Jeremy Renner will once again play Mayor Mike McLusky, as next week he will begin filming the third season of the series Major of Kingstown, for the Skyshowtime platform. It was the actor himself who made this significant announcement during an interview on CNN’s New Year’s Eve special. “I think I’m ready, that I’m strong enough. We’ll see… because I’ll be back in a week. “I will do my best and try my best,” he replied.

The announcement comes just one year after the accident that almost cost him his life. It was near the city of Reno, on January 1, 2023, and Renner was on a six-ton ??snowplow clearing the driveway of a neighbor’s house. His nephew was in the path and the interpreter got out of the vehicle to move her away and prevent her from suffering any harm. That’s when the tractor ran over him and he suffered 30 broken bones. The Washoe County Sheriff’s Department report explained that the accident was caused by the machine’s emergency brake, which had not been applied properly.

Miraculously, Jeremy Renner (52) saved his life and thus began a difficult path to recovery. That is why at the end of the year, and coinciding with Christmas, the actor has visited the hospital where he was admitted to thank for the care: ““Passing through Reno, NV with joy, blessings and [pizza]! !!!. I have stopped by to visit kids/superheroes, first responders, doctors, nurses, and staff at Renown Hospital. “To pay my respects and celebrate the love, life and blessings they bring to us all.” Renner also thanked “that community” for “keeping me here.”

A little over a month ago, the Marvel actor explained that for his recovery “I have explored all types of therapies since January 14,” he wrote. “Every day with countless hours of physical therapy, peptide injections, IV drips and pushes, stem cells and exosomes, red light/IR therapy, 2.0 atmosphere hyperbaric chamber, cold immersion… And the list goes on,” he added. He also confessed that “the greatest therapy has been my mind and the will to be here to recover and be better… and be exceptional.” “I feel like it’s my duty to do it,” he continued. “Not to waste the life that has been forgiven me, but to give it back to my family, my friends and all of you, who have given me the strength to endure.”

In April, Jeremy Renner gave his first interview to ABC News and stated that his jaw was held together with rubber bands and screws. Shortly after on the networks he wrote “although I feel like the Tin Man and need oil for all my new joints (hips, knees, ankles, tibia, etc.) I am encouraged to move forward.” Renner never lost his humor, and he walked again after his ribcage was reconstructed with metal, and metal plates were implanted in his face to support his eye socket, along with titanium rods in his head. one of his legs.

The recovery process has also served as inspiration to resume his musical career, creating a new album titled Love and Titanium and whose first song Wait, dedicated to his daughter, Ava Berlin (10), has just been released.