Friday Night Lights Season 3, Ep. 1 "I Knew You When"

5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
NBC Season Premiere--a time of uncertainty--Brian "Smash" Williams (Gaius Charles) has graduated and the start of the new school year has Coach Taylor (Kyle Chandler) uncertain about the strength of his team.
  • Starring: Kyle Chandler, Connie Britton
  • Directed by: Jeffrey Reiner
  • Runtime: 47 minutes
  • Original air date: January 16, 2009
  • Network: Peter Berg
 
 
 
 

Amazon Instant Video

Buy this episode

1-Click® $1.99

Buy Season 3

1-Click® $17.99
 
 
 
 
 
 
[Send us Feedback]
Have a promotion code? View Balance
Available SeasonsTV:
1234567890
HD TV:
1234567890
Get the Entire Season
You save $7.88
Buy Season 3 with 1-Click® $17.99
 
 
 
 
Watch other Episodes from Season 3
To buy multiple episodes, select the check box on the right and click Buy selected episodes
Buy selected episodes with 1-Click®
 
  Episode   Original Air Date
Synopsis
    Price  
1. I Knew You When
  January 16, 2009
NBC Season Premiere--a time of uncertainty--Brian "Smash" Williams (Gaius Charles) has graduated and the start of the new school year has Coach Taylor (Kyle Chandler) uncertain about the strength of his team.
 
NOW PLAYING
$1.99  
 
2. Tami Knows Best
  January 23, 2009
Emancipation--Smash (Gaius Charles) struggles with his confidence on the field as Coach Taylor (Kyle Chandler) preps him for college tryouts.
  $1.99  
 
3. How The Other Half Lives
  January 30, 2009
Under pressure--The pressure builds for Coach Taylor (Kyle Chandler) to make some changes to his team for an upcoming game.
  $1.99  
 
4. Hello, Goodbye
  February 6, 2009
Leaving it all behind--Tyra (Adrianne Palicki) gets wooed by Cash (Zach Roerig), the new bad boy rodeo star in town and says goodbye to her relationship with Landry (Jesse Plemons).
  $1.99  
 
5. Every Rose Has Its Thorn
  February 13, 2009
Big ideas, big decisions--Tyra's (Adrianne Palicki) new love, Cash (guest star Zach Roerig), seems to be the man of her dreams but that quickly changes when his dark side comes to light.
  $1.99  
 
6. It Ain't Easy Being J.D. McCoy
  February 20, 2009
Welcome to the team--New quarterback J.D. McCoy (guest star Jeremy Sumpter) becomes a victim of freshman hazing but begins to win the respect of the town and his team after he wins his first game.
  $1.99  
 
7. Keeping Up Appearances
  February 27, 2009
J.D. McCoy struggles as the new starting quarterback.
  $1.99  
 
8. New York, New York
  March 6, 2009
Jason Street puts everything on the line to be with his family.
  $1.99  
 
9. Game Of The Week
  March 13, 2009
The pressure is on when the Panthers' playoff game is chosen as the High School game of the week.
  $1.99  
 
10. The Giving Tree
  March 20, 2009
Lyla loses faith in her father after he loses her college fund.
  $1.99  
 
11. A Hard Rain's Gonna Fall
  March 27, 2009
Lyla's relationship with her father quickly breaks down.
  $1.99  
 
12. Underdogs
  April 3, 2009
The friendship between the Taylors and McCoys disintegrates.
  $1.99  
 
13. Tomorrow Blues
  April 10, 2009
Changes come along as life goes on in Dillon.
  $1.99  
 
 
 
New to Amazon Instant Video? Instantly watch thousands of movies and TV shows. Learn more. Watch on your computer or on your TV with one of our compatible devices.



