Co-produced by Israeli broadcaster Kan 11, Apple will be premiering its upcoming Israel-Iran spy series ‘Tehran’ on September 25 worldwide, exclusively on Apple TV+ (via Deadline).

The eight-part series stars Israeli actress Niv Sultan as Tamar Rabinyan, a Mossad computer hacker-agent undertaking her very first mission in Iran’s capital. Tasked with disabling an Iranian nuclear reactor, Rabinyan’s mission has implications not just for the Middle East, but for the rest of the world.
Tehran also stars Iron Man actor Shaun Toub and Homeland‘s Navid Negahban, and was created and written by Moshe Zonder, who penned Netflix’s Fauda.
Dana Eden and Maor Kohn created the show alongside Zonder, while Omri Shenhar is also a writer. Daniel Syrkin directs the series, which is executive produced by Eden, Shula Spiegel, Alon Aranya, Julien Leroux, Peter Emerson and Eldad Koblenz.
Tehran is made by Donna Productions and Shula Spiegel Productions in association with Paper Plane Production
Apple will release the first three episodes of the espionage thriller before switching to weekly installments every Friday.
Other articles in the category: News
iPhone 14 Emergency SOS via Satellite Feature Saves Two Stranded Travellers in B.C.
Apple's Emergency SOS via Satellite feature last month helped rescue two stranded travellers in British Columbia in what authorities said was the first known use of the feature in the province — reports the Prince George Citizen. Emergency SOS via Satellite is a safety feature available on Apple's latest iPhone 14 lineup. It lets users...
Apple Making Tools to Let People Easily Build AR Apps–with Siri? [Report]
Apple reportedly wants an easy way for people to build augmented reality apps, that might even be assisted by the company’s Siri voice assistant, reports The Information. Unnamed sources say Apple plans to let Siri build an AR app when asked through its upcoming mixed-reality headset. These apps would then be able to submit to […]
Apple Using Tencent’s Blacklist to Block Websites in Hong Kong
According to a report by The Intercept, Apple is using Chinese company Tencent’s blacklist to block access to certain websites via Safari in Hong Kong. Last month, Apple users in Hong Kong trying to access the code-sharing website GitLab were presented with a warning that says the website is being blocked for their own safety. Safari’s “safe...