Bob Odenkirk’s ‘Lucky Hank’ Canceled At AMC After One Season

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This won’t help his state of mind… Lucky Hank has been canceled after one season.

AMC has axed the Bob Odenkirk-led drama series, which premiered in March.

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The series, which is an adaptation of Richard Russo’s novel Straight Man, saw Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul star Odenkirk play William Henry Devereaux, Jr., the unlikely chairman of the English department in a badly underfunded college in the Pennsylvania rust belt, who is somewhere between midlife crisis and full-blown meltdown.

The eight-part series premiered in March and came from Sony Pictures’ Television TriStar TV and Mark Johnson’s Gran Via. Aaron Zelman and Paul Lieberstein adapted the book and served as co-showrunners. The duo exec produced alongside Odenkirk, director Peter Farrelly, Richard Russo, Naomi Odenkirk and Marc Provissiero.

It’s been a tough twelve months, programming wide, for AMC Networks, which at the start of the year axed a swathe of new content including Demascus, Invitation to a Bonfire and second seasons of Pantheon, Moonhaven and 61st Street, while Julianne Moore series Mary & George moved to Starz.

On the 2024 docket, it has The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live, Parish, starring Giancarlo Esposito, Orphan Black: Echoes, starring Krysten Ritter and a second season of Anne Rice’s Interview with the Vampire as well as Clive Owen-fronted Monsieur Spade.

“We’re proud of Lucky Hank and thankful for the work of everyone who brought this unique, playful and deeply human show to viewers, from the talented creative team to our partners at Sony and, of course, Bob, Mireille and the entire cast and crew. Unfortunately, we are not able to proceed with a second season, but we are glad these eight episodes exist on AMC+ and will continue to find new fans – or be seen again by viewers who come back to spend more time with Hank, Lily and the entertaining cast of characters at Railton College,” said an AMC Networks spokesman.

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