Product Details
Episode 1, "I Knew You When"
Synopsis: NBC Season Premiere--a time of uncertainty--Brian "Smash" Williams (Gaius Charles) has graduated and the start of the new school year has Coach Taylor (Kyle Chandler) uncertain about the strength of his team.
Original air date: January 16, 2009
Runtime: 47 minutes
ASIN: B001OHU9VS
Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #72,843 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
Friday Night Lights Season 3
Synopsis: Expanding on the hit feature film "Friday Night Lights," this poignant series centers on the small rural town of Dillon, Texas, where the coveted state football championship rings are held in the highest regard.
Starring: Kyle Chandler, Connie Britton
Supporting actors: Zach Gilford, Minka Kelly, Taylor Kitsch, Adrianne Palicki, Jesse Plemons, Scott Porter, Aimee Teegarden, Tony Bottorff, Justin Brown, Karina Clark, David Cowgill, Tim Crowley, Blue Deckert, Preston Flagg, Scott Jefferies, Tamara Jolaine, Caleb Landry Jones, Kate Krause, Denise Lee, Brad Leland
Creator: Peter Berg
Season year: 2009
Genre: Drama, Sport
Executive producer: Sarah Aubrey
Network: Peter Berg
ASIN: B001OI08DG
Rights & Requirements
Purchase rights: Stream instantly and download to 2 locations. Details
Compatible with: Mac and Windows PC online viewing, compatible instant streaming devices, TiVo DVRs. System requirements
Format: Amazon Instant Video (streaming online video and digital download)

Also available on DVD

Video Format Details

Online Viewing

PC Download

TiVo box

Portable device

View instantly from any PC or Mac with a broadband connection
Episode ready to watch in about 20 minutes*
Episode ready to watch in about 20 minutes*
Episode ready to transfer in about 20 minutes*
* Your download times may vary--estimates shown are for a typical DSL connection (1.5 Mbits/sec).


 

Customer Reviews

1 Review
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)
 
 
 
 
Share your thoughts with other customers:
Most Helpful Customer Reviews

11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Best Season Yet of FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS, January 14, 2009
This review is from: Friday Night Lights Season 3 (Amazon Instant Video)
This is a no spoilers review. Anyone who is planning on watching this in the winter NBC schedule will not want warnings about what is going to happen. Those of us who have caught it on DirecTV were delighted and stunned. I'm going to try to be fairly nonspecific and most of the plot details that I discuss will occur in the first episode, so not much will be revealed. The review does assume that you've seen Seasons One and Two. If you have not seen those, this review will contain some spoilers.

Season Two of FNL was great, especially the second half of the season, but all in all it was hurt for two reasons. First, there was the rather melodramatic killing of Tyra's stalker by Landry Clarke. Pretty close to universally fans objected to this, though most also enjoyed the time that Tyra and Landry were forced to spend together as a result. Second, the series was hurt by the writer's strike, with the series ending uneasily with Smash being unable to play football for several games. Other fans complained of Lyla's sojourn as a born again Christian and how whiney Julie was in the first half of the season. Along the way, however, there has been a host of marvelous storylines. I gave Season Two five stars without any hesitation, though I also was the first to admit that it wasn't the work of perfection that Season One was.

Frankly, based on pure business considerations, FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS should have been cancelled at the end of Season Two. The ratings were just miserable. And despite every TV critic in America just going crazy over the show (I honestly prefer it to THE WIRE and THE SHIELD), it curiously has not garnered any awards attention. How is it possible that Connie Britton has not won a couple of Emmys for Best Actress (no one can seriously tell me that Sally Field has been a better television actress than Britton over the past two years)? Why no awards for Kyle Chandler? Why has Adrianne Palicki's astonishing work as Tyra Collette gone unrecognized by the awards? Omissions like this are an indictment of the awards themselves. And why has FNL not received two straight nominations for Best Drama? It is simply absurd that it has not.

Miraculously, NBC did something uncharacteristic for a major network: it found a way to save a show that deserved saving. They worked a deal with DirecTV to show the 13 episodes of Season 3 in the fall of 2008 with NBC showing the show in the winter of 2009. Kudos to NBC! I have been horrified by some recent decisions by the majors. How ABC could even have considered canceling a masterpiece like PUSHING DASIES, let alone doing it, is simply inconceivable. And how NBC, despite the very good thing it did in saving FNL, imagines that it is doing quality TV a service by gutting five hours of scripted TV next year so that we can get stuck with the repellant Jay Leno is unimaginable. Still, I wish more networks would take the effort that NBC did to save their best shows.

