Your Honor Season 1 (S01) Complete Web Series
Your Honor is an American drama television series starring Bryan Cranston, adapted from the Israeli TV series Kvodo (Hebrew: כבודו).[1][2] It premiered on Showtime on December 6, 2020 and ended on March 19, 2023.[3] While ordered as a miniseries, in August 2021, the series was renewed for a second season which premiered on January 15, 2023.[4][5] In July 2022, it was reported that the second season would be its last.[6]
Your Honor Season 1 (S01) Complete Web Series
On August 24, 2021, Showtime renewed the series for a second season.[4] On July 5, 2022, it was reported that Cranston said that the second season will be its final season on Dax Shepard's Armchair Expert podcast.[6] On the same day, it was also announced that filming for the second season has begun, and that Joey Hartstone is the new showrunner with Keith Machekanyanga promoted as a series regular for the second season.[8] The following week, it was reported that Rosie Perez was cast in a recurring role while Andrene Ward-Hammond was promoted to as a series regular for the second season.[7] On August 1, 2022, Jimi Stanton, Kay, and Flores were promoted as series regulars for the second season.[9] On October 11, 2022, Mark Margolis and Mark O'Brien joined the cast in recurring capacities for the second season.[10]
In Showtime's first season of Your Honor, we are introduced to Judge Michael Desiato (Bryan Cranston), jogging the streets of New Orleans while training for a marathon. He is proven to be a man of honor, and we're informed that today is the anniversary of his wife's death. Michael's son Adam (Hunter Doohan) later visits the location of his mother's death to honor her, but his asthma is triggered when he is pestered by the members of this dangerous community run by the Desire gang. Across town, we're also introduced to Jimmy Baxter (Michael Stuhlbarg), the head of an organized crime family and father of three. He and his wife Gina (Hope Davis) decide to gift their son Rocco (Benjamin Wadsworth) a motorcycle as an early birthday present. Meanwhile, Adam's asthma is going into panic mode as he flees the dangerous area believing he is followed by members of the Desire gang. In trying to reach his inhaler, Adam accidentally hits Rocco Baxter with his car, knocking him off his motorcycle. Adam desperately tries to apply CPR to the bloody teenager, calling 911 but finding himself unable to speak and instead opts to flee the scene.
The second season will see Rosie Perez (The Flight Attendant) join the cast in a guest role, playing Olivia Delmont, a charismatic assistant U.S. Attorney. She joins the returning Cranston, Hope Davis, Isiah Whitlock Jr., Margo Martindale, Amy Landecker, and new series regulars, Lilli Kay, Keith Machekanyanga, Andrene Ward-Hammond, Jimi Stanton, and Benjamin Flores Jr.
Joey Hartstone, showrunner for the series' sophomore run, says in the first season, "you have a character with the strongest motivation possible, and in Season 2, we start with a character who basically has no motivation to do anything because he's lost everything. So the real challenge, at least for the Michael Desiato story in Season 2, was 'What story can we tell with this guy? How could we motivate someone who has lost everything and has largely given up on life?' And that became a real interesting challenge to slowly try to piece him back together as a human being and give him things to care about."
PETER MOFFAT: The premise. [Executive Producer] Liz Glotzer called me, and she said, what would you do as a parent if your child hit and killed another child on the roadside and left the scene of the accident? My answer is probably shared by most parents, which is, well, you have to do the right thing and take your son in to the police station. What do you do, she said, if you discover that the father of the victim is the biggest gangster in town. And my answer is, again, I think probably the same as most parents. You turn around and leave, and to be completely honest with you, and I know it sounds like a writer talking to a journalist moment. I knew then I was going to write this. I got off the phone, went upstairs to my study, and going upstairs I fell over, like a child, and hurt my arm a bit.
There are 10 episodes in Your Honor season one, with season two premiering on December 9, 2022. The runtime of episodes averages between 52-63 mins. You can check the complete list of Your Honor episodes and their release date below.
For a while, I wrote about TWD because the first episode was just so great that I wanted to see if the ongoing series could find a way to live up to it. Every now and then, they would give us an episode, or even a four- or five-episode stretch, that fulfilled that often-dormant potential. After a while, though, I grew tired of waiting for consistency, and also struggled when characters I found interesting got killed while ones I found dull stuck around for a while. And even then, I kept with it for another season or two because the show was so popular that the traffic to HitFix was worth me being annoyed with the show two-thirds of the time. But when we got to that ridiculous Season Six-ending cliffhanger with Negan about to swing his stupid bat, I gave up for good. Haven\u2019t watched since, and am frequently amused when I see tweets from peers who have stuck with it, many of them referencing characters I\u2019ve either never heard of because they were introduced after I quit, or who I barely remembered from when I was watching. (I was flummoxed, for instance, to learn that Rosita stuck around until the end, since she was a complete non-character at the time I quit.)
What\u2019s most interesting to me is the divergent paths that TWD and Game of Thrones took. The two were often linked together in the early 2010s as the series that had ushered cable TV out of its boutique prestige drama period and into a more blockbuster-friendly era \u2014 i.e., the Jaws and Star Wars to the likes of Mad Men or The Wire as the early Seventies indie movies. But Game of Thrones kept on building and building in popularity, and even after a mostly-derided final season, its spinoff House of the Dragon came along this year as a ginormous hit. Walking Dead, meanwhile, has been bleeding viewers for years. AMC has various spinoffs in the works \u2014 including those Rick-centric movies that were once slated to be released theatrically \u2014 but I can\u2019t imagine there\u2019s a ton of enthusiasm for them at this point. The series followed the more typical career path for a TV phenomenon: huge ratings at the start, followed by gradual erosion until only the die-hards are left at the end.
Conversely, I knew going in that, regardless of how long the list wound up being, I wanted one of the last spots to go to a song that almost no one remembered, from a show that almost no one remembered. It just took me a long time to decide which one. For a while, it was going to be Warren Zevon's \"If You Won't Leave Me, I'll Find Somebody Who Will,\" from NBC's incredibly short-lived Nineties remake of Route 66 starring James Wilder and Dan Cortese. In the days before DVRs, streaming music, etc., I tuned into that dumb show every week primarily to hear that song, and just kept it on for the next hour. The next contender was also from a show about two friends on a perpetual road trip: Old 97's \"Lost Along the Way,\" from an obscure Showtime series I have a soft spot for called Going to California. Ultimately, I couldn't resist going with a song from a buddy show where the buddies stayed within the confines of Ocean Beach, California: Terriers, with Rob Duncan's \"Gunfight Epiphany.\" (This is also your periodic reminder that Terriers is, like so many past FX shows, streaming on Hulu.) 041b061a72