: The 118’s beliefs are put to the test as they respond to emergency calls involving a jack-o’-lantern and a few more jump scares than they were expecting on Halloween.
Angela Bassett in ‘9-1-1’ season 9 episode 5 (Disney/Christopher Willard)
9-1-1 Series Description, Courtesy of ABC:
The series explores the high-pressure experiences of first responders—including police officers, firefighters, and dispatchers—who are thrust into the most frightening, shocking, and heart-stopping conditions. These emergency responders must try to balance saving those who are at their most vulnerable with solving the problems in their own lives.
The show draws from the real lives of first responders who regularly face situations that are often unpredictable, intense, and uplifting at the same time.
Jennifer Love Hewitt and Debra Christofferson in season 9 episode 5 (Disney/Christopher Willard)Ana Mercedes, Terri Hoyos, and Ryan Guzman in season 9 episode 5 (Disney/Christopher Willard)Elijah M. Cooper, Angela Bassett, and Corinne Massiah in season 9 episode 5 (Disney/Christopher Willard)Ryan Guzman in season 9 episode 5 (Disney/Christopher Willard)