Right now there is no word on whether there will be a Season Four of FNL. My assumption is that after some of the ratings for the winter come in, NBC and DirecTV will sit down and figure out whether they want to do this again. If they do, the format is difficult to predict. There are a few major changes on the show, but within specifying what those are, there will clearly need to be a decision as to whether to stick with the kids who have graduated from Dillon High or keep Coach Taylor in high school football with a new group of players. Personally, I've been hoping that the main kids go to the same college, where Taylor will be named the new head football coach. But if there is no Season Four, they have left Season Three in a place to where it can serve as a series finale. The final two episodes are brilliant summations of everything wonderful that we've cared about for three years.

Season Three is, in my opinion, the best yet. Nearly ever major character has some wonderful story arcs. Because of budgetary considerations and also perhaps the pressure of giving all the characters enough time with only 13 episodes, two major characters has to be written out of the show, though each one gets a several-episode arc to say goodbye. Those two are Smash Williams and Jason Street. Given that both have graduated from Dillon, this was a logical change. Also apparently for reasons of time and budget Santiago, who in Season Two was living with Buddy Garrity, simply disappears with no comment. But the other familiar are back. Season Two ended with Tim Riggins ardently pursuing Lyla Garrity, Tyra and Landry dating as an official couple, and Julie pining for Matt. All those relationships get shaken up (though I won't say in what ways). But nothing is so completely shaken up as Coach Taylor's involvement with the new school principal. And nothing is so funny as the new principal coming to terms with two simple words, "Jumbo Tron."

I especially enjoyed Tyra's arc in Season Three. If you rewatch Season One of FNL, it is clear that early on they didn't quite know what to do with Tyra. Adrianne Palicki, who plays Tyra, is an amazing beauty with incredible onscreen charisma, but for the first three-quarters of Season One she is just in the show simply because she is. She is not integrated into any of the show's major storylines. But once Tami Taylor takes an interest in her (fascinatingly, just shortly after she had forbade her daughter to be friends with her), we get one of the best stories of an individual coming to desire a better life and doing something to achieve it that I've ever seen on TV. And I'll slightly break my promise not to reveal any spoilers by stating that one of the entire highlights in all of FNL comes in the next to last episode where Tyra reads aloud her college application essay. It is as moving a moment as you'll encounter on television and it also marks just how far Tyra's character has come since Season One. And along with Tyra you get her endlessly fascinating relationship with Landry Clarke. If you don't like their relationship one week, check back the next. The tension between his never ceasing adoration of her and her flittering back and forth between valuing him for all his outstanding qualities and her reign as the queen of mixed signals produces many of the show's best moments. And any conversation that the two actors have is special.

This is a season filled with surprises, a plethora of marvelous small moments, a few heartbreaks, and a few shocks. I've gotten about eight or nine people to watch this show and every one of them has become a passionate lover of it. If you already love the show, you'll love this great, great and hopefully not final season as much as the first two.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No

Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
 
 
 
Only search this product's reviews



Production Stills
  • Production Stills:

Tags Customers Associate with This Product

 (What's this?)
Click on a tag to find related items, discussions, and people.
 
(1)

Your tags: Add your first tag
 

Customer Discussions

This product's forum
Discussion Replies Latest Post
No discussions yet

Ask questions, Share opinions, Gain insight
Start a new discussion
Topic:
First post:
Prompts for sign-in
 


Active discussions in related forums
Search Customer Discussions
Search all Amazon discussions
   
Related forums


Get photos, fun facts, and filmographies for Friday Night Lights from The Internet Movie Database, the biggest and best movie and TV site on the planet.

Subscribe to Screening Room to get the latest on Amazon Instant Video delivered to your e-mail inbox weekly. Sign Up

By placing your order, you agree to our Terms of Use.  Sold by Amazon Digital Services, Inc.  Additional taxes may apply.
Amazon Video On Demand Privacy Statement Amazon Video On Demand Shipping Information Amazon Video On Demand Returns & Exchanges