logo
What Time Does ‘Dexter: Resurrection' Premiere On Streaming?

What Time Does ‘Dexter: Resurrection' Premiere On Streaming?

Forbes10-07-2025
"Dexter Resurrection" poster image featuring Michael C. Hall.
Dexter: Resurrection — a follow-up series to Dexter: New Blood starring Michael C. Hall — premieres this week. What time does it begin streaming and where?
Dexter: Resurrection is the fourth series in the Dexter franchise. The original Dexter series — which followed Dexter Morgan (Hall), a vigilante serial killer who uses skills as a forensic technician with the Miami Metro Police Department to meticulously rid society of heinous criminals — ran from 2006 to 2013.
Next up was the sequel series Dexter: New Blood, which ran from 2021 to 22 that was followed by the prequel series Dexter: First Blood in 2024.
The official summary for the new series reads, 'Dexter: Resurrection takes place weeks after Dexter Morgan (Hall) takes a bullet to the chest from his own son, as he awakens from a coma to find Harrison (Jack Alcott) gone without a trace. Realizing the weight of what he put his son through, Dexter sets out for New York City, determined to find him and make things right.
'But closure won't come easy. When Miami Metro's Angel Batista (David Zayas) arrives with questions, Dexter realizes his past is catching up to him fast. As father and son navigate their own darkness in the city that never sleeps, they soon find themselves deeper than they ever imagined – and that the only way out is together.'
Dexter: Resurrection, which consists of 10 episodes, will begin streaming on Paramount+ Premium (formerly Paramount+ with Showtime) with a two-episode premiere on Friday, July 11 at 3 a.m. ET/12 a.m. PT.
For cable users, Dexter Resurrection will begin airing on Showtime on Sunday, July 13 at 8 p.m. ET/PT. After that, a new episode will air weekly.
For viewers who don't have Paramount+ Premium, the service is available for $12.99 per month. However, new subscribers can get the service for $0.99 per month for the first two months through Sunday.
What Other Characters Return From 'Dexter' And 'Dexter: New Blood' in 'Dexter: Resurrection'?
In addition to Michael C. Hall, David Zayas and Jack Alcott, other cast members who return from Dexter and/or Dexter: New Blood include James Remar as Dexter's dead father, Harry Morgan, who realized in the imagination of his son.
Jimmy Smits, who played Miami Assistant District Attorney Miguel Prado in Dexter Season 3 will also return, as well as Dexter Season 4 and Dexter: New Blood guest star John Lithgow, who played Arthur Mitchell, aka the Trinity Killer, Deadline reported.
New cast members joining the Dexter franchise in Dexter Resurrection include Ntare Guma Mbaho Mwine as Blessing Kamara, Kadia Saraf as Detective Claudette Wallace, Dominic Fumusa as Detective Melvin Oliva, Emilia Suárez as Elsa Rivera Peter Dinklage as Leon Prater and Uma Thurman as his associate, Charley.
Dexter: Resurrection will also feature guest appearances by Neil Patrick Harris as Lowell, Krysten Ritter as Mia, Eric Stonestreet as Al and David Dastmalchian as Gareth.
Dexter: Resurrection begins streaming on Paramount+ Premium on Friday at 12 a.m. PT/3 a.m. ET with a two-episode premiere. It will also begin airing on Showtime on cable on Sunday at 8 p.m. ET/PT.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Yes, the Browns' new all-brown uniforms are just as gross as you think
Yes, the Browns' new all-brown uniforms are just as gross as you think

Yahoo

time22 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Yes, the Browns' new all-brown uniforms are just as gross as you think

Despite having one of the trickiest color palettes in all of professional sports, the Cleveland Browns have almost always managed to look better than they play on the field. But in 2025 -- a season where Joe Flacco, Kenny Pickett, Shedeur Sanders and Dillon Gabriel are competing for the starting quarterback role -- the franchise has opted to lean in to the groan. For the last 70-plus years, Cleveland has utilized brown, orange and white in simple, clean contrast to give the NFL one of its sharpest, most recognizable looks (2015-2020 Browns uniforms not included). The last two seasons, that's included an alternate white helmet that, while not the team's best option, still worked. This winter, however, they've opted to reflect the probable mess on the field with, uh, lots of earthen colors. That's the only logic behind a uniform reveal, sponsored by Dude Wipes (naturally), of an all-brown alternate uniform that effectively takes the balance and contrast of the team's use of white and throws it out the window. Well maybe it looks better in motion? Hmmm, nope. But if that unveiling video is accurate and my knowledge of the 1999 Kevin Smith classic film Dogma is correct, that suggests Myles Garrett, Denzel Ward and Jerry Jeudy are all Golgothans (the video in that link is NSFW, because it comes from a 1999 Kevin Smith classic). In fairness, this would explain a lot behind Garrett's general demonic presence. Anyway! These uniforms, PRESENTED BY DUDE WIPES, stink. Especially when the Browns could go out looking like this: Look at that. Zero wipes needed. This article originally appeared on For The Win: Yes, the Browns' new all-brown uniforms are just as gross as you think

FKA twigs, Shia LaBeouf settle 2020 sexual battery lawsuit
FKA twigs, Shia LaBeouf settle 2020 sexual battery lawsuit

