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Which ‘Sullivan's Crossing' Stars Are — And Aren't — Returning for Season 4 After Onscreen Complications

Which ‘Sullivan's Crossing' Stars Are — And Aren't — Returning for Season 4 After Onscreen Complications

Yahoo2 days ago
Sullivan's Crossing has fans worried about where certain story lines will go in season 4 — but is every cast member even returning to the show?
The CW series, which is based on a book series by Robyn Carr, follows neurosurgeon Maggie (Morgan Kohan) who must return to her hometown in rural Nova Scotia. Viewers are introduced to her estranged father, Sully (Scott Patterson), newcomer Cal (Chad Michael Murray) and more members of the community.
After Sullivan's Crossing premiered on Netflix in July 2025, it found an even bigger audience. The cast, however, has been singing the show's praises since it premiered on CTV before being broadcast on The CW.
"It's always exciting to go to a new place with a new project [and] with new expectations. Everybody's lovely. The work is deep and the collaboration is real. You've got a built-in audience with [Gilmore Girls] and now we've got Robyn Carr's book audience," Patterson told Us Weekly in October 2023. "So it's kind of exciting to come into something that's kind of established — has already an established fan base — and I can bring mine in. They can join forces and watch the show together and compare notes."
Most Shocking TV Exits of 2025 So Far: From 'Emily in Paris' to 'General Hospital'
Patterson highlighted how Sullivan's Crossing left room for collaboration.
"I have a lot more freedom to create the role. I have a lot more input with what [Sully] says and what he does. I just love that about the show. I love that about the producers and the network and all the support they give. And [executive producer] Roma Roth is a very, very special showrunner," he noted. "She really, really trusts her actors and she really listens. She just wants the best for the episode. She wants the best for the scene [and] she wants the best for the show. To me, that is the sign of a true leader. So we follow her lead, but she's open to suggestions, which makes this so much stronger.'
At the time, Patterson shared how "respected" the cast got to feel on set.
"Everybody has a platform to voice their concerns or their opinions and state their ideas and they're taken seriously," he added. "It makes everybody feel like they've got skin in the game and that they're helping to create this as we go along in a little way. Roma's still the boss and she's doing all of the heavy lifting. But she wants to hear our thoughts and that's rare. That's very, very special. I think that's why this show feels so natural, so alive and [why] it's been so successful so far. I hope that continues."
Keep scrolling to see which Sullivan's Crossing stars are coming back for season 4:
Morgan Kohan
After getting to a hopeful place in her relationship with Cal, Maggie's life got more complicated when her summer fling Liam (Marcus Rosner) arrived in Sullivan's Crossing to reveal that he and Maggie are married.
'There's never a dull moment at Sullivan's Crossing,' showrunner Roth told Collider in July 2025. 'A romance drama series needs to have push and pull between your characters… we're going to have a pretty big shoe drop at the end of the season that we'll get to see play out in Season 4.'
Chad Michael Murray
Murray will reprise his role as Cal, whom he has enjoyed getting to bring to life.
'I will say that Sullivan's Crossing is a place you go to heal,' he told Parade in October 2023. 'Sullivan's Crossing is a place where you go to grow and to be honest with yourself.'
He continued: 'What's so beautiful about this show and why people, I believe, will just want more and more of it is because it's slowing things down. We all work so hard that we don't ever live. I think in this show there's a lot more living than there is work.'
Reboots and Revivals Missing Beloved TV Stars
Tom Jackson
After facing major ups and downs since Sullivan's Crossing premiered in 2023, Jackson is coming back as a main cast member in season 4. He plays Frank Cranebear.
Andrea Menard
Season 4 will continue to show Edna trying to heal after a brain tumor caused her to lose her vision. Maggie ultimately performed a high-stakes surgery that saved Edna's life.
Scott Patterson
Patterson, who has praised the show, will continue to bring Sully to life. The CW President Brad Schwartz told Deadline in July 2025 that the show isn't going anywhere since there are five books in the series and Sullivan's Crossing 'still has a lot of runway left.'
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The D'Amore Drop: The night Juggalos hit 'Rowdy' Roddy Piper in the face with a dead fish
The D'Amore Drop: The night Juggalos hit 'Rowdy' Roddy Piper in the face with a dead fish

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The D'Amore Drop: The night Juggalos hit 'Rowdy' Roddy Piper in the face with a dead fish

