Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Entertainment
  3. News

Who is making HBO’s new Harry Potter series? The answer may surprise you

Add as a preferred source on Google
Harry, Hermoine, and Ron stand next to each other in a line.
Warner Bros. Pictures

The Harry Potter creative team is starting to assemble.

The upcoming Harry Potter TV series has named Francesca Gardiner as showrunner and writer. Additionally, Mark Mylod has been tapped to direct multiple episodes. Gardiner and Mylod, who will executive produce the Harry Potter series, worked together on Succession, HBO’s award-winning drama that ran for four seasons from 2018 to 2023.

Recommended Videos

Gardiner’s writing and producing credits include Killing Eve, His Dark Materials, and The Man in the High Castle. Mylod directed 2022’s The Menu and will helm several episodes of The Last of Us season 2.

The Harry Potter television series has been in development since 2021. According to a press release, the series will be a “faithful adaptation of the beloved Harry Potter book series by author and executive producer J.K. Rowling.” Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, and Rupert Grint will not reprise their roles as Harry, Hermione, and Ron, respectively.

Instead, the series will feature a “new cast to lead a new generation of fandom, full of the fantastic detail and much-loved characters Harry Potter fans have loved for over twenty-five years.”

Harry holding his wand for the first time in Harry Potter and the Sorcerers Stone.
Warner Bros. Pictures

The Harry Potter series was originally branded as a Max Original. However, the series will now be rebranded as an HBO Original due to a change in Warner Bros. marketing strategies. Welcome to Derry and Lanterns will follow suit and transition from Max Originals to HBO Originals.

Casting news is expected at a later date. A production timeline or release window has also not been announced. However, Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav said on the company’s earnings call that he expects the series to air in 2026.

Executive producers on the Harry Potter series include Rowling, Neil Blair, and Ruth Kenley-Letts of Brontë Film and TV, and David Heyman of Heyday Films. The HBO series stems from Warner Bros. Television in association with Brontë Film and TV.

Dan Girolamo
Former Entertainment Writer
Dan is a passionate and multitalented content creator with experience in pop culture, entertainment, and sports. Throughout…
The Boys finale tried too hard with real-world symbolism and totally forgot fans like me
The Boys wanted its ending to mean something but fumbled the execution completely.
the-boys-finale

Here is my problem with The Boys finale. After five seasons of buildup, watching Homelander laser people in half for looking at him wrong and Butcher destroying himself for one shot at revenge – I wanted a bloodbath. And somehow, the memes that came out of the finale were more satisfying than the episode itself.

The Boys season 5 finale, titled "Blood and Bone," is not the worst finale ever made, but it is one of the most frustrating ones to sit through. The show threw out every method the Boys had spent seasons chasing to kill Homelander, botched the execution of what remained, and delivered an ending that felt like the writers suddenly remembered they had a show to wrap up.

Read more
After a disappointing finale, the Vought Rising looks like it could be the Boys universe’s saving grace
Vought Rising has dropped its first trailer, revealing a 1950s-set prequel story centered on Soldier Boy and the dark origins of Vought
vought-rising-trailer

The Boys wrapped its five-season run just two days ago, and Prime Video is already keeping the hype train moving. The first trailer for Vought Rising, the prequel spinoff set in 1950s New York City, just arrived – and it looks promising.

The show follows a young, wide-eyed Soldier Boy (Jensen Ackles) suiting up for the very first time, teaming up with a fresh squad of supes who believe they're a gift from God. Spoiler: they're not!

Read more
YouTube is trapping you in an entirely different content bubble based on your gender
Researchers say YouTube’s algorithm pushes male users toward more polarizing content
YouTube

A new study suggests YouTube’s recommendation algorithm may be shaping political perspectives differently for men and women - even when both groups start with the same interest in political content. The research, published in Cornell University’s arXiv repository, explored how YouTube’s recommendation system responds to different viewing behaviors.

Researchers created 160 automated social bots, splitting them into two groups with “male-coded” and “female-coded” viewing habits. While both sets of accounts showed identical interest in YouTube’s News & Politics category, their recommendations reportedly evolved in dramatically different directions over time.

Read more