The Journal. - For Riz Ahmed, Life is a Spy Thriller
Episode Date: May 18, 2026Sometimes, actor Riz Ahmed says, his life feels like a spy thriller. He made his new show, “Bait,” about that feeling, and sat down with Jessica Mendoza at our Journal Live show in Los Angeles to ...talk about it. The actor, known for blockbusters like “Star Wars: Rogue One” and his Oscar-nominated performance in “Sound of Metal,” also spoke about his career, what it takes to succeed in Hollywood and getting the rights to a famous spy for his show. Further Listening: - Financial Influencers on Wealth and Work - Kathy Hochul on Mamdani, Trump and Where Democrats Went Wrong Sign up for WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Riz Ahmed is an actor, rapper, and movie producer.
You may know him from Star Wars Rogue One,
The Sound of Metal, which got him nominated for an Academy Award,
or the TV show Bate.
This conversation was filmed at our journal live event in Los Angeles last month.
You can watch the interview on Spotify.
It's got some fun moments you might want to see.
Hey, everyone. How you doing?
Riz, I'm so glad you were here.
join us for this live taping of the journal podcast.
I'm really glad to be here.
We've got to do one more thing.
Are you ready?
Are you guys ready?
Amazing.
All right, cue the theme.
Live from the L. Ray Theater in Los Angeles,
welcome to The Journal, our show about money, business, and power.
I'm Jessica Mendoza.
Coming up on the show, Riz Ahmed, on making Hollywood work for him.
I'm absolutely psyched you're here.
Thank you so much.
I have so many questions for you about the movie business,
your business, your career, your thoughts on storytelling, so let's get into it.
Let's get into it, but also just say, that is a tune, is not?
That slaps.
I've got to remix that.
Thank you.
On behalf of our engineers and the people who composed it, thank you.
But I do want to start with Bait, which is your TV show on Amazon Prime.
Six episodes where you play Shal Atif, an actor not unlike yourself, it seems like,
who gets an audition to play the next James James.
James Bond.
And it's amazing, but it also kind of messes up his life.
I found it very funny, very nuanced, had a lot of feelings watching it.
And one of the themes of the show, you tackle a lot of different things in it, but one
of the themes of the show is the challenges that an actor of color faces when he tries to
move out of the stereotype.
Of all the characters, you could have wrapped the story around, why James Bond?
You know, the James Bond element came quite late in the day.
the show is really not actually about being an actor
or about Hollywood or even James Bond
it's about self-love
and how so many of us can look for love
in all the wrong places, look for it in the validation
and the likes and the comments of strangers
particularly in an age where we're all
kind of continuously performing
a public version of ourselves online
or on stage as we're doing right now maybe a little bit
exactly none of these clothes are mine
for example, I'm a chaotic mess
and I'm pretending like I know what I'm talking about
I'm reading off an auto queue at the back
and so there is this kind of gap
between who we are and how we like to be seen
and that's what the show is about
and so then
if it's a show about someone
who wishes they were somebody else
who wishes they were decisive
and desirable and accepted
and successful and an alpha male
what's the perfect symbol for that
is James Bond
so he serves as a similar
of aspiration for somebody who wants to be anything other than themselves.
But there is another kind of layer to it, and maybe we can talk about that later.
I knew when I was making this show that I wanted it to be in the playground of genre.
Jordan Peel said something that stayed with me.
When he made Get Out, he said, in his mind, being black in America felt like being in a horror movie.
That's why he made Get Out.
And in my mind, being brown in the West
feels like you're stuck in a spy thriller.
You didn't ask to be in.
You know, and so I wanted the show this character's journey,
even though it was about self-love,
to be infused with the surveillance,
the idea of being looked at but not really seen,
the idea of torn allegiances, identities, mistrust.
I wanted that to be in there.
So when we landed on Bond, it did double duty.
It was both a symbol of aspiration
and a nod to this genre, I really did.
wanted to explore. And when you say spy thriller, like who is the brown person playing in this thriller?
Well, that's a great question, you know, because sometimes in your own mind, you walk into a room and you're the
hero of a story. I've learned not everyone always sees me that way, shockingly. Sometimes we walk into a
room and, you know, in someone else's mind, you may not be the hero of the story. And so that's
another kind of duality, you know, again, how we like to be seen.
seen, how we are seen in a way we might not like to be, but both of those things are
projections.
