
Kevin Williamson's 'The Waterfront' inspired by dad's sordid past
He's back to his roots.
Kevin Williamson, who first rose to fame creating 'Dawson's Creek,' is heading back to a waterside small town community with his new Netflix drama, 'The Waterfront.'
'It was sort of loosely inspired by my own family and my dad – and growing up in the '80s as the son of a fisherman,' Williamson, 60, exclusively told The Post.
Premiering Thursday, June 19, 'The Waterfront' follows the Buckley family, who preside over a fishing empire in the coastal North Carolina town of Havenport.
In order to keep their business afloat, they've dipped their toes into the wrong side of the law – including smuggling drugs on their boats.
7 Kevin Williamson attends the 'The Vampire Diaries' panel during Comic-Con International 2016 at San Diego Convention Center on July 23, 2016 in San Diego, California.
Getty Images
7 Holt McCallany as Harlan Buckley in 'The Waterfront.'
DANA HAWLEY/NETFLIX
7 Rafael L. Silva, Melissa Benoist, Ben Fast, Holt McCallany, Jake Weary, Danielle Campbell, and Kevin Williamson attend Netflix's The Waterfront Screening & Dinner on May 29, 2025 in Austin, Texas.
Getty Images for Netflix
The family includes hard-drinking patriarch Harlan (Holt McCallany, 'Mindhunter'), his ambitious wife Mae (Maria Bello), and their adult children, recovering addict daughter Bree (Melissa Benoist, 'Supergirl'), and washed up former football star son Cane (Jake Weary), who clashes with his dad and struggles to be a present husband to his wife, Peyton (Danielle Campbell). Topher Grace plays a drug lord.
Williamson said that his dad had some similarities to Harlan. He explained that his dad was 'a fisherman who got into a little trouble smuggling some drugs on his fishing boat.'
'But it was really small time stuff,' he added. 'He was caught and arrested. He paid the price.'
7 Jake Weary as Cane Buckley, Danielle Campbell as Peyton, Melissa Benoist as Bree Buckley in 'The Waterfront.'
DANA HAWLEY/NETFLIX
Williamson's father is now deceased, but he said he told him that he was going to use his life as inspiration for a show.
'He always said, 'Wait till I'm dead.' But I do know my dad has a big sense of humor and I'm sure wherever he is, he's happy knowing I did this show.'
The 'Scream' screenwriter said that his father was 'the best man ever, and so I was like, 'how did such a good man take a left turn?' I feel like we're in a world now where everyone has a side hustle….Everyone's trying to survive and they're doing what they can just to pay the bills. I really wanted to tap in that struggle.'
7 Holt McCallany as Harlan Buckley and Maria Bello as Belle Buckley in 'The Waterfront.'
DANA HAWLEY/NETFLIX
'The Waterfront' feels like a mix of 'Yellowstone' and 'Ozark,' but with the setting of a family fishing empire.
''Yellowstone' was my dad's favorite show, and I used to call him up after every episode and we would chat about it because he loved it, and it was something that sort of bonded us,' Williamson explained.
'And so it did inspire a lot,' he told The Post. ''The Waterfront' has its own thing going on, but I would say that it lives in the same grocery aisle with those other shows.'
7 Holt McCallany as Harlan Buckley, Maria Bello as Belle Buckley in 'The Waterfront.'
DANA HAWLEY/NETFLIX
7 Melissa Benoist as Bree Buckley, Rafael Silva as Shawn West in 'The Waterfront.'
COURTESY OF NETFLIX
'The Waterfront' is darker and more adult than Williamson's first show, but he quipped, 'if all the kids in 'Dawson's Creek' grew up and started to do bad things, then you have 'The Waterfront.''
'I have a three-year plan and a five-year plan,' he said of the show's potential future. 'So I would say four seasons, let's go with that. I do kind of have a blueprint for the second and third season, for sure. And maybe we could go further. That would be great.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

NBC Sports
30 minutes ago
- NBC Sports
Cowboys Cheerleaders getting 400 percent raise, according to one member
The Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders are getting a 400 percent raise, one of the members said during the second season of the Netflix series 'America's Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders.' 'Happy' isn't even the right word for it,' former cheerleader Jada McLean said on the show, via the Associated Press. 'I think I was just . . kind of felt, like, a relief, like everything had paid off. And it was, you know, finally, we were done fighting.' The cheerleaders have fought for pay increases for years. The Cowboys settled a lawsuit with a former cheerleader in 2019 that led to the squad doubling their per-game pay from $200 to $400. 'Our efforts were heard and they wanted to give us a raise,' four-year veteran Megan McElaney said on the show. 'And we ended up getting a 400 percent increase, which is like, life-changing.' The Cowboys agreed to pay four cheerleaders a total of $2.4 million nine years ago to settle claims by the women that then-public relations executive Rich Dalrymple filmed them in the dressing room. Dalrymple denied the claims but retired shortly before the settlement became public in a 2022 ESPN story. The Cowboys are the world's most valuable sports team, according to Forbes magazine, with a valuation of $10.1 billion as of late last year.

