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Watson (TV series)

Watson is an American television series created by Craig Sweeny which premiered on CBS on January 26, 2025. The series, described as a "medical drama with detective elements", revolves around the character of Dr. John Watson from Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories, with Morris Chestnut portraying the character. It is the second CBS series to adapt the Holmes stories, after Elementary. While the two programs are otherwise unrelated, their creative teams overlap. In March 2025, the series was renewed for a second season, which premiered on October 13, 2025. In March 2026, the series was cancelled after two seasons.

Premise

One year after Sherlock Holmes's apparent death at the hands of his archenemy Moriarty at Reichenbach Falls, Dr. John Watson resumes his medical practice by opening the "Holmes Clinic" in Pittsburgh to treat patients with strange and unidentifiable issues. Soon however, Watson must face his past when evidence surfaces indicating that Moriarty is still alive.

In Season 2, Holmes emerges alive, although Watson comes to have doubts as to whether he is quite the same man he used to be.

Cast and characters

Main

  • Morris Chestnut as Dr. John Watson, a former London-based physician and consulting detective, now the head of the Holmes Clinic of Diagnostic Medicine. To aid his patients' cases, he applies a specific type of deductive reasoning that he learned from his years working with Sherlock Holmes.
  • Kevin Vidal plays a younger Watson in the episode "Take a Family History"
  • Eve Harlow as Dr. Ingrid Derian, an aloof but highly skilled neurologist with an enigmatic past. She has a shaky relationship with her colleagues owing to her stony manner and questionable methods.
  • Amanda Arcuri plays a teenaged Ingrid in the episode "Take a Family History"
  • Peter Mark Kendall as Drs. Stephens Croft and Adam (birth name Adams) Croft, identical twin brothers, acting as infectious disease and functional medicine specialists at the clinic. Stephens, a Johns Hopkins graduate, is an emotionally withdrawn workaholic, while Adam, who attended Boston University, is more extroverted. They have a strained relationship because Adam is dating Stephens' ex-fiancée.
  • Inga Schlingmann as Dr. Sasha Lubbock, an affable specialist in immunology and rheumatology. An affable Texan, she was born in China and raised in Dallas. In Season 2, she is searching for her biological mother.
  • Ritchie Coster as Shinwell Johnson, a former criminal from London and an acquaintance of Holmes and Watson who works as the clinic's administrative aide, his connections often proving very useful to the team. In Season 2, he is training to be a nurse.
  • Rochelle Aytes as Dr. Mary Morstan, an East Coast surgeon and Watson's estranged wife. Despite their impending divorce, she maintains a productive working relationship with Watson, acting as his voice of sanity and attempting to rein in his more irregular techniques.

Recurring

  • Randall Park as Professor James Moriarty (season 1), a criminal mastermind and Sherlock Holmes' archenemy who re-emerges from his presumed death with a nefarious agenda
  • Kacey Rohl as Hannah Burke (season 1), Moriarty's subordinate who forces Shinwell to carry out her employer's bidding
  • Bethany Brown as Devin Chaplin, the Executive Vice President of Human Resources of UHOP
  • Amanda Crew as Lauren Confalone (season 2; guest season 1), a lawyer and Stephens' ex-fiancée who is engaged to Adam
  • Rachel Hayward as Detective Lestrade (season 2; guest season 1), a veteran Pittsburgh Police Department investigator who is initially skeptical of Watson's theories
  • Tika Sumpter as Laila Bynum (season 2; guest season 1), a pediatric oncologist treating Ashleigh Burke who forms a relationship with Watson
  • Robert Carlyle as Sherlock Holmes (season 2), a brilliant British consulting detective and Watson's best friend who was seemingly killed by Moriarty
  • Matt Berry voices an auditory hallucination of Holmes in the first season episode "Teeth Marks"
  • Noah Mills as Beck Wythe (season 2), a washed-up tech worker in exile from Silicon Valley who Ingrid meets at group therapy
  • John Cassini as Ivan Ferry (season 2), a group therapist who is treating Ingrid and Beck
  • Margot Bingham as Carlin DaCosta (season 2), a nurse who befriends Shinwell

