"Duck Dynasty," which follows the Robertson family in West Monroe, Louisiana, is coming back this summer after a multi-year hiatus. Why it matters: It's the latest television news for Hollywood South.
A hit reality TV show featuring a north Louisiana family will be back in 2025, nearly 10 years after the series went off the air.
The original "Duck Dynasty" series ended in 2017 after 11 seasons. "Duck Dynasty: The Revival" is coming this summer.
Eight years after the series finale, “Duck Dynasty: The Revival” has been green lit by A&E. TVLine.com reports that the original order is for two seasons and 20 episodes. The site said the new series is slated to begin this summer and will feature Willie and Korie Robertson, their children and grandchildren, in Louisiana.
"With their dynasty expanding into more than just ducks, Willie and Korie will bring their signature humor and family fun as they grapple with mapping out the future of Duck Commander, watching the kids navigate marriage, children and businesses of their own, and passing down the family legacy," an A&E news release says.
The Robertsons are returning to reality TV eight years after ending their popular series, "Duck Dynasty," which ran for 11 seasons on A&E.
After eight years off the air, “Duck Dynasty” is returning to A&E with the new series “ Duck Dynasty: The Revival.”
The Duck Dynasty crew brought us years of laughs, an up-close-and-personal look into the hilarious family dynamics of the Robertson clan and filled our homes with quirky characters we love to this day.
"Duck Dynasty," the hit show following Louisiana bayou royalty, is quacking back to A&E this summer, with two new seasons planned.
That’s right, eight years after their series finale, the Duck Commander crew is coming back tih “Duck Dynasty: The Revival.”
Set to premiere this summer, the show will follow Willie and Korie Robertson, as well as their children and grandchildren, who live on a Louisiana homestead and operate their family business, Duck Commander. The original Duck Dynasty ran for 11 seasons, ending in 2017.
Three Lake Arthur men have been cited by the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries for hunting violations in Jefferson Davis Parish.