Pluribus ajustó las ideas suicidas de Carol al principio de la primera temporada

Rhea Seehorn reveló que los creadores de la serie de ciencia ficción de Apple TV, Pluribus, redujeron las tendencias suicidas de su personaje Carol Sturka tras las preocupaciones iniciales sobre su representación.

Seehorn habló sobre la decisión durante una entrevista con su compañero de reparto en Better Call Saul, Bob Odenkirk, para la revista Interview. Explicó que el creador Vince Gilligan había señalado que el duelo del personaje por la muerte de su esposa era fundamental, pero que el nivel de desesperación corría el riesgo de dejar a la historia sin margen de maniobra. Ambos decidieron dar un paso atrás para dejar espacio a un desarrollo posterior.

Artículos relacionados

Bob Odenkirk appearing grey and distressed on a film set with laughing crew, illustrating his 2021 heart attack scare.
Imagen generada por IA

Bob Odenkirk recalls turning grey in 2021 heart attack scare

Reportado por IA Imagen generada por IA

Bob Odenkirk is spilling fresh details on his terrifying 2021 on-set collapse during Better Call Saul filming. The actor went grey and help was delayed as crew thought it was a joke.

Five months after its premiere, Vince Gilligan's Pluribus on Apple TV has been renewed for a second season, earning two Golden Globe nominations and praise from critics. Rhea Seehorn's Carol remains central as the immune outlier in a world of enforced happiness.

Reportado por IA

Oliver Platt, who plays Dr. Charles on NBC's Chicago Med, has previewed an intense two-part storyline described as an existential crisis for his character. The arc begins with Wednesday's episode, 'The Book of Charles,' where Dr. Charles confronts his mental health after working a suicide prevention line. Showrunner Allen MacDonald called it one of the season's dramatic high points.

Connie Britton guest-stars as Elizabeth, the ex-wife of Steve Carell's character Greg Russo, in episode 5 of HBO's Rooster. The character, a successful Ludlow alum, reopens wounds from their 25-year marriage marked by loneliness and resentment. Britton reunites with co-creator Bill Lawrence 30 years after their work on Spin City.

Reportado por IA

Kaitlin Olson revealed that fan enthusiasm for a Morgan-Karadec romance directly influenced the separate romantic storylines in High Potential's second season. The show's writers opted to keep the pair apart by introducing new love interests for each. Olson shared these insights in an interview with Variety.

Este sitio web utiliza cookies

Utilizamos cookies para análisis con el fin de mejorar nuestro sitio. Lee nuestra política de privacidad para más información.
Rechazar