Business Insider
2 hours ago
- Business Insider
Netflix is looking more like the cable model it used to say was doomed
Netflix just made a groundbreaking deal to show a TV network's live and on-demand programming. Starting next summer, people in France will be able to watch content from French TV network TF1, including "The Voice," soaps, and big live sports events. "This is a first-of-its-kind partnership that plays to our strengths of giving audiences the best entertainment alongside the best discovery experience," Greg Peters, co-CEO of Netflix, said in a statement. "By teaming up with France's leading broadcaster we will provide French consumers with even more reasons to come to Netflix every day and to stay with us for all their entertainment." And just like that, Netflix is looking more and more like the cable model it used to say was doomed. It's unclear why Netflix chose France for its first such partnership and if it could signal the start of a broader push. Industry watchers were quick to speculate that more could follow. "I would expect to see these deals crop up in other markets," Ampere Analysis' Guy Bisson said, pointing to the UK as a natural next market. Netflix is far ahead of the paid streamer pack. To keep growing, it has to continually unlock new kinds of content that keep subscribers sticking around. That's why it has moved into live sports and other events, as well as kids' shows and games. But it has never signed a deal for live TV channels, and the TF1 partnership fits Netflix's goal of being a one-stop entertainment shop. It also feeds its advertising ambitions. Netflix is leaning on ads for its next phase of growth, and advertisers place a high value on live audiences because they're seen as more attentive. Netflix's ad tier reaches 94 million monthly active users, according to the company. All in, it has more than 300 million paid subscribers. There's also an upside for cable and linear TV broadcasters in partnering with Netflix. Their audiences are waning, and Netflix and other tech platforms can connect them to more viewers. TF1 is free to air in France, so being on Netflix doesn't cannibalize subscription revenue, though it could jeopardize the broadcaster's standing with advertisers by distributing on a platform it doesn't control. TV networks' partnership with tech platforms has taken other forms, as well. Media companies in the US, needing short-term revenue, have long licensed their shows to Netflix, for example. TV companies have also put full episodes of shows on YouTube as they look for new sources of revenue and viewers. Streaming industry analyst Dan Rayburn said the TF1 deal won't likely be replicated in the US anytime soon, however. US TV companies like Disney and Paramount are invested in their own streamers. Comcast and Warner Bros. Discovery 's cable networks are soon to be out there on their own as their parent companies prepare to spin them off, but he doubted either are big enough to be interesting to Netflix.


New York Post
2 hours ago
- New York Post
Kelly Ripa says Mark Consuelos' diet is ‘way too disciplined' — but it left her ‘super fit' when she tried it
Kelly Ripa says her husband, Mark Consuelos, is pretty tight. Too tight — but, then, so was her Oscars gown. 'So right before the Academy Awards, I was having trouble getting my dress zipped up the side. It was a side-zip dress, and I kept getting zipped into the dress,' Ripa, 54, confessed on a recent episode of 'Live with Kelly and Mark.' 3 Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos at the Oscars on Sunday, March 2, 2025. Disney via Getty Images Needing results fast, she turned to her hubby's super strict, super high protein diet for three days and — lo and behold — the zipper slid like a kid on a waterslide. 'I don't love it, but I ate exactly how you told me to eat, and that dress zipped right up, no side skin,' she told Consuelos, also 54. 'And I looked super fit. Super, super fit. So thank you for that.' That being said, she made it pretty clear his regimen wasn't her everyday jam. 'It's the only time I've listened to Mark about my diet because I typically don't like to do what you're doing,' she said. 'I just find, you're like, way too disciplined. I can't live that way. But for 72 hours, I can live like Mark Consuelos so I lived like Mark Consuelos for 72 hours.' 3 'I don't love it, but I ate exactly how you told me to eat, and that dress zipped right up, no side skin,' she said. ABC So, what did this miracle diet entail? According to Ripa, it was plenty of yogurt, veggies and steak — much to the talk show host's dismay, as she admitted that she's 'not big on animal protein.' Consuelos said the diet is 'the craze now,' possibly alluding to the popularity of the carnivore diet, which is being touted as a game changer for the gut by wellness influencers and celebs like Jenny McCarthy. However, it's worth noting that experts have expressed concerns about the potential health risks of this trendy meal plan, citing an increased risk of kidney stones, LDL cholesterol, heart disease, colon cancer, digestive issues and nutritional deficiencies as potential side effects. 3 'It's the only time I've listened to Mark about my diet because I typically don't like to do what you're doing,' she said. 2003 RAMEY PHOTO 310-828-3445/L 'There are significant long-term risks with following the carnivore diet,' Dr. Joseph Antoun, CEO of the longevity company L-Nutra, previously told The Post, arguing for a 'well-balanced, plant-forward approach' that is 'rich in complex carbs, plant-based/fish-based proteins and healthy fats from nuts and seeds' instead. Consuelos himself cautioned that it's crucial to increase your fiber intake when following a high-protein diet, especially if you're doing it as a lifestyle choice and not a 72-hour stint. 'It's really, really important. 'Recommended 25 grams of fiber per day for women, 38 grams for men.' So it's crucial for 'maintaining a healthy gut microbiome and may lower the rates of chronic disease such as diabetes,' he said. Of course, it helps to have a live-in expert, as it sounds like Ripa didn't even know what she was eating most of the time. 'You were there, you were managing my diet,' she told her husband on the episode. 'I'm like, 'I don't know, I ate whatever you told me to eat.' Literally, if he was like, 'Eat this,' I ate it. And it was great for the 72 hours I had to suffer through it. But they're talking about daily life every day, if you're having a high protein diet…' '…Make sure you take your fiber,' he said.