THE FULL TRAILER has been released for a documentary series charting Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney’s takeover of Wrexham AFC.
Reynolds, the A-list Hollywood movie actor, and McElhenney, who created and stars in acclaimed sitcom It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, turned the heads of the football world and beyond in the winter of 2020/21 when they stated their intention to purchase the North Welsh club, who currently play in the Non-League fifth tier of English football.
The comedic actors’ £2 million ($2.75m) takeover was approved by 98.6% of the 2,000 members of the Wrexham Supporters Trust in November 2020 and formalised in February 2021.
The duo have since quite publicly immersed themselves in the club, the town and its culture, attending several games in person since the pandemic and associated scheduling conflicts first allowed for them to do so last October.
Reynolds and McElhenney have proved hugely popular owners among Wrexham fans, with whom they engage as they work towards fulfilling their stated dream of bringing Premier League football to the market town of 66,000 people.
I fell in love with a sport, a town and a movie star. I couldn’t help it. ❤️ @VancityReynolds @Wrexham_AFC pic.twitter.com/L76mNmX2cm
— Rob McElhenney (@RMcElhenney) July 20, 2022
The first steps of that dream, which culminated in a heartbreaking Wembley Stadium play-off defeat to Grimsby in May, have been documented for a series which will premiere in Ireland on Disney+ on 24 August.
The series has been produced by FX, with whom McElhenney has worked for over 15 years on his comedy series, It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia.
Ryan Mullen, not Ronan.
And they want people to pay for this app. Some of the people that either write or copy and paste these articles haven’t a dickybirds about sport.
@David: Aaah would you wind your neck in! You’ve had this App for free for years. So many people never appreciate anything that they get for free.
@Pat Mangan: he allways moaning that fellow
@Sèan: but he’s right. many of the articles have mistakes in them or are of bad quality.
@Louise Murphy: so nobody is perfect
@Sèan: I might be older than you Sean, but in my day journalists actually took pride in their work and editors never let anything slip through the cracks.
Probably ok for you though as judging by your grammar you’re as bad as the 42.
@Louise Murphy: another one mutted
@Louise Murphy: spelling police numpty