You Season 4 will return sooner than expected

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The chilling psychological suspense novel You will be making a move that is so Joe Goldberg by returning earlier than anticipated. This Thanksgiving, viewers of the wildly popular Netflix series starring Penn Badgley and based on the works of Caroline Kepnes have a lot to be thankful for thanks to the announcement that Season 4 will premiere one day earlier than anticipated. When it debuts this February, just in time for Valentine’s Day, You Season 4 is shaping up to be another smash due to the growing anticipation following some extremely bizarre events in Season 3.

According to a TV Insider update posted on Thursday, Netflix said that the first episode of the future season of You will air on Thursday, February 9, 2023, and the second episode will air exactly one month later, on Thursday, March 9, 2023. Following the events of Season 3 where Joe ended his marriage to Love Quinn as a result of his most recent obsession with librarian Marienne Bellamy (Tati Gabrielle), he travels abroad under the guise of Professor Jonathan Moore. Moving to London for Marienne, Joe develops an obsession with Kate, the director of an art gallery, as a result of his roving voyeuristic gaze and sadistic romanticism.

Although little is known about what Season 4 of the hot series will bring when it returns this winter, a previous teaser confirmed a new aspect of Joe’s life would be explored, including his membership in a group of wealthy socialites, many of whom will undoubtedly receive the scathing, frequently signature sarcastic criticism from Joe. However, when the Londoners claim they are being targeted by a killer who is killing them one by one, it appears that Joe is returning to his detective methods to uncover the perpetrator of the horrible crimes in a manner reminiscent of another dark anti-hero, Dexter Morgan.

Ritchie, an actress well known for her work on BBC One’s Ghosts, will be joining Badgley this season. The 33-year-old star described the part as “difficult” and “exciting” in an earlier interview with the Radio Times. “I haven’t found something as challenging for a really long. Actually, I always find it difficult it’s a boring refrain that the people close to me have to hear me say I never quite feel like I can do it. But particularly this one, because the character is, and because the show is, very glossy, and often everyone looks really good and well-dressed all of this emphasis on that stuff.”

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