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Dewayne Perkins developing new Hulu comedy series

Published on 04/06/2026 Brooklyn Nine-Nine The Studio
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Stephen Curry producing a Hulu comedy series alongside a comedian best known for Brooklyn Nine-Nine — that's not a combination you see every day. Yet that's exactly what's taking shape right now. Dewayne Perkins is developing a brand-new untitled comedy series for Hulu, and the project already has enough creative firepower behind it to make it worth watching closely.

What we know about Dewayne Perkins' new Hulu project

The series centers on a genuinely fresh premise : a group of friends in their 30s who decide to let a group vote determine all of their romantic choices — essentially dating by jury. At the heart of the story are two best friends : the chaotically gay Denny and his straight counterpart Nelson. Their dynamic drives the plot as both characters navigate the messy process of finding new love, rebuilding confidence, and figuring out what comes next in their lives.

It's a setup that leans into contemporary anxieties around modern dating while keeping things firmly in comedy territory. The "group vote" mechanic gives the show a built-in social commentary angle without forcing it — and the Denny-Nelson friendship looks like it'll carry the emotional weight of the whole series.

Perkins is set to star in, write, and executive produce the project. That level of creative control is significant. It suggests Hulu is backing a genuine authorial vision here, not just a pitch developed by committee. Perkins brings real screen experience to the table : he appeared in The Blackening (2022) and had a recurring role in Brooklyn Nine-Nine, and more recently showed up in The Studio on Apple TV+.

Role Person / Entity
Star, writer & executive producer Dewayne Perkins
Executive producer Stephen Curry
Executive producer Erick Peyton
Executive producer Sharla Sumpter Bridgett
Production company Unanimous Media
Platform Hulu

According to Variety, Stephen Curry, Erick Peyton, and Sharla Sumpter Bridgett will executive produce via Unanimous Media, Curry's production company. Curry has been building out Unanimous Media's TV slate steadily since the company launched in 2018, and attaching it to a character-driven comedy like this one fits the company's broader focus on culturally resonant storytelling.

Production status and what's still unknown

Here's where we have to be straight with you : the project is still in early development. No casting beyond Perkins has been confirmed. No filming schedule has been announced. No release window exists yet — not even a rough one. And crucially, Hulu hasn't officially greenlit the series. Everything could still shift, whether that's the storyline, the creative team, or the project's very existence.

For context, we track streaming availability across platforms daily, and development announcements like this one regularly don't make it to air. That's just the reality of how TV gets made. A project moving from "in development" to actually landing on a platform involves a long chain of decisions, and any one of them can stall the process.

That said, the combination of factors here is encouraging. Consider what's already in place :

  • A writer-actor with proven TV credits steering the project creatively
  • An established production company (Unanimous Media) with industry relationships
  • A concept with clear audience appeal and a distinctive central dynamic
  • Hulu as the target platform, which has been expanding its original comedy output

Whether it eventually lands on Hulu — and potentially Disney+, which already shares content with Hulu in several markets — remains to be confirmed. But the building blocks are there.

Why this series deserves attention beyond the headlines

Dewayne Perkins isn't a newcomer riding a single breakout moment. His work across comedy and drama over the past several years shows range — from the ensemble comedy of Brooklyn Nine-Nine to the horror-comedy of The Blackening, which grossed over $18 million at the global box office on a limited budget. Moving into a creator role, with writing and producing credits alongside his performance, marks a clear career progression that Hulu is apparently willing to bet on.

The premise itself taps into something genuinely current. Dating as a group project — where friends hold collective veto power over each other's romantic choices — reflects how much of social life has become collaborative and externally validated, especially for people in their 30s navigating a second chapter after earlier relationships didn't stick. That's a rich vein for character comedy.

From our end, keeping tabs on what's coming to streaming platforms means we start paying attention to projects at exactly this stage. The earlier you know a show is in the pipeline, the better positioned you are to follow its journey from development to premiere. We'll be tracking any casting announcements, production updates, or greenlight confirmations as they surface. If this one moves forward, it has the shape of something that could land well — both on the platform and with audiences who've been waiting for a comedy that actually reflects how complicated modern relationships have become.