Jason Street | |
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Friday Night Lights character | |
Scott Porter as Jason Street
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First appearance | "Pilot" (episode 1.01) |
Last appearance | "Perfect Record" (episode 5.07) |
Created by | Peter Berg |
Portrayed by | Scott Porter |
Information | |
Nickname(s) | Six, Jay (by Tim) Streeter (by Billy) QB (by Herc) |
Gender | Male |
Occupation | Assistant coach of the Dillon Panthers (S1–2) Car salesman (S2) Sports agent (S3–5) |
Family | Mitchell Street (father) Joanne Street (mother) |
Spouse(s) | Erin Street (wife; 1 child) |
Significant other(s) | Lyla Garrity (ex-fiancée) |
Children | Noah Street (son) |
Jason Mitchell Street is a fictional character in the NBC/DirecTV (The 101 Network) television drama Friday Night Lights, portrayed by Scott Porter. Introduced as the small town "All-American," Jason is the starting quarterback of the Dillon Panthers, with a promising future career, until an injury during the season-opening football game results in paraplegia. Jason's story arc is focused on his adjusting to life and carving out a niche for himself outside of Panthers' football. In Season 3, due to Porter leaving the show, Jason moves to New York City after landing an entry-level position at a sports agency to be near his infant son.
The character is inspired by the real-life events in the career of David Edwards, a high school player in San Antonio, Texas.
Jason is portrayed as a confident, affable, charismatic and popular all-American high school student from a middle-class home with loving and supportive, although sometimes over-protective, parents. He is presumably the only child of Mitchell and Joanne Street (there is no mention of siblings). He, Landry and Julie Taylor are the only original main characters in high school who come from stable, two-parent families, in contrast to the others, all of whom come from divorced or single-parent homes or families with absent parental figures. Of the adult characters in the show, Jason is closest to Coach Taylor, who coached him since elementary school and was his position coach in high school, and often seeks his advice.
Despite his social status as a jock and star quarterback, he is well-liked by everyone, young and old, in both his school and the community (including the notoriously difficult and loud-mouthed Buddy Garrity). Tim Riggins once called him "the heart" of the Panthers team and as the season progresses, it becomes apparent that he still commanded his former teammates' respect and loyalty, even from his wheelchair.