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Home»Defense»Studios Are Betting Big on Familiar TV Brands in 2026: Here’s What’s Coming
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Studios Are Betting Big on Familiar TV Brands in 2026: Here’s What’s Coming

Tim HuntBy Tim HuntJanuary 9, 20268 Mins Read
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Studios Are Betting Big on Familiar TV Brands in 2026: Here’s What’s Coming

From Scrubs and Malcolm in the Middle to Game of Thrones and Yellowstone spin-offs to prestige adaptations, the upcoming Television show slate reveals a clear strategy. Here’s what’s confirmed, what’s still TBD, and why studios are leaning so hard on recognizable IP right now.

Key 2026 dates to know

  • Jan. 11: The Night Manager Season 2
  • Jan. 18: A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms (A return to the Game of Thrones universe)
  • Feb. 8: The ’Burbs (reimagining of the 80s comedy film)
  • Feb. 25: Scrubs (original cast returning + “new and old characters” angle).
  • Mar. 1: Y: Marshals (Yellowstone modern spinoff)
  • April: The Testaments (a sequel to The Handmaid’s Tale)
  • April 10: Malcolm in the Middle: Life’s Still Unfair (four-episode event + anniversary hook)
  • Summer: Elle (prequel premise, younger Elle, etc.)
  • 2026–27 season: Baywatch (Fox, straight-to-series, 12 episodes)
  • TBA: Little House on the Prairie (Netflix, reboot confirmed)

Zach Braff and Donald Faison return as J.D. and Turk in ABC’s Scrubs revival, premiering in February 2026. Photo credit: ABC/Disney

Why familiar TV is everywhere in 2026

Television trends move in cycles, but the 2026 TV schedule suggests something more deliberate. The upcoming release calendar is heavy with familiar revivals, sequels, spinoffs, and adaptations.

ABC is bringing back its early-2000s hit comedy series Scrubs in February after a 15-year hiatus. Peacock is launching a series adaptation of The ’Burbs, the Tom Hanks comedy from ‘89, that same month. Hulu has positioned The Testaments, an upcoming book-to-screen adaptation and sequel to The Handmaid’s Tale, for an April debut, while CBS plans to roll out the Yellowstone spinoff Y: Marshals in March. HBO is returning to the Game of Thrones universe yet again with A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, and Prime Video has the Legally Blonde prequel Elle slated for summer.

Original cast members reunite for the return of Scrubs, marking the show’s first new episodes in more than a decade. Photo credit: ABC/Disney

The concentration of familiar brands reflects an industry shifting from a growth-at-all-costs phase to a more cautious one. As streaming platforms push toward profitability, raise prices, and focus more aggressively on subscriber retention, recognizable IP has become a safer bet than untested originals. Recent reporting by The Wall Street Journal on streaming price increases and so-called “streamflation” underscores the pressure platforms face to justify their value to consumers.

Audiences aren’t simply asking for reruns; studios appear to be betting that known titles still cut through the noise in a crowded viewing landscape.

The Comfort Economy

Deloitte’s 2025 Digital Media Trends report indicates that consumers are not increasing their subscription spending. Many are experiencing fatigue from juggling multiple services and growing frustrated with constantly rising prices. In this landscape, familiar titles serve as powerful marketing tools. They significantly reduce the cognitive effort required to choose what to watch, allowing platforms to confidently showcase these titles prominently on their homepages.

Subscription analytics firm Antenna has repeatedly emphasized churn as a central challenge for premium streaming, publishing churn metrics and reports on how cancellation behavior continues to shape the market. A slate of recognizable brands is one way platforms try to keep viewers from drifting.

Frankie Muniz returns as Malcolm in Hulu’s limited revival Malcolm in the Middle: Life’s Still Unfair. Photo credit: Hulu/Disney

Sitcom Revivals: Aging Characters, Aging Viewers 

The most obvious nostalgia plays in the 2026 mix come from comedy, where audience attachment tends to be especially sticky. ABC’s Scrubs revival premieres Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026, with Zach Braff, Donald Faison, and Sarah Chalke attached, and it’s a full-blown return to Sacred Heart with “new and old” characters.

On the streaming side, Malcolm in the Middle: Life’s Still Unfair is a four-episode limited revival that reunites most of the original cast, with a premiere date of April 10, 2026, and distribution via Hulu and Hulu on Disney+ for bundle subscribers.

A different kind of legacy comedy return is The Comeback, the HBO series starring Lisa Kudrow, which centers on her character Valerie Cherish’s desperate attempts to remain relevant. Industry trades reported that HBO greenlit a third and final season.

