Lisa Kudrow's The Comeback Season 3 Sets Release Date Window in Video
The Comeback Season 3 will release sometime in May 2026, according to HBO. The third and final season of the series comes 20 years after the show first debuted on the network back in 2005 and 10 years after its second season aired in 2015.
Production on Season 3 is set to begin this summer and will see Lisa Kudrow, Dan Bucatinsky, Laura Silverman, and Damian Young all return as series regulars.
Check out the Season 3 announcement video below:
'Valerie Cherish has found her way back to the current television landscape. Neither of us are surprised she did,' said creator Michael Patrick King and Lisa Kudrow in a statement.
The Comeback originally premiered in 2005 and was created by both Kudrow and King. The series was a satirical look inside the entertainment television industry and is presented as found footage. The show follows Valerie Cherish (Kudrow), a veteran B-list sitcom actress who is looking to revive her career in a Hollywood that is getting increasingly younger.
The show originally ran for just one season but was revived in 2014 for a second season. Throughout its run, The Comeback was nominated for four Primetime Emmys, with Kudrow being nominated for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series twice.
The post Lisa Kudrow's The Comeback Season 3 Sets Release Date Window in Video appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More.

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Civil rights activists have noted signs of eugenics regaining a foothold through the far right's promotion of the 'great replacement theory,' a racist ideology that alleges a conspiracy to diminish the influence of white people. Shalini Shankar, a cultural and linguistic anthropologist at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, said she had problems with American Eagle's 'genes' versus 'jeans' because it exacerbates a limited concept of beauty. 'American Eagle, I guess, wants to rebrand itself for a particular kind of white privileged American,' Shankar said. 'And that is the kind of aspirational image they want to circulate for people who want to wear their denim.' Many critics compared the American Eagle ad to a misstep by Pepsi in 2017, when it released a TV ad that showed model Kendall Jenner offer a can of soda to a police officer while ostensibly stepping away from a photo shoot to join a crowd of protesters. 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A year ago, the company released a limited edition denim collection with tennis star Coco Gauff. The retailer has an ongoing diversity, equity and inclusion program that is primarily geared toward employees. Two days before announcing the Sweeney campaign, American Eagle named the latest recipients of its scholarship award for employees who are driving anti-racism, equality and social justice initiatives. Marketing experts offer mixed opinions on whether the attention surrounding 'good jeans' will be good for business. 'They were probably thinking that this is going to be their moment," Myles Worthington, the founder and CEO of marketing and creative agency WORTHI. "But this is doing the opposite and deeply distorting their brand." Melissa Murphy, a marketing professor at Carnegie Mellon University's Tepper School of Business, said she liked certain parts of the campaign but hoped it would be expanded to showcase people besides Sweeney for the 'sake of the brand.' 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