Shannon Wallace has not been in a rush. The Long Island native spent years accumulating credits across acting, directing, producing and photography, with work appearing on Netflix, Amazon and BET. In 2026, that accumulation is finally visible all at once. With Season 2 of Diarra from Detroit arriving on Paramount+ and his debut feature film Channels headed to the festival circuit this summer, Wallace is not scrambling for what comes next. He is focused on what is already finished.
Back in Detroit for Season 2
Diarra from Detroit gave Wallace one of his most textured roles to date, and the second season goes further into the character he plays, Chris, who operates under multiple identities. Where the first season leaned heavily into mystery and misdirection, Season 2 settles into something more grounded. The blanks that the first season deliberately left open get filled in, and the character becomes more knowable as a result.
Wallace described the shift as a welcome one, both for the story and for him as a performer. He also noted that the cast has grown significantly, with established figures from television joining the show for the new season. He stopped short of naming anyone specifically, but made clear that working alongside people he had watched growing up was a meaningful experience. His verdict on the season is unambiguous. He did not believe the creative team could outdo what they built in Season 1, and he was wrong.
The story Wallace needed to tell with Channels
Channels began as something personal and grew into something Wallace did not entirely predict. The film centers on an 8-year-old boy named Josh who finds a piece of technology capable of showing him previews of his future, with each scenario shifting based on the choices he makes in the present. Every channel he switches to reveals a different version of who he might become.
Wallace named the lead after his younger brother, who died a few years ago. The central question driving the story was one he had been sitting with for some time: if a person could see previews of where their decisions were leading, how would that change the way they made them. That question pulled him toward science fiction, but Channels does not stay in one lane. The film moves through romance, action, thriller and sports territory while spanning multiple time periods, from the present day back through the early 2000s and into the 1940s.
Wallace originally wrote himself into the project as an actor, but the film evolved around him as he directed it. By the time production wrapped, the story had become bigger than his own presence in it. The focus shifted entirely to the narrative and what it was trying to say about possibility.
Channels is expected on the festival circuit this summer. Wallace also has A Story About You, a film shot nearly four years ago, heading to the American Black Film Festival this year. His current focus is on building momentum from projects that already exist rather than chasing new ones.
What Shannon Wallace tells other creatives
Wallace’s advice for creatives watching his career breaks into two parts. The first is about action. Creating does not require a large budget or a perfect set of conditions. The process of doing the work, finding what resonates and doing it again is how the craft develops.
The second part is about ownership. Making something without securing the rights to it is a mistake that compounds over time. Someone will eventually find commercial value in the work, and it should be the person who made it.
He also spoke about titles and what they mean to him. Despite having written and directed Channels, he is deliberate about not claiming the director label prematurely. Earning a title, in his view, matters more than holding it.

