Brooke Shields’ ‘You’re Killing Me’ Episode Titles and Full Release Schedule Revealed
Acorn TV has a new cozy mystery on its hands, and early buzz suggests it might be the streaming service’s most charming original in years. ‘You’re Killing Me’ premiered on May 18, 2026, exclusively on Acorn TV in North America, kicking off a six-episode first season with a weekly release schedule and new episodes arriving every Monday.
The show arrives at a moment when audiences are deeply hungry for smart, character-driven mysteries that prioritize wit alongside whodunit. The series was created by Robin Bernheim Burger and stars Brooke Shields, who also serves as an executive producer, alongside Amalia Williamson and Golden Globe-nominated Tom Cavanagh.
The ‘You’re Killing Me’ Episode Titles You Need to Know
One of the most fun things about a serialized mystery is how much a single episode title can tease. Season one opens with Episode 1, titled “The Beginning,” in which Allie investigates the suspicious death of a close friend while clashing with Detective Jack Kerrigan and ambitious podcaster Andi Walker.
Following that debut, Episode 2 is titled “The Wedding,” Episode 3 is “The Copycat,” Episode 4 is “The Front Window,” and Episode 5 is “The Perfect Alibi.” The sixth and final episode of the season has yet to receive a publicly confirmed title (“The Road Trip” is the rumored title), building intrigue for how the show plans to close out its debut run.
Each title feels deliberately crafted to evoke classic mystery fiction, which fits perfectly given the show’s literary protagonist. The nod to Hitchcock’s ‘Rear Window’ in “The Front Window” is a knowing wink to genre enthusiasts that the creative team is working with intention.
The Full Acorn TV Release Schedule
For viewers who prefer to track their watchlist like a proper investigation board, here is the full weekly breakdown. New episodes of ‘You’re Killing Me’ air every Monday on Acorn TV, running until the season finale on June 22, 2026.
Episode 3, “The Copycat,” premieres on June 1, followed by Episode 4, “The Front Window,” on June 8, and Episode 5, “The Perfect Alibi,” on June 15, with the finale landing on June 22. That gives viewers a clean six-week run of Monday night mystery content, which is an ideal rhythm for a show built on suspense and slow reveals.
Viewers can also access ‘You’re Killing Me’ through the Acorn TV Prime Video Channel and the Acorn TV Apple TV Channel for those who prefer streaming through those services. The multi-platform availability reflects how Acorn has smartly widened its reach beyond its core subscriber base.
Brooke Shields and a Cast Built for the Genre
The central trio is drawing as much attention as the mysteries themselves. Shields plays Allie Chandler, a bestselling detective novelist living in the charming small town of Founder’s Cove, Maine, who is also a divorced mom with a grown son and a tendency to make poor romantic choices. Comparisons to Angela Lansbury’s iconic Jessica Fletcher in ‘Murder She Wrote’ have been immediate and are clearly intentional.

Amalia Williamson’s Andi Walker functions as the series’ emotional anchor, younger and digitally native, armed with podcast production skills and forensic curiosity, while her pairing with Allie generates genuine dynamism as the two characters bring very different skill sets to each investigation.
Tom Cavanagh’s Detective Jack is described by the actor himself as a big-city transplant confronting the peculiar reality that more people seem to die in this small town than one would reasonably expect, keeping his plate very full. That self-aware humor is exactly the kind of energy that elevates cozy mysteries above their more formulaic counterparts.
Behind the Scenes of This Acorn TV Original
The production itself has a compelling backstory. The series began production in September 2025 in Nova Scotia, Canada, produced by award-winning Topsail Entertainment and award-winning Toronto-based Shaftesbury, with Acorn TV backing the project as an original. The show’s working title before its official branding was “Allie and Andi,” which tells you everything about where the creative heart of the series lives.
Amalia Williamson’s casting was announced in a memorable moment when she learned the news via a live Zoom call with Brooke Shields herself, a detail that generated genuine warmth online and set the tone for the kind of production this would be.
Critics have noted that Shields carries the material with good humor, and that the show leans confidently into its Hallmark-adjacent aesthetic while adding enough edge to feel distinct from pure comfort viewing. Rotten Tomatoes audience response has been encouraging, with viewers citing the chemistry between the three leads as the primary reason to tune in.
Where to Watch and What to Expect
For new subscribers hesitant to commit, the barrier to entry is deliberately low. Acorn TV offers a free trial for new subscribers, meaning viewers can create an account and stream ‘You’re Killing Me’ during the trial period, with the free trial also available through select Prime Video and Apple TV channel subscriptions.
Each episode runs approximately 44 minutes, and the show is classified as a scripted drama-comedy-crime hybrid, which accurately captures the tonal balancing act the series is attempting across its six-episode season.
Rotten Tomatoes critics offered a qualified endorsement, recommending the show on the strength of the chemistry between Shields, Williamson, and Cavanagh, and acknowledging that the series delivers genuine comedic moments alongside its mystery plotting. For fans of shows like ‘Death in Paradise’ or ‘Midsomer Murders,’ this one sits comfortably in that same conversational orbit.
Whether ‘You’re Killing Me’ earns a second season will likely depend on whether Acorn TV sees enough subscriber engagement to justify another run in Founder’s Cove, so if you want more Allie and Andi solving murders together on Monday nights, this is absolutely the moment to show up and watch. Do you think Brooke Shields has found her defining television role with Allie Chandler, or does the show still need to prove itself by the time the finale drops on June 22?

