Netflix has canceled The Boroughs less than a month after its debut, ending the Duffer brothers’ first post-Stranger Things series after a single season and drawing a sharp line under one of the streamer’s most anticipated new shows of the year.
The cancellation blindsided the production. A Season 2 writers’ room had already opened — standard practice for high-profile series — and Netflix had floated the idea of filming Seasons 2 and 3 back-to-back. Those plans collapsed after the show debuted to soft numbers last month.
Created by Jeffrey Addiss and Will Matthews and executive produced by Matt and Ross Duffer, The Boroughs was set in a seemingly idyllic retirement community where a group of unlikely heroes must band together against an otherworldly threat. The cast included Alfred Molina, Geena Davis, Alfre Woodard, Denis O’Hare, Clarke Peters, and Bill Pullman.
The show earned a 97% critics score on Rotten Tomatoes, but critical acclaim ran headlong into a lukewarm audience response. It spent four weeks in Netflix’s global Top 10, accumulating 130.5 million viewing hours overall, but the trajectory was damaging: after climbing to 9.5 million views in its second week, it fell to 3.7 million the following week — a drop-off that signals the absence of the word-of-mouth momentum Netflix needs to justify renewing an expensive production.
The cost side of that equation was always a problem. Sci-fi is expensive, and the Duffers’ departure for a major new deal at Paramount Skydance made the business case for renewal harder to construct. The timing also raised the question of audience saturation: The Boroughs was the second Duffer-produced paranormal series to launch in 2026, following Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen, which premiered in March, weeks after the emotional series finale of Stranger Things aired on New Year’s Eve.
The Duffers’ exclusive four-year deal with Paramount Skydance, which began in April and covers film, television, and streaming, leaves Netflix with a single active Duffer project: the animated Stranger Things: Tales from ’85, set to return this fall.
On Monday, Paramount dated a secret Duffer brothers event film for a November 3, 2028, theatrical release — a reminder that the pair’s next chapter is now someone else’s prize. For Netflix, the cancellation closes an era defined by one of its most successful creative relationships with nothing left to show from it on the horizon.




















































