Preview:
- The trailer for the ‘Ted’ TV series is online.
- It’s set in the 1990s, before the two ‘Ted’ movies.
- From creator Seth MacFarlane, the show will premiere on Peacock in January.
Not content with dominating the televised animation landscape with shows such as ‘Family Guy’ and ‘American Dad’, Seth MacFarlane has also made movies, with the ‘Ted’ films –– about a foul-mouthed toy (voiced by MacFarlane) who is best friends with John Bennett (played in the movies by Mark Wahlberg).
MacFarlane is now bringing the character and his story to his small-screen stomping grounds via a new Peacock prequel series, also titled ‘Ted’.
The first trailer for the show is now online, and you can watch it above.
10057405What’s the Story of ‘Ted’?

While the movies do kick off with young John Bennett wishing his favorite toy could talk, the new show will fill in some of the storytelling gaps.
It’s 1993, and Ted the bear’s (Seth MacFarlane) moment of fame has passed. He’s now living back home in Framingham, Massachusetts with his best friend, 16-year-old John Bennett (Max Burkholder), along with John’s parents, Matty and Susan (MacFarlane regular Scott Grimes and Alanna Ubach) and cousin Blaire (Giorgia Whigham).
Ted may be a lousy influence on John, but at the end of the day, he’s a loyal pal who’s always willing to go out on a limb for friendship.
Related Article: Every Seth MacFarlane TV Show, Ranked From ‘Family Guy’ to ‘The Orville’
Seth MacFarlane and His Team Talk About the Show

MacFarlane, along with co-showrunners Brad Walsh and Paul Corrigan, issued the following statement about the new series:
“Each generation develops its own unique artistic style, its own way of seeing the world. In the twenties, it was the subversive musical phrasings of jazz. In the fifties, it was the bold brushwork of the abstract expressionists. Our generation’s unique art is streaming content based on previously successful intellectual property. In that proud tradition, we humbly give you ‘Ted’. Our series is a prequel to the Ted movies. It takes place in the nineties but is based on the timeless truth that being sixteen sucks. The only thing that makes it tolerable is going through it with a friend, even if that friend is a has-been magical teddy bear with a foul mouth and a proclivity for drug use. The three of us were teenagers in the nineties and grew up in and around Boston, where the show takes place, so many of these stories are personal for us. We were able to put the characters through some of the same indignities and milestones we experienced back then. Also, we made stuff up (it’s a lot of pages to fill and real life is mostly boring).”
When Will ‘Ted’ Be On Screens?

Peacock is premiering the series on January 11th.

Other Movies Similar to ‘Ted’:
- ‘The Other Guys‘ (2010)
- ‘Ted‘ (2012)
- ‘A Million Ways to Die in the West‘ (2014)
- ‘Ted 2‘ (2015)
- ‘Get Hard‘ (2015)
- ‘Good Boys‘ (2019)
- ‘Me Time‘ (2022)
- ‘Teddy’s Christmas‘ (2023)
- ‘No Hard Feelings‘ (2023)
Buy ‘Ted’ Movies On Amazon
At a loss for what to watch this week? From new DVDs and Blu-rays, to what’s streaming on Netflix, we’ve got you covered.
Maybe all Coen Bros. movies should inspire new TV shows. Season 2 of this instant classic series stars Kirsten Dunst, Patrick Wilson, Jesse Plemons, Jean Smart, and Ted Danson, and the fun is ending with Episode 10, “Palindrome,” on December 14. Check out why it just got some “The Expanse” (Monday on Syfy at 10 p.m.)
Thunder buddies for life? Not for audiences, at least.
A foul-mouthed, pot-smoking teddy bear was pretty funny the first time. The second time? Not so much. “Ted” seems to have been playing on permanent rotation on cable for the past three years, and instead of whetting appetites for a sequel, it seems to have worn out the bear’s welcome.
Since the first “Ted” opened, MacFarlane has hosted the Oscars — to decidedly mixed reviews — and wrote, directed and starred in last summer’s “A Million Ways to Die in the West,” which was universally panned and topped out at $43.1 million — about $11 million less than “Ted” earned upon its opening weekend.
Well, sort of.
Or at least a zoo, with the poor bear fighting not just genetically-enhanced dinosaurs at the box office, but also emotions inside a little girl’s head. “Ted 2” faced the one-two punch of over-performers “Jurassic World” and “Inside Out” this weekend, competition that the first film didn’t have to face. A strong argument can be made for “Ted 2’s” audience getting lost on their pay to see “Jurassic” and “IO” again.
This summer, anyway. 