Really, what I'm trying to bring through is how do we really feel authentically, you know,
and how can we learn to take off the mask, are there a mask of our own making or one that
someone puts on against our will?
So it's a show about authenticity and trying to own your messy self.
Yeah.
And I think, I mean, you were really able to achieve that.
We were just talking about it backstage.
Really incredible show, you guys should check it out.
But listeners of our show might know this because we've made an episode about it.
It's interesting that James Bond is the figure that you wind up with.
For decades, the creative rights to the film franchise was owned by the Broccoli family,
like the vegetable, yes.
And they are very famous for being very protective of that IP.
Was it difficult to get the rights to use James Bond for this?
Yeah, it was like,
It was like, we're in the riot's room.
We wanted a show about all this stuff and self-love and identity and ambition.
We're like, what's the symbol?
We've nailed it.
We've solved the Sudoku puzzle.
It is going to be James Bond.
High five.
Oh man, how are we going to get the rights to this?
This is never going to happen.
And we were told by everyone, it would be impossible.
You know, rightly so.
Barbara Rockley has protected and shepherded in this franchise over many generations her family has.
But I thought if there's just a 1% chance, we can.
get this, we have to go 100% all in. So we did. We wrote it around the concept, even though we had
no sign off on it. I reached out, went for brunch with her, gave her the scripts, talked it through
and she got it. Turn on the charm? Well, she got it. She got it. She understood that this isn't really
about Bond. It's more about this feeling about how life can feel like one big audition and we're
always performing a version of ourselves. Would you ever actually want to play James Bond? I mean,
pretending to do it seems to have created a lot of conversation.
I mean, it seems like there's support.
There are three people in the room that would love to see that happen.
You know, I think I can safely say that I have burned every possible bridge to that ever happening after making this show.
But, you know, I think, yeah, certainly there was a moment in time when
I would have loved to have done that, you know?
And I think actually part of the reason we use that
is because there was a period of time for me
when my name was being mentioned around the casting for James Bond
along with everyone else in their dog.
If you're a British actor under the age of 90,
your name is mentioned, okay?
So it's not that big a deal.
But it did kind of confront me with a bit of a question,
which is like, do I want to,
do I want to dedicate my life to stepping into other people's stories or do I want to tell my own?
And for better or for worse, I've kind of been very excited and inspired to tell stories that feel
personal to me and stories that I feel like we haven't seen, you know, before.
And so for whatever it's worth, I want to kind of pursue that.
and I want to kind of like celebrate and create new archetypes alongside James Bond.
Yeah.
You know?
Which we'll get back to that in just a second.
But I did want to ask you, I don't know if you guys can tell.
He's from the UK.
Maybe the accent gave it away.
But you have worked in the UK's robust film industry.
You've worked here in L.A.
What are the big differences that you've experienced in the industries in these two continents, really?
It's interesting, you know.
I guess I start by saying increasingly it feels like a globalized industry, you know?
I know that our show was a British set show.
Yes, very much.
And yet we did the writers' room here in Los Angeles.
It was commissioned out of the LA office, but then produced by the UK office of Prime Video.
So it feels increasingly like the lines are being blurred and that's, you know, how capital moves, right?
I guess a big difference that I've found is that
when you're a smaller fish like the UK,
I think you have no choice in a way
but to lean into the hyper-specificity
of your subcultures, of your experience.
I think there's a reason why we've had these really breakout voicy shows,
whether it's Fleabag or I May Destroy You or Baby Reindeer.
And of course you have those in the US as well.
But I kind of feel like when you don't have all the resources in the world, when you are not setting yourself a challenge of trying to appeal to everyone in a way that I think a lot of the time things commissioned out the US can, you know, have that consideration in mind.
You actually have sometimes more of a chance of like breaking out because it's so left field.
It's so specific.
It's so particular.
And I think that's something that I find like very liberating about storytelling in the UK, despite.
considerably less resources often.
So I think that's one thing that's interesting.
It's almost like creativity is bred from the necessity
of having to work with less.
I think so.
Yeah, I think there's one reason why Iranian cinema
has been so incredibly strong,
you know, comparatively compared to its resources
and it's like access to global markets.
Like it's limitations, right?
It's how limitations can like spur creativity, I think.
It's interesting you bring up resources
You know, you come out with Bait after years of success in Hollywood in the film industry.
You've done a lot in the last couple of decades.
