Pop Culture Happy Hour - Paradise

Episode Date: February 23, 2026

In Hulu's twisty drama series Paradise, Sterling K. Brown plays a Secret Service agent caught up in a web of intrigue after the president of the United States (James Marsden) is assassinated, with no ...suspect in sight. But at the end of the first episode, we learn this show is about way more than the murder of the head of state. From Dan Fogelman (This is Us), the series is back for a second season, so we’re revisiting our conversation about the show. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:04 In the drama series Paradise, Sterling K. Brown is a secret service agent caught up in a web of intrigue after the president of the United States is assassinated with no suspect in sight. The president is played by James Marsden, because of course he is. But at the end of the first episode, we learn this show is about way more than the murder of the head of state. Paradise is back for a second season, so we thought it would be a perfect time to revisit our conversation about the series. I'm Glenn Weldon. And I'm Ayesha Harris. And today we're talking about Paradise on Pop Culture Happy Hour from En And PR. Joining us today is Ronald Young Jr. He's the host of the film and television review podcast, Leaving the Theater.
Starting point is 00:00:44 Welcome back, Ronald. Hello, Aisha. Hello, Glenn. It's great to have you here. I feel like this conversation is going to be at least as fun as watching this weird kind of silly show. Paradise is created by Dan Folgerman, who created the hit show This Is Us, which also starred Sterling K. Brown. And it also had a big reveal in its first episode. so that's kind of his thing.
Starting point is 00:01:09 Brown plays no-nonsense secret service agent, Xavier Collins. He's serving under President Cal Bradford, played by James Marsden, until he finds Bradford dead on his bedroom floor one morning from an apparent head trauma. Who's responsible? Collins is obviously going to investigate. But we learn this is happening in a literal doomsday situation. They've all been living in a bunker for a few years following a catastrophic environmental event that wiped out most of the world's population.
Starting point is 00:01:36 A select few were able to escape to the bunker, which was designed by tech billionaire Samantha Sinatra Redmond. She's played by Julianne Nicholson. And there's a not so small chance that the president's murder is connected to the decisions he made in those crucial moments during the natural disaster. Paradise is streaming on Hulu. So, Ronald, I'm going to start with you. Did this show have enough Sterling K. Brown being very stoic and moody and all that stuff? Like, how do you feel about this? I really liked it.
Starting point is 00:02:07 And I really like Sterly K. Brown's performance. It's a show that, like, I think in the beginning, I was like, what am I watching? What's going on here? I haven't seen Sterling K. Brown in this. But by the time I get to episode seven, I remember thinking out loud, I want to see Sterling K. Brown in more roles like this. Like, I like the emotion. I like what he brings to it?
Starting point is 00:02:25 And I was just sitting there. I'm like, for instance, what if I saw Sterling K. Brown in the Christopher Dolan film tenant instead of John David Washington? I would have bought it. It would have been incredible. You know what I mean? So most of my enthusiasm for this show comes from the fact that any time it starts to get too silly around the edges, all of a sudden they cut the Sterly K. Brown and I'm like, no, I'm in. I'm in. Which reminds me kind of like of hijack on Apple TV. Sure.
Starting point is 00:02:49 Where it's the same thing where it's like, this is starting to get silly. And then all of a sudden it'll be Edra Sable. You're like, you know what? I'm in. Keep going. So that's kind of how I feel about it. I just, I really like it. And I'm excited to see what happens in the finale. Yeah, I'm so glad you brought up hijack, because I had that in the back of my mind while watching this. And they all start some of our greatest black male actors. So I feel like there's an emerging trend happening here. Yeah, bring it on. Glenn, how do you feel about this? I liked it. I mean, Sterling K. Brown, best posture on television, I think.
Starting point is 00:03:17 This guy just makes you want to stand up straighter. I think the show itself kind of improves as it goes. I mean, I was very worried in the beginning because of the reliance on flashbacks, which, you know, this is us did too. But I remember souring on Lost as soon as I realized. that the show's priorities and mine weren't exactly lining up because I wanted answers about what the hell's happening on the island and the show wanted to waste an episode telling me that Kate had a bad relationship with her mom. That does characterizing work ostensibly. Great summation of loss. It's not why I'm watching the show, right?
Starting point is 00:03:45 Backstory isn't story. There's a reason it's called backstory. So you sit there and you think, well, there's going to be a Sinatra episode. That's the billionaire played by Julianne Nicholson. There's going to be an agent Billy episode. There's going to be, I mean, it's coming down the pike. Next season, we're going to get a Gerald McCraney episode. He plays the father of the president.
Starting point is 00:04:01 But now I'm going to contradict myself because that last episode you mentioned, Ron, is my favorite, episode seven, which the flashback to the day, everything goes pear-shaped. Easily the strongest episode of the series, one of the strongest episodes on TV I've seen in a while. Yes.
