Bestselling detective novelist Allie Chandler is living the dream in this cozy mystery series. She’s rich, beautiful, beloved by fans of her Selena St. Cloud books, and has a sprawling, gray-shingled home overlooking the charming small town of Founder’s Cove, Maine. She’s also one of us — the divorced mom of a grown son, and a bit of a klutz who makes poor romantic choices and gets tongue-tied around her crush. Her latest book is Love is Murder, if that tells you anything.
Played by Gen X icon Brooke Shields, You’re Killing Me‘s Allie has more than a little in common with Jessica Fletcher (Angela Lansbury) of Murder She Wrote, the classic TV series about another bestselling novelist living in another charming small town in Maine with a surprisingly high murder rate. Unlike Jessica, Allie has a partner in solving crime. In the premiere of this six-episode series, she meets aspiring writer/podcaster Andi (Amalia Williamson), a Zillennial (that’s a young Millennial closer to Gen Z), but they aren’t exactly instant besties.
TV Insider spoke with the duo in November of 2025 on location in a coastal village near Halifax, Nova Scotia, where they were shooting the fifth episode. Shields says that at this point in the series, the women’s relationship “has definitely grown from adversarial and slightly contentious to a closeness that still has its ups and downs and humorous bits, but you really do feel how deeply they do care about each other and need from each other and learn from each other.”
Williamson says, “They’re so different in so many ways at the beginning and then as they work more closely together, they discover just how much they need each other to succeed.”

Mike Tompkins/AcornTV
The generation gap delivers plenty of laughs, like Allie telling Andi that her coffee order at local spot the Mermaid’s Mug is “longer than my third marriage.” And it spills into real life, although in a much more lighthearted way. Williamson reports that she’s had to replace Shields’ iPhone cover for her and says affectionately to her castmate, “You showed me a picture of a giraffe yesterday in the car and your flashlight was on.” Shields cracks up and insists of her frequent comical ineptitude with tech, “It’s not a bit! The same stuff that she complains about me as Andi to Allie is the same stuff my daughters complain to me about.”
In the premiere, Allie’s dated phone gets some derision from Andi, who’s come to her book signing to get a copy autographed for her grandma. She calls the successful author’s life’s work “escapist Boomer fiction.” Allie, in turn, is dismissive of the younger’s podcast (she later calls it a “pod show”) about the Long Island Slayer. But then an old friend of Allie’s is murdered, and the two women realize that by combining their individual strengths they can solve the case.
“In this series, we get to explore what it’s like to have a different point of view, but to deal with it with humor and love,” says Robin Bernheim, a veteran TV scribe who executive produces along with Shields and wrote the role of Allie for her longtime friend. The two first worked together in 1992 on an episode of Quantum Leap. When Shields came out for the shoot, she stayed with Bernheim, who reports that she was told by the series’ powers-that-be, “You be in charge of her because she’s from New York and she doesn’t know her way around — and don’t let her drive.” The pair hung out for the weekend and “went to the beach and she’s just the loveliest person. Honestly, somebody you root for,” Bernheim says. The two kept in touch off and on, and recently did the 2024 Netflix film, Mother of the Bride.
As for this new project, Bernheim sees the cross-generational banter and misunderstandings echoing shows she admires like Gilmore Girls and Hacks but says the series’ cozy tone is a bit nostalgic. “This is just such a flashback to the shows I started with in the mid ’80s — Remington Steel, the original Matlock. Maybe we just need a little escapism. It’s so much fun to write them and to write strong females,” Bernheim says.
In the case-of-the-week format Allie and Andi frequently cross paths with handsome Jack Kerrigan (Tom Cavanagh), the new lead detective of the local police department. “Jack’s from a big city. He’s coming in and he meets these people. There’s more people dying than one would expect in this small town. It keeps his plate full,” Cavanagh says. Despite the milieu of stabbings, stranglings, and poisonings, a (non-toxic) chemistry develops between Jack and Allie that he acknowledges before she does. “A murder mystery that also has a romantic storyline is catnip for me,” Cavanagh says.
Besides the ongoing will-they-or-won’t-they attraction, the other major story arc that lasts throughout the season — and comes to a dramatic conclusion in the finale — concerns Andi’s mom, who vanished without a trace when Andi was a child 15 years ago.
“Her biggest struggle is trusting people enough to let them in because her mom left her,” Williamson says. “It’s hard to form meaningful connections because she’s worried that they’re going to abandon her.”
That explains Andi’s sometimes shocking prickliness early on. Allie can’t help but step into a maternal role, but the mothering goes both ways. When Shields and Williamson head back to set, it’s to shoot a scene when Jack arrests the murderer in their latest case. The wind has picked up and Shields’ auburn curls blow wildly as Allie beats herself up for not catching a clue sooner while Andi reassures her. As Shields has just reflected, “[Allie learns] from this younger person to be kinder to herself, trust herself more, give herself a break, and not have to be perfect.” It’s no mystery everyone wants a friend like that.
You’re Killing Me, Series Premiere, Monday, May 18, Acorn TV
More Headlines:
- ‘Nemesis’: That Bombshell Ending Explained — Matthew Law & Y’lan Noel Talk Season 2 (VIDEO)
- ‘You’re Killing Me’: Brooke Shields & Amalia Williamson Introduce New, Humorous Investigative Duo
- When Will ‘Family Guy’ Return for Season 25? Everything We Know So Far
- Nancy Guthrie Case: Sheriff Chris Nanos Confirms Evidence is Being Withheld From Public
- ‘Today’s Sheinelle Jones Thanks Fans After Recent Career Achievement



(0) comments
Welcome to the discussion.
Log In
Keep it Clean. Please avoid obscene, vulgar, lewd, racist or sexually-oriented language.
PLEASE TURN OFF YOUR CAPS LOCK.
Don't Threaten. Threats of harming another person will not be tolerated.
Be Truthful. Don't knowingly lie about anyone or anything.
Be Nice. No racism, sexism or any sort of -ism that is degrading to another person.
Be Proactive. Use the 'Report' link on each comment to let us know of abusive posts.
Share with Us. We'd love to hear eyewitness accounts, the history behind an article.