But I've noticed that since Venom in 2018, where you, you know, played the villain, Carlton Drake, opposite Tom Hardy,
you haven't actually been in another, like, big budget blockbuster.
Is that right?
You make me feel really bad about that.
No, no, no.
And I mean, I ask that.
This is therapy.
Let me just recline it.
Let me...
It all started when my mom...
Tell me why.
Why are you...
No, but it is, I am curious, is there like a reason for that?
Was that a question of opportunity, or was it a purposeful decision that you made her?
At a point in your career where it's like I get to choose the projects that I want to make.
No, it's a valid question.
I'm being, you know, silly.
I guess I was at a place in my kind of creative journey.
around there, around 2017 or so,
where I felt like
I had been on this mission.
However high-minded, pretentious or misguided it was,
I felt like I had to justify a career in the arts,
either to my parents or to myself,
this idea of like stretching culture.
Like, I want to try and stretch culture.
I really, and I actually believe even more passionately now
than I did then, the stories have the power of doing that,
of taking you to a world you've never met before,
been to before,
and recognizing yourself in a stranger,
that's how we stretch culture
that's what story can do
and so I had it in my mind
that the way of doing that was for me
to pop up in these
like big stories
right
and like
change the furniture
in these pre-existing rooms
and I got to a point
where I realized like
what if I build my own rooms
what if I tell my own stories
I suddenly kind of
started to feel that like
there's another way of stretching culture
and that's by kind of offering
something very personal and specific and new.
And so I really kind of felt like I was running out of excitement and steam, kind of putting on the
mask for other people.
And I wondered what it would be like if I started to take the mask off and create from a
much more personal place, whether that's Mogul Mowgli or the Long Goodbye or even
Sound of Metal was very personal.
project in many ways, and especially Bates and Hamlet.
And so I wanted to kind of experiment with that and see where that might lead me.
And it's been very fulfilling for me to, you know, being able to share that with people.
I mean, did it feel like you were being, like, you know, moving the furniture around in those
bigger blockbuster rooms?
Did it feel like you were being boxed in in some way, in a way that's different when
you're the one kind of creating the room?
I think there's some truth in that as well, yeah.
I think that
you know
being able to kind of
make the decisions not just around casting
but around what kind of story
we tell how we tell it you know
what kind of genre exists in
those are things that
I felt like I was bumping up against them
you know particularly stories that spoke to the
specificity of my experience
are often be relegated to a kind of like
dry like documentary realism
but it's like I want to do it as a comedy
I want to do a spy thriller comedy
about my neighborhood of Wembley
and Northwest London, you know?
And so yeah, I think it kind of
afforded me more freedom to play and really
explore the stuff I'm genuinely interested
in rather than
be wedded to the place
that other people might put me.
Do you worry about whether
that specificity will resonate?
Not really.
No. No, no, no. I mean, I used to
but when I think about it,
I actually think things resonate more if they're more specific, right?
Like, there's nothing more specific than being the queen of England, right?
And yet, I don't know if anyone else watches the crown
and goes like, I am the queen of England right now.
Like, I feel you.
Yeah, only they knew what it was like to run a kingdom.
And you're just suddenly, you're relating to it.
And it's, I think what people respond to is a kind of honesty.
Yeah.
You know, if something feels specific, it feels specific,
It feels authentic.
It feels honest.
That's what resonates.
And, you know, a couple of shows that were really in front of my mind were shows like Fleabag and I May Destroy You and Atlanta when I was making bait.
And they're so specific.
You know, I got into, I fell in love with movies through Martin Scorsese's Goodfellas.
That's so specific.
Yeah, you're like, have I ever been a gangster?
Yeah.
I may, yeah, one day.
But, you know, but that's something that you connect with because of it.
specificity. And that's a lesson that I've kind of learned and I believe in passionately,
you know. After the break, Riz Ahmed on the challenges facing Hollywood.
So when we talk about Hollywood right now, one thing that we've covered a lot on our show is sort of
the industry and the challenges that it's been facing, right? There's fewer people going to
theaters, the rise of online platforms that are competing with eyeballs that could be going to
traditional TV and film. There's AI, there's jobs disappearing here in LA and Hollywood,
entertainment companies merging, there's this huge focus on like existing IP, all of these
things. So when you tackle a project like Bait or your recent film Hamlet, which is this modern
reimagining of the Shakespeare play, like what are the business considerations that you
think about when you do this? Do you think about them at all? I think different projects demand
different considerations, actually.
