Sheriff Country

Friday dramas return: high-stakes and mid-siege

When CBS’ Friday dramas finally return, they’ll find tough times.
There’s a big blaze in “Fire Country” (there usually is) at 9 p.m., Feb. 27, a big case in “Blue Bloods” at 10. And a siege in “Sheriff Country,” at 8.
Yes, a siege, sort of like the old days of catapults and fireballs and such. In this case, the sheriff’s headquarters is being overwhelmed.
“It was a very carefully choreographed, staged area,” Morena Baccarin (shown here) told the Television Critics Association. “We had to … tell a very consistent story of being under siege, running out of ammo and having no radio connectivity to the outside world.” Read more…

In this small town, friends and neighbors collide

Life gets hectic in the fictional world of Edgewater.
Fires are fought, marijuana is grown, laws are broken. But alongside that are sturdy, everyday people and serene scenery.
That’s the setting for “Sheriff Country” (shown here) and “Fire Country,” at 8 and 9 p.m. Fridays on CBS. Both are from actor-writer Max Thieriot.
“What really inspired me to create ‘Fire Country’ was this opportunity to tell a story rooted in the community I grew up in,” Thieriot said by Zoom. “It’s about resilience, redemption, the human spirit.” Plus messier things. Read more…