Peter Crouch and Abbey Clancy in talks for fly-on-the-wall TV series

Peter Crouch and Abbey Clancy are reportedly negotiating a fly-on-the-wall series that could film later this year and reach Prime Video, sources say.

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Brandon Hayes
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Arts writer and cultural critic covering theatre, fine art, and the independent music scene. Regular contributor to The Atlantic and Rolling Stone.
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Peter Crouch and Abbey Clancy in talks for fly-on-the-wall TV series

and are reportedly in negotiations to make a fly-on-the-wall television series that would follow their family life — including life in their Surrey home — with filming said to be possible later this year and a broadcast as early as 2027 on if a deal is reached.

People close to the couple describe the project as a chance to give fans an “all-new insight” into their marital and family antics. The reports say the series would show the couple’s home life and children and would be a major step up from occasional joint appearances and ad campaigns, with the potential deal described as highly lucrative.

The proposition would not be unfamiliar territory for Crouch and Clancy. They have steadily built a joint media presence — from TV spots and advertisements to the podcast — that has made them a recognisable duo in British popular culture.

Those ties go back three decades in public time: Peter Crouch met Abbey Clancy in 2005 and they married in 2011. The couple live in Surrey with their four children. Abbey Clancy’s television background includes hosting Britain’s Next Top Model and winning in 2013; she also returned for a Christmas reunion in 2015.

The friction in the story is immediate. Abbey Clancy has publicly said she would decline an all‑stars return to Strictly Come Dancing — she has explained that after winning in 2013 she does not want to risk competing again and possibly losing. That reluctance to re-enter a competitive, public arena sits uneasily next to reports that the pair would open up their family life to the kind of relentless camera access a fly‑on‑the‑wall show requires.

Reporters point out the mechanics are straightforward: the couple are said to be in talks with Prime Video and would likely let production crews film in their home, which is frequently described in reports as a multimillion‑pound property. Industry contacts frame the move as a logical next step for well‑known personalities who already make joint media work pay, and they note streaming platforms have backed similar projects in recent years.

What viewers should expect if the series proceeds is a domestic portrait rather than a constructed reality show. The pitches circulating claim the emphasis would be on day‑to‑day family interactions and the couple’s chemistry off camera, not on manufactured stunts. That positioning aligns with the tone of their podcast and past public appearances, which trade on a blend of openness and carefully managed image.

For now the unmistakable fact is that nothing is signed. The next concrete development to watch for is a formal announcement that a deal with Prime Video has been completed and a production schedule that confirms whether filming will begin later this year. If both happen, a 2027 air date is the earliest the reports suggest.

Until then the project will be judged on two questions the couple cannot paper over: how much of their private life they are prepared to expose, and whether the show will change public perception of them or simply extend the brand they have already built. The reported talks leave one clear point: the offer is on the table, the platform most often named is Prime Video, and the decision now rests with Crouch and Clancy — who must weigh potential reward against the new level of scrutiny it would bring.

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Arts writer and cultural critic covering theatre, fine art, and the independent music scene. Regular contributor to The Atlantic and Rolling Stone.