Apple TV will stream two brand‑new Peanuts productions and two classic series between late June and July 2026, expanding its family‑friendly catalog with Camp Snoopy S2, a restored 1988 miniseries, the full Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show run, and a new adventure short titled There’s No Place Like Home.
Apple TV adds four new Peanuts titles for the summer lineup
Apple TV continues to build on its reputation as the exclusive home for Peanuts content. Starting late June and running through the end of July, the service will debut two original productions and revive two classic series, giving fans both fresh stories and a chance to revisit the beloved cartoons of the 1980s.

New releases
| Release date | Title | Type |
|---|---|---|
| June 26 | Camp Snoopy Season 2 | Original live‑action series (Apple production) |
| July 3 | This Is America, Charlie Brown | Restored 1988 miniseries |
| July 10 | The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show | Full 18‑episode classic run (1983‑1986) |
| July 31 | Snoopy Presents: There’s No Place Like Home | Original short‑form Apple production |
Camp Snoopy Season 2
The sequel arrives exactly two years after the first season’s debut. Like its predecessor, the series blends live‑action footage with the animated world of the Peanuts gang, targeting kids and families. Production notes suggest a tighter shooting schedule and a modest budget increase, which should translate into richer set pieces and more guest appearances from the original voice cast.
This Is America, Charlie Brown
Originally broadcast in 1988 as a four‑part miniseries, the special explores the cultural impact of the Peanuts characters on American society. Apple TV has restored the original footage in 4K, added optional subtitles, and included a behind‑the‑scenes documentary that highlights the political climate of the late‑80s when the show was first aired. For developers interested in media restoration pipelines, Apple’s use of the Apple ProRes RAW workflow demonstrates how legacy content can be upgraded for modern streaming without sacrificing archival fidelity.
The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show
All 18 episodes from the 1983‑1986 run will be available simultaneously on July 10. The series marked the first time the Peanuts comic strip was adapted into an hour‑long format, combining short gags with musical interludes. Apple has bundled the episodes with a new Apple TV + Kids UI toggle that lets parents filter content by age rating, a feature built on the tvOS 17 parental‑control APIs.
Snoopy Presents: There’s No Place Like Home
This short‑form story follows Snoopy’s quest to retrieve his beloved doghouse after it’s mistakenly sold at a yard sale. Charlie Brown leads the rescue mission, turning the adventure into a gentle lesson about what truly makes a house a home. The production was shot on the Apple A17 Pro‑powered iPhone 15 Pro camera system, then edited in Final Cut Pro 12 with the new Multicam AI sync feature, showcasing how Apple’s own hardware and software can streamline short‑form content creation.
What this means for developers
- Content‑driven UI patterns – The new Kids toggle and episode‑grid layout rely on the SwiftUI 5
LazyVGridcomponent, offering a template for developers building similar catalog experiences. - High‑resolution streaming – Apple’s 4K restoration of a 1988 miniseries pushes the Apple Media Services encoding stack to support HDR10+ and Dolby Vision, a useful reference for anyone implementing adaptive bitrate streaming with AVFoundation.
- Cross‑platform asset pipelines – The use of iPhone‑captured footage for There’s No Place Like Home demonstrates a workflow where the same media can be repurposed for iOS, iPadOS, and tvOS apps without transcoding, thanks to the universal HEVC‑Main‑10 profile.
How to watch
Apple TV is available for $12.99 / month, or as part of the Apple One bundle, which also includes iCloud, Apple Music, and Apple Arcade. All four titles will be accessible through the standard Apple TV + interface; no additional purchases are required.

Looking ahead
Apple’s continued investment in Peanuts programming suggests the company sees value in evergreen family content that can be refreshed for new generations. For developers, the rollout offers a concrete case study in how legacy IP can be modernized through high‑quality streaming, UI enhancements, and cross‑device production pipelines.
For more details, see the official Apple TV press release here.

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