The ‘Burbs | Official Teaser | Peacock Original

Synopsis: Set in present-day suburbia, The ‘Burbs follows a young couple returning to the husband’s childhood home. Their world is upended when new neighbors move in next door, bringing old secrets of the cul-de-sac to light, and new deadly threats shatter the illusion of their quiet little neighborhood.

Reboots Aiming For Reinvention 

Not every familiar title on the board is trying to recreate an old tone. Some of these projects appear built to reinterpret a premise for a different cultural temperature.

Take Baywatch. Fox has ordered a straight-to-series reboot of the popular 90s series for the 2026–27 broadcast season, with reports confirming a 12-episode order and framing it as a “reimagined” version of the lifeguard drama.

Then there’s The ’Burbs, a Peacock series riffing on the 1989 film starring Tom Hanks. Peacock’s own release post states that all eight episodes drop Feb. 8, 2026, exclusively on the service.

Netflix’s Little House on the Prairie reboot is still date-less, but its very existence signals how aggressively streamers are mining legacy comfort properties for the next wave of subscribers.

HBO’s A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms explores Westeros decades before Game of Thrones. Photo credit: HBO

Franchise TV Keeps Building Universes

If sitcom revivals represent emotional familiarity, franchise expansions are a different kind of confidence: the belief that a world can keep generating new entry points.

HBO’s A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms is scheduled to premiere Jan. 18, 2026, and it draws from George R.R. Martin’s Dunk and Egg stories, narrowing the focus compared to the sprawling warfare of the flagship series.

Y: Marshals follows a new chapter in the Yellowstone franchise focused on law enforcement in Montana. Photo credit: CBS

On the Paramount side of the TV universe, Y: Marshals is set to premiere on CBS on March 1, 2026, and the show’s premise centers on Kayce Dutton joining a specialized group of U.S. Marshals in Montana. Whether audiences will follow depends on execution, but the strategic intent is easy to read: franchise TV increasingly behaves like an ecosystem, with spinoffs designed to keep viewers inside an IP orbit rather than bouncing between unrelated originals.

Prestige Adaptations

Alongside crowd-pleasing revivals and franchise expansions, 2026 also includes projects that signal “seriousness” and literary weight.

A new generation comes of age under Gilead’s rule in The Testaments, expanding the world first introduced in The Handmaid’s Tale. Photo credit: Hulu

Hulu’s The Testaments, a follow-up to the streamer’s prestigious The Handmaid’s Tale, is also a book-to-screen adaptation of the novel of the same name. The expansion on the Handmaid’s Tale universe has a confirmed premiere month of April 2026, with first-look coverage and reporting that Ann Dowd reprises Aunt Lydia. The property arrives with built-in cultural gravity and an audience already trained to treat its themes as political, not just speculative.

Meanwhile, The Night Manager returns in early 2026, and Season 2 is described as a continuation of the show rather than a fresh John le Carré adaptation. Amazon’s Prime Video post confirms the rollout: Season 2 begins Jan. 11, 2026, with three episodes, followed by weekly releases through the Feb. 1 finale, with BBC/BBC iPlayer handling UK availability.

The Night Manager returns with new episodes in 2026, continuing the acclaimed espionage drama. Photo credit: Prime Video

Why 2026, Specifically?

If the early 2020s were defined by streaming land grabs and an arms race for originals, the mid-2020s have been shaped by consolidation, price hikes, and a louder push for sustainable economics. That is the context in which familiar brands become safer bets.

On the consumer side, Deloitte’s 2025 survey data points to subscription management fatigue and price frustration. On the market side, Antenna’s reporting underscores churn pressure as an ongoing issue in premium streaming and highlights how cancellation behavior has become a defining dynamic of the category. The WSJ has documented repeated waves of price increases across major streamers, which only raises the stakes for programming that can reliably keep viewers engaged.

Cast and creators gather during early production on Netflix’s Little House on the Prairie reboot. Photo credit: Netflix

The Risk: IP Fatigue Is Real

None of this is risk-free. An IP-heavy slate can crowd out new voices and make TV feel like an endless loop of recycled titles. The audience’s tolerance is real, but it is not infinite.

The good news for studios is that familiarity does not automatically mean creative stagnation. A revival can use a legacy brand to explore aging, regret, or modern pressures. A reboot can reinterpret a premise for a different era. A spinoff can shrink a massive world into something more character-driven. The title gets viewers to the door, but it’s the storytelling that decides whether they stay.

For now, though, the message of 2026 is clear. Studios are betting that in a crowded, expensive, churn-prone entertainment economy, familiarity is one of the few things that still cuts through.

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