
Apple TV on Tuesday revealed a first look at season three of “Silo,” the hit, world-building drama created by Emmy Award winner Graham Yost, who also serves as showrunner, and starring and executive produced by Rebecca Ferguson. The 10-episode third season will premiere on Apple TV with the first episode on July 3, followed by one new episode every Friday through September 4, 2026.
Season three of “Silo” continues the saga of a dystopian society of 10,000 people living underground under mysterious circumstances, while revealing an origin story set centuries earlier. In the present, Juliette Nichols (Ferguson) survives her forced “cleaning” but returns with memory loss as the silo recovers from rebellion and faces a dangerous new threat. Meanwhile, in the “Before Times,” journalist Helen Drew (Jessica Henwick) and Congressman Daniel Keene (Ashley Zukerman) uncover a conspiracy that pulls them into a chain of events with catastrophic, irreversible consequences. The series is based on Hugh Howey’s New York Times bestselling trilogy, “Silo.”
The ensemble cast returning alongside Ferguson includes Common, Harriet Walter, Chinaza Uche, Avi Nash, Alexandria Riley, Shane McRae, Remmie Milner, Rick Gomez, Billy Postlethwaite and Clare Perkins. Joining the cast for season three are Zukerman and Henwick, who appeared in the season two finale, along with Laura Innes, Jessica Brown Findlay, Morven Christie, Reed Birney and Matt Craven, with Colin Hanks set to recur. Steve Zahn will also return.
Already renewed for a fourth and final season, “Silo” continues to captivate audiences worldwide, earning praise as “genuinely brilliant,” “immensely satisfying” and “one of the best sci-fi TV shows today.” Catch up on the complete first and second seasons, now streaming globally on Apple TV.
“Silo” is produced by Apple Studios. The series is executive produced by Yost, Michael Dinner, Nina Jack, Joanna Thapa, Ferguson, Morten Tyldum, Howey, Amber Templemore, Fred Golan, Rémi Aubuchon, and AMC Studios.
Apple TV offers premium, compelling drama and comedy series, feature films, groundbreaking documentaries, and kids and family entertainment, and is available to watch across all of a user’s favorite screens. After its launch on November 1, 2019, Apple TV became the first all-original streaming service to launch around the world, and has premiered more original hits and received more award recognitions faster than any other streaming service in its debut. To date, Apple Original films, documentaries and series have been honored with 797 wins and 3,429 award nominations and counting, including multi-Emmy Award-winning and history-making comedies “The Studio” and “Ted Lasso,” global cultural phenomenon “Severance,” Apple’s most-viewed drama “Pluribus,” Academy Award Best Picture winner “CODA” and Academy Award winner “F1,” the highest-grossing sports feature of all time.
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Cool! That city isn’t DC nor NYC in the trailer video. Rather, looks like Ohio or anywhere just east of the Mississippi down to Louisiana, difficult to say, but somewhere near a decently sized US city that has resources to support and aid in building out the Silo’s, yet not so major to be blown to smithereens by nuclear war. Clearly, the city was hit, but not buy a massive nuke, and perhaps only once. The nearby Silo’s surviving as intended…
I’m guessing somewhere in Louisiana, as that was the 18th state, and our illustrious key is 18, and that is where the House rep. was working and represented I believe?
Seems our House Rep doesn’t look so rep-y-ish anymore. Looks more like he grabbed his Journo would-have-been girlfriend and is taking her to a Silo as the world as we know it collapses around us…
Butler us ask the real questions. How can a rep. from Louisiana, and a leftist Oregon Duck Journalist really make it together to pull off the starting of Silo 18 as its leaders? Simple answer: That would never work. And thus, we know this is 100% fiction. ; )