Starting point is 00:04:14 And I want to get your takes on this, though. I think the show made a mistake by withholding it for so long because I would have invested so much harder in this show a lot earlier. That episode makes some really gnarly choices. And they're not there to add, like, extraneous detail, but to surprise and contradict what we think we know.
Starting point is 00:04:31 I know why they put it that late in the season because there's something else happening in the main plot that's also tense. Yeah. So they wanted to kind of parallel them, I guess. But I don't know. I think people might have opted out of the show before it got to the good stuff.
Starting point is 00:04:42 What do you guys think? I get why they did it. And I feel like if they did it any other way, if they put that episode first, I don't know if I love the rest of it as much. Right. But I feel like that episode feels like a reward for going through kind of like the ups and downs
Starting point is 00:04:57 and little bits of silliness of plot, that they're kind of like doling out to you a little bit by bit. Because there's stuff that they reveal over the course of time. And then they kind of get to this big part where everything we learned about Cal, President Cal played by James Marsden, everything we've learned about Sterly K. Brown's character, who I don't know, as far as I'm concerned,
Starting point is 00:05:17 his name is Sterly K. Brown in the show. But everything we've learned about Sterling K. Brown or Xavier Collins, everything we've learned about him all comes to a head in these interactions. And they've been planting these little seeds. and it's rewarded in seven. I think if they give that to us too early, we'd probably be sitting here talking about how it's unearned that it happened this early in the series.
Starting point is 00:05:36 You know what I mean? Yeah, I don't know. I think I kind of feel as though it didn't need to be the first episode, but I would have liked it, I think, a little bit, maybe in the first three or four episodes placed there. Maybe four. Yeah, I do think the first several episodes do too much of the, I mean, granted, no one episode is, you know,
Starting point is 00:05:56 other than that seventh episode is like, focused on a very particular moment. Even when they're focusing on a specific character, they're still flashing back and jumping around in time a lot. What was one of my quibbles with this show is there's just so much hopping around. There's usually not any sort of marker necessarily to distinguish easily or quickly. The entire show has this similar kind of like ethereal glow that I feel like a lot of like primetime type shows tend to have. This is Us. Again, it like it has that glow. And even when they're flashing back to the past and to the very not recent past, like in 1997, at one point it flashes back, it still kind of looks like the same. It's just James Marston looks a little bit younger.
Starting point is 00:06:37 One of the things that I've noticed with a lot of TV now and movie storytelling as well is that there's always just this withholding, withholding, withholding. And sometimes, like, mystery is fine, but also just give it to me straight. Let's talk a little bit about the world building here, because we learn at the end of the first episode, that they're living in this bunker. And then slowly we kind of learn about what life has been like in this bunker. We learn that like they all have these like government wrist fit bits, whatever, that like they're basically tracking them. We learned that there's no animals or at least there's no, we're not eating animals anymore. There's all these other things.
Starting point is 00:07:15 So like how does that world building work for you when we think about other examples of dystopias or I mean, this is presented as a sort of utopia in a way? But like, when we think of the end of the world, the end of the earth, like, does this feel unique and novel to you? I mean, it did to me a little bit. I think in the fact that they're, like, they're leaning more on political thriller, I think, more than they are on dystopian future. Like, dystopian future is the setting for this political thriller, which is what I'm excited about because, I mean, I went from watching this to watching that show Zero Day on Netflix starring Robert De Niro, which is another political thriller. And I remember in my mind, my mind easily connecting these two universes seamlessly in a very, like easy way because it was really about power, politics, and who has authority to do what thing here. So I feel like for me, most of the things about it that are very dystopian fade to the background until they mention it as a part of the plot, which I think, I mean, that was really working for me. Yeah, we do get some scenes set outside the bunker in the actual real world.
Starting point is 00:08:21 and the question is, you know, is anybody still alive? What is it like out there? I don't care. Yeah. I think what the show has going for it, as close as it comes to Last of Us Walking Dead territory, it kind of misses me. I think, I mean, there's a reason that they filmed this on the Warner's Backlot, you know, the Star's Hollow set. That's what he's running through with the beginning. That's the appeal here.
Starting point is 00:08:42 That's what makes the show different is this creepy, small town setting that can't possibly exist. And yet, they're going out of their way to make us. try to believe that it does. Yeah, yeah. It's funny because I think for me what I like most about this show, I think I was a little less high on this overall than you both. I think the fact that it leans on political thriller is absolutely right, Ronald. And I think for me, it's interesting because Fogelman, the creator, has talked about how he was drawing from like older political thrillers, Crimson Tide, Man on Fire. Like, Dinsale Washington, Dedso Washington. Yes. Denseau, Washington. Yes, Denso Washington, and I guess there's a plus and a minuses of this for me.