Guest

  • Nat Faxon as Hobie McSorley, an experimental geneticist and old friend of Watson's with a colorful personality
  • Logan Mae as Ashleigh Burke (season 1), Hannah Burke's daughter who is sick and needs to be saved by Watson
  • Kiera Allen as Gigi Grigoryan, Ingrid's paraplegic sister. Beatrice Schneider plays a teenaged Gigi.
  • Whoopie Van Raam as Irene Adler, a con artist and the only woman ever to outwit Holmes who turns to Watson in a moment of desperation regarding her son
  • Sebastian Billingsley-Rodriguez as Angus Adler, Irene's young son who might be the offspring of Sherlock Holmes
  • Vincent Gale as Mycroft Holmes, Sherlock's reclusive older brother who previously crossed paths with Watson
  • Andy Bean as Ivo Derian, Ingrid and Gigi's father
  • Juanita Jennings as Elizabeth Morstan (season 2), Mary's mother who is admitted for accidental self poisoning after exhibiting dementia-like symptoms
  • Khary Payton as Miles McClung (season 2), a bakery owner who is discovered to be Elizabeth Morstan's first-born child, and thus, Mary's heretofore unknown older brother
  • Tzi Ma as Jun (season 2), Sasha's long lost birth uncle
  • Clarke Peters as Hamish Watson (season 2), a saxophonist who is John Watson's estranged father
  • Shannon Purser as Shannon, an AI chatbot

Episodes

Series overview

Season 1 (2025)

Season 2 (2025–26)

Production

Watson was announced in October 2022, to be created, written and produced by Craig Sweeny who had previously worked on Elementary. The show was given a straight to series order, bypassing the pilot stage.

By January 2024, Morris Chestnut was attached to executive produce and star as the title character. Executive producer Larry Teng directed the first two episodes. In May 2024, Peter Mark Kendall and Ritchie Coster were announced as the first core cast additions. In June 2024, Rochelle Aytes was cast as Mary Morstan, followed by Eve Harlow and Inga Schlingmann. By July 2025, Robert Carlyle was cast in a recurring role as Sherlock Holmes. He is set to appear in roughly eight episodes.

Watson began shooting in Vancouver in June 2024, with filming locations including The Bridge Studios and the University of British Columbia campus. The shoot concluded on November 22, 2024. The show is set in Pittsburgh, where some exterior scenes were shot. The series is scored by Paul Leonard-Morgan.

On March 26, 2025, CBS renewed the series for a second season, which was originally set to premiere in January 2026, but was moved up to October 13, 2025 due to CIA being delayed. Unlike the first season, no location shooting took place in Pittsburgh. Filming for the second season began on June 24, 2025 and concluded on March 9, 2026. Leonard-Morgan has revealed that the season will consist of 20 episodes. On March 27, 2026, CBS canceled the series after two seasons.

Release

The first episode had its worldwide premiere at MIPCOM Cannes on October 20, 2024. The series premiered on January 26, 2025, on CBS after the AFC Championship Game, and is streaming on Paramount+. The second season premiered on October 13, 2025. In Australia, the series airs on Network 10 and is streaming on Paramount+. In Canada, the series airs on Global and is streaming on StackTV. In the United Kingdom, it premiered on Sky Witness on November 24, 2025.

In Germany and Austria, the series premiered on Sky One from November 9, 2025.

Reception

Critical response

The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 50% approval rating based on 18 critic reviews. The website's critics consensus reads, "Transplanting Sherlock Holmes lore into a medical procedural, Watsons conceit proves an awkward fit but gets a boost from the ever-watchable Morris Chestnut." Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned a score of 54 out of 100 based on 16 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.

Ratings

Season 1

Season 2

Notes

References

External links