One of us is lying Wiki
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One of Us Is Lying is an American drama television series based on Karen M. McManus' novel of the same name. It premiered on Peacock on October 7, 2021 and released as a Netflix Original on February 18, 2022.

On January 14, 2021, it was announced via social media that Peacock renewed the series for a second season.[1]

Synopsis[]

One Of Us Is Lying is the story of what happens when five high schoolers walk into detention and only four make it out alive. Everyone is a suspect, and everyone has something to hide.

Cast[]

Main[]

Recurring[]

Production[]

Development[]

August 15, 2019, it was announced that Peacock has given a pilot order to One of Us Is Lying. This marked the first official pilot order for the streamer.[2]

On August 12, 2020, it was announced that Peacock had given a series order to One of Us is Lying. Executive producers include Erica Saleh, Darío Madrona, John Sacchi and Matt Groesch. Additionally, Madrona would be the series' showrunner. Jennifer Morrison directed and produced the pilot. Production companies involved in the series include Universal Content Productions and 5 More Minutes Productions.[3] The streamer gave the adaptation of Karen M. McManus’ novel an eight-episode order after ordering a pilot last year.[4]

On January 14, 2021, the series was renewed for a second season. Erica Saleh will take over as showrunner for the second season, replacing Darío Madrona, who will remain on the show as an executive producer.[1]

Casting[]

October 30, 2019, Peacock announced that Marianly Tejada, Cooper van Grootel, Annalisa Cochrane, Chibuikem Uche, Jessica McLeod, Barrett Carnahan and Melissa Collazo will lead the ensemble cast of the drama.[4] July 16, 2021, Mark McKenna joined the cast in a series regular role.[5] August 05, 2021, Martin Bobb-Semple, Karim Diané, George Ferrier, Miles J. Harvey, Zenia Marshall, Sara Thompson were cast as recurring characters in the series.[6] On October 5, 2021, Alimi Ballard joined the series in a heavily recurring role.[7]

Trivia[]

  • The streamer gave the adaptation of Karen M. McManus’ novel an eight-episode order after ordering a pilot in 2019.[8]
  • It marks the first of Peacock’s pilot orders to have been picked up to series.[3]
  • Erica Saleh wrote the pilot and executive produced.[3]
  • Jennifer Morrison directed and produced the pilot.[3]
  • The series was originally developed for E! before moving to NBCUniversal's fledgling streaming platform.[9]
    • The show has had a long road to pickup: Universal Studio Group's UCP won the rights to McManus' novel in 2017, originally setting it up at E!.[9]
      • E! later exited the scripted business, and the project moved to Peacock in 2019.[9]
  • The first season was originally scheduled to release on February 4, 2022, however Netflix pushed it back to February 18, 2022.[10]

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