The showrunners hope the series will be as well-received as the original films in spite of the lack of connection. “I just want to sort of quibble with the ‘vaguely connected,’” said showrunner Patrick McKay in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter last week. “We don’t feel that way. We feel like deep roots of this show are in the books and in Tolkien. And if we didn’t feel that way, we’d all be terrified to sit up here. We feel that this story isn’t ours. It’s a story we’re stewarding that was here before us and was waiting in those books to be on Earth. We don’t feel ‘vaguely connected.’ We feel deeply, deeply connected to those folks and work every day to even be closer connected. That’s really how we think about it.” “The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power” will debut the first two episodes of the series on September 2 before switching to a one-episode-per-week release for the remaining six episodes. “The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power” debuts on the streamer September 2. September 1
“American Ninja Warrior” Seasons 12-13 “Friday Night Lights” Seasons 1-5 “Texicanas” “WAGS Miami” Seasons 1-2 “The Suze Orman Show” (Freevee) “Murder, She Wrote” (Freevee) “Murder, She Wrote: A Story to Die For” (Freevee) “Banacek” Seasons 1-2 (Freevee) “Models of the Runway” Seasons 1-2 (Freevee) “The Rockford Files” Seasons 1-6 (Freevee)
September 2
“The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power”
September 7
“He Is Psychometric” “Prison Playbook” “Reply 1988” “Reply 1994” “Search: WWW” “Signal” “The Crowned Clown”
September 15
“Thursday Night Football”
September 21
“Prisma”
September 23
“September Mornings”
September 30
“Jungle” “Un Extrano Enemigo”
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