The D'Amore Drop is a weekly guest column on Uncrowned written by Scott D'Amore, the Canadian professional wrestling promoter, executive producer, trainer and former wrestler best known for his long-standing role with TNA/IMPACT Wrestling, where he served as head of creative. D'Amore is the current owner of leading Canadian promotion Maple Leaf Pro Wrestling. The end of July marked 10 years since the one and only 'Rowdy' Roddy Piper left us. A decade gone, and I still tell Piper stories like they happened yesterday. Roddy could have you ready to strangle him one minute — he could be relentless when he targeted you for a ribbing — but leave you inspired and speechless the very next day. We crossed paths in WWE, WCW and TNA, but it's two small moments in 2007 that really stick out when I think of him a decade after he left us. First was in the summer of '07. I had one foot out the door of wrestling at that time, but Violent J (Joe Bruce) reached out and said he wanted me to come to the Annual Gathering of the Juggalos for the Insane Clown Posse's JCW Wrestling. He wanted me to do a segment on 'In the Pit with Piper,' which was what Roddy had to call his segment then, as WWE owned the copyright on 'Piper's Pit.' This took place in this awesome makeshift outdoor stadium, purpose-built, in the middle of a camp ground. The ICP has built an amazing subculture out of nothing, based on accepting everyone and anyone, no matter what they look like, sound like or sleep with. On this night, though, the fans were so fired up, it was crazy. I'd worked in WCW when Eric Bischoff all but encouraged fans to toss trash and beers into the ring. (EZE felt it looked cool on TV, then a glass was thrown and they stamped down on it.) But these ICP fans were hurling beer bottles, large batteries, even fish that they'd grabbed out of a pond on the campsite. Minutes before I was due to go out and appear on Piper's Pit — I mean the Pit with Piper — wrestler Mickie Knuckles got knocked silly by a battery to the head. She was then pelted with more batteries and other projectiles while she lay there trying to regain her senses. I witnessed that and thought, "I don't know if I want to go out in that." I was literally crossing the room to talk with JCW boss Violent J when Roddy clapped me on the shoulders, grinned, and said: 'Let's go! We got a wild crowd! This'll be fun!' I wasn't going to tell Roddy Piper, of all people, that, nah, actually I don't want to do this now. So Roddy went out first. He was supposed to say, 'I was a Juggalo before there was even the name for being a Juggalo,' and babyface himself to the crowd. Instead, he took a fish to the face and started cutting a promo on the fans. 'I've been stabbed! I've been shot! You guys can't scare me,' he said. And the fans began to turn on him. They started throwing more crap at him. 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Justin Bieber Thanks Jesus for Having ‘Patience' With Him: ‘I Can Be Extremely Selfish'
Justin Bieber Thanks Jesus for Having ‘Patience' With Him: ‘I Can Be Extremely Selfish'

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Justin Bieber Thanks Jesus for Having ‘Patience' With Him: ‘I Can Be Extremely Selfish'

What's more swag than showing gratitude and enjoying nature? On Tuesday (July 29), Justin Bieber did both. In a post on X, the pop star shared photos of himself taking a walk on a tree-lined path and wrote, 'Let's have a good day, let's go outside.' More from Billboard Justin Bieber's 'Swag': All 21 Tracks Ranked Justin Bieber's New Album Is First of More to Come: Everything We Know Stayin' Alive: Justin Bieber's 'Swag' Track 'Go Baby' Has 'Right Tempo' for Performing CPR 'Thanking Jesus for his patience with me this morning,' continued Bieber. 'I can be extremely selfish and impatient yet Jesus always has his arms open toward me.' The update comes about two weeks after the Canadian pop superstar surprise-dropped Swag — complete with 21 R&B-infused tracks — four years after he last released an album. The project debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 and earned Bieber his biggest streaming week ever. At his side throughout the album's rollout has been Hailey Bieber, who is married to the Grammy winner. The model appeared alongside her husband on promotional billboards for Swag — along with their young son, Jack Blues — and shared a passionate kiss with Justin at a recent listening party. And when the LP first dropped, she showed support by writing on her Instagram Story, 'Is it finally clocking to you f—ing losers?' — a reference to the singer's viral 'standing on business' meme. Justin's latest post is far from the first time he's taken some time for self reflection on social media in recent months. In June, he posted about being 'broken' and having 'anger issues,' writing, 'Jesus is the only person who keeps me wanting to make my life about others.' Before that, he slammed the 'audacity' of haters who tell people what they 'should or shouldn't have,' declaring, 'God decides what we deserve.' Two months prior, he opened up about feeling like he was 'drowning' in 'hate' and struggling with feeling 'unworthy.' It's unclear what Justin's next moves will be after Swag, whether it's performing in support of the album or spending more time outdoors and typing out additional introspective posts. Sources did, however, recently tell Billboard that he still has more music left to release, possibly in the form of a more pop-inspired album. Best of Billboard Chart Rewind: In 1989, New Kids on the Block Were 'Hangin' Tough' at No. 1 Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits H.E.R. & Chris Brown 'Come Through' to No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay Chart Solve the daily Crossword

TIFF pulls documentary about Oct. 7 attack from lineup over security and rights concerns
TIFF pulls documentary about Oct. 7 attack from lineup over security and rights concerns

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TIFF pulls documentary about Oct. 7 attack from lineup over security and rights concerns