Yahoo

time22 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

FKA twigs, Shia LaBeouf settle 2020 sexual battery lawsuit

NEW YORK — British musician FKA twigs has settled the sexual battery lawsuit she brought against ex-boyfriend Shia LaBeouf in 2020 and is seeking to dismiss all her claims against the controversial actor. Lawyers for the 37-year-old Grammy nominee, real name Tahliah Debrett Barnett, and the 'Transformers' star, 39, released a joint statement, after Variety reports that Barnett requested her claims be dismissed with prejudice, preventing her from refiling. 'Committed to forging a constructive path forward, we have agreed to settle our case out of court. While the details of the settlement will remain private, we wish each other personal happiness, professional success and peace in the future,' Barnett's attorney Bryan Freedman and LaBeouf's lawyer Shawn Holley said in a statement shared with the Daily News. The 'cellophane' singer, who met LaBeouf while making 2019's 'Honey Boy,' in her December 2020 filing accused the Disney Channel alum of physical and emotional abuse, including choking as well as knowingly giving her and 'other unsuspecting women' a sexually transmitted disease. LaBeouf 'hurts women. He uses them. He abuses them both physically and mentally. He is dangerous,' said Barnett, who also accused him of 'love bombing' at the start of their romance. The lawsuit also laid out LaBeouf's alleged abuse against ex-girlfriend, stylist Karolyn Pho. 'I'm not in any position to tell anyone how my behavior made them feel. I have no excuses for my alcoholism or aggression, only rationalizations. I have been abusive to myself and everyone around me for years. I have a history of hurting the people closest to me. I'm ashamed of that history and am sorry to those I hurt,' LaBeouf wrote in an email to The New York Times in 2020. 'There is nothing else I can really say.' In response to the filing, he also said that 'many of these allegations are not true,' though he owed Barnett and Pho 'the opportunity to air their statements publicly and accept accountability for those things I have done.' The settlement comes four years after Barnett and LaBeouf were first reported to be in 'productive settlement negotiations' in June 2021. Barnett told GQ in June 2022 that she filed because she 'just didn't want anyone else to get hurt.' A jury trial date had been set to take place this September after it was delayed last October.

The return of 'Backyard Sports': What it took to recover lost IP rights and bring back the franchise
The return of 'Backyard Sports': What it took to recover lost IP rights and bring back the franchise

Yahoo

time22 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

The return of 'Backyard Sports': What it took to recover lost IP rights and bring back the franchise

Listen and subscribe to Yahoo Finance Sports Report on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you find your favorite podcasts. IP revivals are everywhere in gaming and movies right now, but the rights to beloved franchises aren't always easy to track down. Just ask Lindsay Barnett, a former elementary school teacher who made it her mission to bring "Backyard Sports" to modern consoles using several lawyers, a private investigator, and a lot of reverse engineering. The "Backyard Sports" games were an incredibly popular series of desktop PC video games in the late 1990s and early 2000s. The earliest games, developed by Humongous Entertainment, featured a series of cartoon children as possible teammates to recruit, while later installments featured kid versions of some professional players, like Alex Rodriguez and Derek Jeter in "Backyard Baseball 2001." Though the original franchise ended a decade ago with the release of "Backyard Sports: Baseball 2015" and "Backyard Sports: NBA Basketball 2015," it made a comeback in October 2024 when Playground Productions rereleased "Backyard Baseball '97." As of July 8, fans of the series can now play "Backyard Baseball '01" too. "These games were my favorites growing up," Barnett, founder and CEO of Playground Productions, said on the Sports Report podcast (see video above or listen below). "I was a very sporty little girl in Chicago, and this was the game that made me fall in love with baseball and football. I was looking for great content for kids and especially great games that they could be playing on their computers, and this franchise was nowhere to be found." This embedded content is not available in your region. Barnett, who taught elementary public school in Chicago for nine years, explained that teaching remotely during the COVID era set her on the path to find out how to make these games accessible to children again. "['Backyard Sports'] hadn't had a game come out in almost a decade when I started looking for it," she recalled. "And so I did the normal process of first searching on Google and then asking IP lawyers — and it was not findable. One of the lawyers said, 'Hey Lindsay, you could hire a private investigator to track the rights down.' And that just sounded like a great COVID project. And so I was like, let's do that." She said it took six months to find out who owned the intellectual property rights for "Backyard Sports," but she eventually acquired them for her own production company, which she founded in 2022. Once she acquired the rights to the IP, her company also needed to obtain the rights to the individual pro players who were featured in the games. "We were able to get 28 out of the 31 players, and I was just so excited because, honestly, we did have to go player by player for the majority of them," Barnett explained. "Some of them are in the retired players union ... We wound up hiring an awesome guy named Zach Oliver to help track people down." Getting player rights wasn't the only roadblock Barnett faced while reviving a well-loved IP. She explained that she and her team have been reverse-engineering the code to make it playable on current platforms. "The process of it has actually been quite complicated because we don't have the source code," Barnett said. "It took us a little bit longer to actually reverse engineer and make it possible on mobile. And then through that process, we actually discovered new technology to be able to make it playable on PlayStation and on Nintendo Switch." Two and a half years after her journey started, "Backyard Baseball '97" was rereleased on Steam, bringing the franchise back in full force for fans new and old. The game was later released for iOS and Android in March 2025 and on PlayStation 5 and the Nintendo Switch in June 2025. "Backyard Soccer '98" was also made available on Steam in 2024, and four other games in the beloved franchise are set to be rereleased in the coming years. "We're really inventing a playbook in some ways, which is very exciting for us because we have a big piece of IP that's independently operated, and so we have a lot of flexibility on how we bring things to market," Barnett said. "It's actually quite exciting for us because we're learning a lot, but we're able to do it with the integrity that we all share on our team, which is making sure that we're making great children's family content and we can set our own kinds of standards." Each week, Sports Report with Joe Pompliano coaches you through the latest sports business news so you can play the financial game for financial gain. You can find more episodes on our video hub or watch on your preferred streaming service. Click here for in-depth analysis of the latest stock market news and events moving stock prices Sign in to access your portfolio

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store