Starting point is 00:09:25 We're living in a very tense time. We're living in a time where everything is political and all these institutions are crumbling. And when I'm looking at this like sort of disaster show where everything literally crumbles in the most horrific way possible, and the fact that there's no sense of like whether or not the James Marsden president is a Republican or a Democrat, There's hints at here and there, but it doesn't feel real. It feels like everything is very, very just like the blandest possible version of politics. Do I want an escape? Yes, but I also kind of feel like it's a missed opportunity to at least kind of delve into more than just having Julianne Nicholson, who is great here, by the way, as this like, again, feeling like real life in some ways, billionaire tech person.
Starting point is 00:10:15 Who was given unchecked political power? Yeah. Yes. But I guess I just wanted a little bit more of like the tensions that really arise when the world is falling apart and how the world doesn't necessarily sort itself out. Am I wishing for something that I shouldn't be wishing for here? I don't know. Two things. One, I think I watched this and did feel like I was escaping, which was good.
Starting point is 00:10:36 I think you mentioned something about the bland kind of political, you know, not basically choosing a side of these Republicans, Democrats, progressives, independents. What are we talking about here? And I think part of that is because their hands are a little bit tied. right now because by choosing a side that is the air quote good guy or bad guy you are now like tying your plot to something else and now we can no longer pay attention to like the story that's in front of us but we're also thinking in the background where this politically aligns with our own personal beliefs and what's going on in the world which is like tough for creators right now because they are sitting still a message about somebody like the character Samantha redman played by julian
Starting point is 00:11:14 Nicholson, but they're not necessarily politically aligning themselves one way or another, as much as they're saying, this thing is bad, you know what I mean? But that's like just tough to do as a creator right now. I want to clarify, I don't need them to say this is bad or that like, or like have one side be the good guy or the bad guy. But like even scandal the show. Yeah. Deeply flawed in so many ways. Deeply silly. Yeah. And deeply silly. Even that show we had like Fitz Grant, the president for much of the show, like he was a Republican. They played. They planted that stake in the ground. And I feel as though it's a little bit mealy mouth to not do that here, considering the time. I don't know. Glenn, I'm curious. I don't feel that way. I feel that there is something off with the kind of alchemical mixture of the show. And that's, you know, he might want to go back to something like Crimson Tide, but this is still Dan Foglman. This is the This Is Us guy. And I know.
Starting point is 00:12:04 I would like the show to seem a little less like it's always going to be lunging for my heartstrings the way that This Is Us did. There's always a moment in every episode where the music swells and it targets your tearducks. And it just feels repetitive, right? I mean, this show does have soapy elements. The family drama stuff misses me, the stuff with the daughter misses me. But the sopiest thing about it is the way the show seems to be structured around monologues, right? Which makes it seem kind of unbalanced.
Starting point is 00:12:29 Instead of two characters in a scene being more or less at the same emotional place, there are lots and lots of scenes where one character is having their moment, you know, their Emmy clip, while the other character just kind of sits and watches it happen. Agent Collins, I went from being one of the richest men in the world to a one-term, now two-term president almost overnight.
Starting point is 00:12:49 I drink whiskey in the middle of the Oval Office. And I'm up front about telling a potential new lead agent that part of the reason he's appealing to me is the color of his skin. I did not get here by doing things by the book. I'm sure the actors love it, but it does make it feel off to me. I will say, one of my favorite things about this show, we've mentioned the silliness. And again, I think that's what keeps this from me from being like,
Starting point is 00:13:12 I can't do this. Like, there's a scene in episode six where the Sterling K. Brown character is sitting in a diner waiting for, um, yes. The doctor who he's having, he's been intimate with her name's Gabriela and she's played by Sarah Shahi. And he's just sitting in a diner. He's done something very drastic. And he's dramatically eating a steak.
Starting point is 00:13:33 And we learn that it's like not a real steak. It's a plant-based steak because like once the world ended, they stopped eating real meat, which leads Xavier to. give this very dramatic speech about how everyone who fled to this underground bunker like cows being led to the slaughter. All that muscle, all that happened. And they just surrendered. And it makes you wonder if that's what she did to us. Let us down here, corralled us, and sent us to slaughter. It's great. It's like Stirling here Brown is giving like the performance of his life. And then he gets up, wipes his steak knife, cuts his government Fitbit watch tracker off his wrist and then says, regarding the Redmond tech billionaire.
Starting point is 00:14:16 He's like, tell your girl I'm coming for her. And then like two scenes later, this happened. He said he was coming for you. Who the hell talks like that? Then he hacks off his band with a knife? What the what's he doing? I mean, besides dramatically eating. Those little moments, like it reminds me of the movie cellular.