The Toronto International Film Festival has pulled from its lineup a documentary detailing one family's experiences of the Oct. 7, 2023 attack by Hamas over footage rights and security issues, though the festival says it is still trying to work through those concerns with the filmmakers. In an emailed statement, the filmmaking team behind the documentary The Road Between Us: The Ultimate Rescue, acknowledged the cancellation and told CBC News that they were "shocked and saddened" by the festival's decision. "Ultimately, film is an art form that stimulates debate from every perspective that can both entertain us and make us uncomfortable. A film festival lays out the feast and the audience decides what they will or won't see," the statement said. "We are not political filmmakers, nor are we activists; we are storytellers. We remain defiant, we will release the film, and we invite audiences, broadcasters, and streamers to make up their own mind, once they have seen it." In a statement Wednesday evening, TIFF CEO Cameron Bailey said he remained committed to working with the filmmakers to "meet TIFF's screening requirements" which would allow the movie to be aired at the festival this fall. The film, by Canadian director Barry Avrich, tells the story of Noam Tibon, a retired IDF general who is on a quest to save his son and his family during the attack that sparked the nearly two year long war between Israel and Hamas. Tibon's story has been told before in the media, including on CBS's 60 Minutes. His son, Amir Tibon, who is a journalist, also recounted the events from his own perspective in a book. WATCH | He moved his family to a border kibbutz — then Oct. 7 happened: According to Deadline, which was first to report the news, TIFF withdrew its invitation for the film to participate in the festival in part because some requirements for inclusion were not met, including the "legal clearance of all footage." "The purpose of the requested conditions was to protect TIFF from legal implications and to allow TIFF to manage and mitigate anticipated and known risks around the screening of a film about highly sensitive subject matter, including potential threat of significant disruption," the festival said in a statement to The Associated Press and Deadline. The ultimate dis-invitation, according to Deadline, came over the legal clearance and identification of footage of the attack that was filmed by Hamas. TIFF's Bailey also rejected claims of censorship, saying they were "unequivocally false," but apologized for any pain the removal of The Road Between Us caused. "Given the sensitive and significant nature of the film's subject, I believe that it tells an important story and contributes to the rich tapestry of perspectives in our lineup — stories that resonate both here at home and around the world," Bailey said in the statement. "The events of October 7, 2023 and the ongoing suffering in Gaza weigh heavily on us, underscoring the urgent need for compassion amid rising antisemitism and Islamophobia." Groups condemn decision The move has drawn condemnation from a number of organizations and officials. Creative Community for Peace, an entertainment industry organization that educates about antisemitism, called the decision to pull the film "deeply disturbing." "They are choosing to censor a Jewish story of survival and attempting to erase the experiences of survivors of the worst attack on Jews since the Holocaust," the statement read in part. "This decision is part of a growing trend of silencing Jewish and Israeli voices under the excuse of 'security concerns.' " The Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs' CEO, Noah Shack, also decried the decision, which he saw as the festival bending to the prospect of protests. "This shameful decision sends an unmistakable message: Toronto's Jewish community, which has long played an integral role at TIFF, is no longer safe or welcome," he said in a statement. Israel's Minister of Foreign Affairs, Gideon Sa'ar, also called the decision "vicious and sickening" in a post on X. And Stan Cho, Ontario's Minister of Tourism, Culture and Gaming, said in a statement posted to social media that he believed freedom of expression is "integral to the arts." TIFF pulled another documentary last year The festival also drew controversy last year over its decision to run — then pull — a documentary that followed Russian soldiers fighting in the war against Ukraine. The film, called Russians At War by Russian-Canadian director Anastasia Trofimova, attracted protesters who called the film Russian propaganda. After the festival paused screenings due to "significant threats," the film was quietly screened toward the end of the festival. Russians At War follows soldiers and medics on the front lines of the war, something the filmmaker says she did without the government's permission, which puts her at risk of criminal prosecution. Sean Farnel, a producer on the documentary who managed the film's distribution at festivals, told CBC News that the dis-invitation of The Road Between Us felt like "total deja vu," given what his team went through last year. He says decisions like these are becoming "endemic" within the arts world, and that it's increasingly difficult for documentary filmmakers to secure funding to tell difficult or provocative stories. "I think we all have to come together and figure out a way to present such work constructively, safely, because that's what festivals, that's what filmmakers do" Farnel said. LISTEN | 'Russians at War' director talks critics and backlash: His team recently made Russians At War available directly to audiences through a website that he says gives the film context. He says he feels fortunate that filmmakers at least have the option of circumventing the usual distribution channels in this way to give people a chance to view their work in the event that festivals are unwilling or unable to present it. Farnel says that before forming an opinion, people should see films being "censored or self censored" like Russians At War or The Road Between Us. "Watch the film, have an open mind, challenge your own biases and perceptions, and communicate with each other."

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