Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Entertainment
  3. Audio / Video
  4. News

Halle Berry sci-fi series Extant pulled by CBS

Add as a preferred source on Google

Halle Berry’s recent stint on the small screen will be coming to an end as CBS has confirmed the cancellation of her sci-fi drama Extant, reports Deadline.

The show, which premiered in 2014, is executive produced by Steven Spielberg. It follows the story of astronaut Molly Woods (Halle Berry) who mysteriously returns home pregnant after a 13-month solo mission in space. Yes, solo.

Recommended Videos

CBS had initially acquired the show following a bidding war, and gave it a straight-to-series order. The network confirmed the cancellation just a month after season two ended.

Glenn Geller, President of CBS Entertainment, noted that the second season of the show had an “exciting and fitting conclusion” for the series.

Related: The latest project from The Good Wife creators, BrainDead, just got a straigt-to-series order 

In addition to airing on CBS, Extant has been available to Amazon Prime subscribers, where it has reportedly garnered a healthy audience.

This marks the second major summer show that CBS has cancelled thus far this year, the other being Under the Dome. Like Extant, Under the Dome reportedly also performed quite well on Amazon. Both series saw episodes made available on Amazon four days after they aired on traditional TV. They join the growing list of TV shows that seem to work far better in the binge-watching streaming world versus traditional network TV.

CBS, meanwhile, has picked up BrainDead, a horror/comedy from the creators of The Good Wife, and CBS’ other big summer series Zoo has been confirmed to continue.

This does not, however, mark an end to Berry’s relationship with CBS: the Hollywood A-lister has already signed on to executive produce an upcoming drama for the network called Legalease. That show will follow the story of a biracial lawyer who ends up partnered with a lawyer from the “old white boy” club for a case, dealing with a number of biases to which we’ve all become familiar. There’s no word on whether Berry will also star in the show.

Christine Persaud
Christine has decades of experience in trade and consumer journalism. While she started her career writing exclusively about…
This true story thriller is one of the 3 underrated Netflix shows you should watch this weekend (July 17-19)
An apocalypse comedy, an Icelandic mystery, and a true crime hit make this week's picks.
legends-underrated-netflix-tv-shows

I've done the heavy lifting this week to bring you a hand-picked selection of the best Netflix TV series that are actually worth your time. This weekend presents a fantastic opportunity to explore three exceptional hidden gems. Ranging from thoughtful animated comedies to eerie Nordic mysteries and tense crime dramas, these underrated Netflix TV series deliver original storytelling. So grab your favorite snacks and get ready to binge-watch.

We also have guides to the best new movies to stream, the best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Hulu, the best free movies, and the best movies on Amazon Prime Video.

Read more
Netflix says it has used AI in over 300 titles and there’s no stopping it now
AI in hollywood is no longer just en experiment.
Netflix on TV couple watching

The Hollywood argument over whether AI belongs in film and television production may already have been overtaken by reality. Netflix has confirmed that its creative partners used generative AI workflows across roughly 300 titles in 2026, with the largest concentration of work happening during post-production.

Keep in mind this number describes AI-assisted production workflows and not 300 completely machine-generated films and shows. Regardless, it does show how quickly the technology has moved beyond isolated experiments.

Read more
Spotify’s new conversational AI can play tracks you request and answer your music questions
A ChatGPT-like AI feature is coming to Spotify for music requests and listening-history questions
spotify

Spotify is rolling out a new AI-powered conversational feature that lets Premium users talk directly to the app about what they want to hear. Users can type or speak a request and refine the results through follow-up questions instead of manually searching for a song, podcast, or audiobook.

The feature is available from Spotify’s Home and Now Playing screens and works much like a personal audio assistant. It can choose what plays, answer questions about the current track or album, recommend something new, and look through your listening history to provide more personalized responses.

Read more