The creators of Netflix’s Cobra Kai say they tried to bring Hilary Swank back into the Karate Kid universe as Julie Pierce, the lead of 1994’s The Next Karate Kid, but the idea never made it past the earliest stage.
In interviews about the show’s final season, co-creator Josh Heald said they reached out early to Swank’s representatives to explore whether there was a path to a guest appearance, and described it as “disappointing” that it couldn’t be worked out.

What the creators say they pitched
According to Heald, the team didn’t envision Swank committing to a full-season run. The concept was a small, targeted appearance—roughly a one- or two-episode arc—similar to how Cobra Kai brought back Elisabeth Shue as Ali at a pivotal moment.
The idea was to introduce Julie in a way that meaningfully impacts relationships without requiring a long shoot. Heald characterized it as the “beginnings of a genesis of an idea,” meaning they wanted an initial conversation before building anything major around it.
Why didn’t it happen
The key detail is that the showrunners say they didn’t even get a meeting. Heald explained that Swank’s response was respectful, but she declined the idea of discussing an appearance at that time.
In the same comments, he cited personal and scheduling factors, noting that she’d recently had children and was working on another project, and described her response as a respectful pass before they could make their usual in-person pitch.
Why fans cared about Julie Pierce
Cobra Kai became known for pulling legacy characters back into the fold, even deep-cut ones, and making them feel relevant rather than gimmicky.
That track record is why Julie Pierce remained a big “missing piece” for long-time fans: she’s directly tied to Mr. Miyagi’s story, but she never got the modern follow-up treatment that other corners of the franchise received. SlashFilm’s recap of the situation notes that, for a show that seemed able to bring back almost anyone, Swank’s Julie was the notable exception.
The part people often miss: the show didn’t rewrite itself around her
Even while calling it disappointing, Heald also emphasized they didn’t sacrifice a fully developed storyline to chase a cameo that might not happen.
The way he tells it, the writers didn’t build the season on Swank’s return and then scramble when it fell through. Instead, they treated it as “fruit on the vine” for a future Miyagi-verse project if the opportunity ever opens up.

