On the set of ABC’s fiery drama ‘9-1-1: Nashville’
The newest part of the “9-1-1” franchise comes to Music City. Here’s a behind-the-scenes look at the set.
When “9-1-1: Nashville” returns, the city is in crisis.
A cyberattack has shut down emergency systems, a runaway showboat is barreling toward the pedestrian bridge and Blythe Hart is unconscious after a horse-bucking fall into a barbed-wire fence.
The escalation comes as ABC’s hit show posted strong viewership numbers. The series premiere amassed 19.29 million cross-platform viewers in its first 35 days, according to the Tennessee Entertainment Commission. The spinoff is performing on par with the Los Angeles-based original “9-1-1,” now deep into its ninth season, as one of the franchise’s actors, Oliver Stark, teased a crossover.
Two teases to what’s to come in 2026
At the CMAs in November, lead actor Chris O’Donnell told The Tennessean that an upcoming episode digs into characters’ history. The actor who plays Don Hart said the flashback shows how he, Blythe Hart (played by Jessica Capshaw) and Dixie Bennings (played by LeAnn Rimes) first crossed paths.
The disasters, he added, “never cease to amaze,” with several rescues so intense he admitted he had to look away.
For Rimes, the return also brings a creative milestone. The singer-actress revealed at a red carpet event in October that she wrote an original song for the show, a process that unexpectedly launched her next album.
Unlike “9-1-1: Lonestar” shot mostly in Los Angeles, but fictionally based in Austin, Texas, “9-1-1: Nashville” is filmed in Tennessee, using real landmarks and neighborhoods to ground its disasters in recognizable terrain. From downtown riverfront chaos to a “sorority house” on fire in Midtown, Music City is an active participant in the story.

Watch ‘9-1-1: Nashville’ cast react to making Tennessean’s front page
The Tennessean’s Sunday paper showcased the cast of “9-1-1: Nashville,” the third installment of the emergency drama that’s heading to the Music City.
How to watch’9-1-1: Nashville’
“9-1-1: Nashville” returns 8 p.m. CT Jan. 8 on ABC, with episodes streaming the following day on Hulu.
Nashville locations seen in the first six episodes
- Ascend Amphitheater (Ep. 1): A Kane Brown concert turns catastrophic when a tornado rips through the riverside venue, collapsing stage trusses and trapping fans and crew.
- Printer’s Alley (Ep. 1): Blue Bennings performs as “Captain Smokeshow” at an adult revue as bachelorettes “bleeding all over Broadway” chaos spills into the historic nightlife corridor.
- Bridgestone Arena (Ep. 1): The Music City Rodeo hosts a tense father-son showdown during a record-setting team roping event.
- Centennial Park (Ep. 1): A child’s birthday turns perilous when powerful winds lift a red kite high above the Parthenon.
- Union Station Hotel (Ep. 2): A honeymoon reservation gone wrong leads a broken-hearted man to check into the historic hotel. He takes a Segway tour through downtown and by Fort Nashborough when a tornado throws him more than a mile away to a water tower.
- Marathon Motor Works water tower (Ep. 2): Station 113 races to rescue the Segway man impaled atop the historic tower as lightning and wind threaten its collapse.
- Belmont University Hospital (Ep. 2-3): After Capt. Don Hart is electrocuted by lightning he is rushed to the hospital filmed at the Thomas F. Frist Jr. College of Medicine building at Belmont University. The brand new health center was opened in 2024.
- Korean War Veterans Memorial Bridge (Ep. 3): An Airstream hangs from the bridge’s arches in a harrowing midair rescue.
- Nashville Shores Lakeside Resort (Ep. 4): A deadly water-slide stunt unfolds on the Riptide Racer, renamed “The Royal Flush” in the series.
- Midtown Nashville (Ep. 4): A three-story blue “Delta Theta Rho” sorority house ignites with green flames after a dangerous chemical reaction near Vanderbilt University.
- Snow White Drive-In (Ep. 5): Brothers Blue Bennings and Ryan Hart confront family tensions at the longtime burger joint located on the outskirts of Lebanon.
- Jo Johnston Avenue and 16th Avenue (Ep. 5): A daring roadside maneuver by Blue saves children in a crosswalk from a drunk driver. In the show, Cammie Raleigh, played by Kimberly Williams-Paisley, says the intersection is 14th and McCoy, which is not a real intersection in Nashville.
- Nelson’s Green Brier Distillery (Ep. 6): The distillery doubles as the “Raleigh Reserve.” A devastating fire at the site exposes long-buried tensions between Capt. Don Hart and his father-in-law upset the fire consumed his fermentation blend containing the family’s secret formula.
Bryan West is an entertainment reporter for The Tennessean, part of the USA TODAY Network. Reach Bryan at [email protected].
‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.tennessean.com ’