Starting point is 00:14:36 I don't know if you remember this movie, but it's where Chris Evans gets a phone call from a kidnapped stranger. And then spends the movie trying to save her and her son. And at one point, he goes to the school. And he's like, what's your kid's name? Because he's, like, trying to get his, her kid out of school. And she's like, Ricky Martin. And he's like, you named your child Ricky Martin?
Starting point is 00:14:53 And it's just like, the script just keeps going. They don't dwell on it. But like, that is what I think worked for me is the monologue. I liked the monologna because it felt like a 90s political thriller in that way. Yeah. I want to say, I wanted to kind of go back to your comments on the performance by Julianne Nicholson as Samantha Redmond. do not like her performance at all.
Starting point is 00:15:15 And I think it's because it reads, let me speak to the manager over and over and over again. Like it reads just like sitting in a chair saying these pithy lines. And I remember at one point, especially in episode seven, I was yelling at the TV, you have no real leverage. Yeah. I see what you're saying, Ronald. But I like Julian Nicholson.
Starting point is 00:15:36 And I like her here. I was just grateful that they explained the bad wig. She's wearing a terrible wig. He's a distractingly terrible, noticeable wig. And eventually they do explain why. And so that kind of put me at ease. James Marsden, guys, like, he is in his element here. He is a smarm machine.
Starting point is 00:15:52 He is locked in. I had to look because I was like, of course he's playing the president. And I had to look and see, like, has he played the president? He has. JFK and the Butler, yes. Yes, he played JFK. So I was like, of course, he's the guy you want to have a beer. Like, at one point, he literally says, like, I don't know where Syria is, but the people like me.
Starting point is 00:16:10 And I'm like, okay, of course. And then, of course, Sterling K. Brown's character, Zabler & Collins is like, he tells him exactly we're Syrian. And this is like, of course. Like, this is the deepest it gets with it's like talking about race and politics is like, of course, the black upstanding secret service agent knows way more than his dumb kind of oafish boss. I like Marsden here. Like, again, not realistic to what a president really is or should be anyway, but fun. And he's having fun. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:38 And Sterling K. Brown, like, give him his props. here because that role is so stoic and such a straight arrow that he could come off as a bore, he could come off as a cipher, right? He does sometimes. And he kind of does. I'll about that. He does sometimes. But, I mean, he has the emotional weight to kind of pull James Marsden in, right, and ground him a little bit.
Starting point is 00:16:58 And if he buys this pretty silly premise, you buy it, too. I mean, I think he's doing a lot of the work to kind of desilify the show. I think the other thing is like, again, and we get to episodes five, six, and seven, you really start to think about all of the things we've learned about these characters, all of the things that may be one note or silly about their performance that all, like, kind of come to a head later on. Like, when you find out what the president, Cal Bradford, what was happening to him at the time that he's murdered, you know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:17:30 You find out what he was thinking, what he was discovering. And I feel like without the range of James Marsden, you like really don't get the opportunity needed to really see him all of a sudden turn around, even though he's having a bourbon and say, look, something serious is going on and I need to talk to you about it if he's like too folksy. But the fact that he could turn around and be folksy is also good. And I think that plays so well when him and Xavier Collins played by getting Sterly K. Proud. I don't know why I keep going back and forth between their names.
Starting point is 00:17:57 I want to just call him Sterling K. Brown so bad. But they have this conversation in episode seven when they're like going back and forth at each other and it's very, very tense in a way that I'm just like, yes, I love. love this. This is what I want. And I feel like both of them, like I said, clocked in to do that. No matter how silly it gets in the margins at other times, that part was enough for me to say, yeah, I'll watch season two. Keep bumping them out. Yeah, yeah. Glenn, I'm just curious, like you mentioned this earlier, but kind of like, what is to you the main draw besides not the mystery? Oh, I'm here for the mystery. Yeah, I'm here for the president. Yeah, I mean, that's it. I mean, I like the setting. It's kind of fascinating how they set up the mystery because this is probably the most
Starting point is 00:18:37 observed, surveilled person in the bunker, and yet somehow this happens, and they have to come to jump through a lot of hoops to explain how and why that could happen. But yeah, I'm here for the mystery. I want to know who done it.
Starting point is 00:18:49 Oh, well, paradise is, uh, it's not paradise, but they, uh, that's what they call it. And we want to know what you think about it. Find us at facebook.com slash PCHH. That brings us to the end of our show, Ronald Young Jr., Glenn Weldon. Thanks so much for being here.
Starting point is 00:19:05 Thank you. Thanks for having me. And this episode was produced by Husta Fatima and Lenin Sherburn and edited by Mike Katzv. Our supervising producer is Jessica Reedy and Hello, Kamen provides our theme music. Thanks so much for listening to Pop Culture Happy Hour from NPR. I'm Aisha Harris and we'll see you all tomorrow.

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