I think some things are designed
to work at the box office, or at least
there's a hope that they will. There's other things
that kind of have a long tail.
If you think of a film like Hamlet,
I have every confidence that film will stick around.
It'll be there
in the ether in 20 years
because
contemporary Shakespeare adaptations have that
kind of long tail the way that Kenneth Branagh does
from 1997. We haven't had one
for 25 years. And so
that's the idea
behind that, for example, with something like bait, you know, there's a real hope that it does
kind of break through in the pop culture and is received well in the way that, you know, touchwood
so far has been. And so I think that the idea that there's one definition of success for a
project or for any individual is that leads us to madness. And so I try and kind of be aware of
try and define success for myself going into it.
But can I be honest?
The things that end up being most successful
in my experience for me are the ones
where I'm not making it aimed at an end result of success.
The success is something about being true to the material,
being as honest as possible.
With Bay, it was like, how do we play
with as many different genres as possible?
Episode two is a James Bond episode.
Episodes three is a Bollywood soap opera.
Episode four is Richard Lingletas before Sunrise Walk and Talk.
Like, okay, that's our definition of success.
How can we pull that off?
And more often than not, yes, you've got to have a business awareness,
a producerial awareness.
You need to be realistic about the landscape
and how we will meet the public.
But if I try and emphasize the end result
in my definition of success too much,
it usually totally does not work.
have to kind of frame success more intrinsically around the process.
And it's like that idea, if you dance like no one's watching, that is the best dancing,
you know?
And I'm with you there.
I mean, even with the making of a podcast, right?
Like, we want to make the best show we can possibly make and not think too much about
the profit and whether we're going to be able to sell ads and all of those things.
But we talked about resources before.
I mean, you need those resources.
And for resources to be awarded to you, you also have to be able to prove that you can
make some kind of commercial or financial argument
for the projects that you're making.
So I guess I just wanted to push back a little bit on that
and say, like, you know, how important is it really?
How do you balance that artistic integrity with...
I think it is a balance,
but I think that the way to bring those two things together
is like, is really thinking about this idea of the gut.
You know, people say, like, trust your gut.
If it's exciting to you as a topic,
it will probably be exciting to this audience
and these people who follow you
and love your material.
And Steve Jobs would often speak about the focus
group of one, right?
And it's like if you have that kind of,
that excitement, if something's making you lean
forwards and sit up in that kind of way, you might
not be able to articulate coherently
to someone else to give them
that bug. But if
it's in your body, if it's exciting you
in that way, there's got to be
something to it. You can't be that much of an
alien compared to everyone else. If there's
something in it that is
feeding you, it will feed other people.
So I am increasingly a
in like following your obsessions and following your gut.
Yeah.
And then of course surrounding yourself with, you know, hard-nosed individuals who are going to say
that will never sell.
That's about it.
So that's the balance.
You outsource the balance.
And listening to them too.
Totally.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
We've been talking about this in the context of projects.
But, you know, you yourself, like as a success in, in this industry, you know,
you're not just an actor.
You own a production company.
You are a rapper.
do you feel like to be successful in Hollywood
or in the entertainment business right now
you have to be able to do multiple things?
Yes, it's an interesting question.
It's certainly not a strategic decision that I've made
trying to do different things.
It's a kind of expression of my own creative curiosity
and my own identity crisis
that I do these different things.
I do think increasingly we have to wear different
hats. For example, I think producers have to be very involved in marketing now. And producers
often also creators. So there used to be a world where the creative would do the creating, and then
they'd kind of seal themselves off from the dirty work of selling something. And now I think there
has to be a complete through line, a narrative through line, from the inception of a project,
to all the way when you're selling it and marketing it, the whole way through. I do think that
there is a sense in which we're all having to cover more bases, whether we'd like to or not.
At least for myself, I think it is very additive.
Yeah.
You know, to be able to be able, yeah, I think so.
I think it helps me creatively, you know, to have one foot in music and have one foot in
writing and acting because it means when we're making it.
a show like bait, we say, how do we bring this to life in a different way? The soundtrack
can do so much work for us narratively. So I don't know if it's like necessary, but I do feel
like it's additive and we're increasingly being asked to wear more hats. Right. I mean,
just before this, we were already doing like a social video that we had planned as part of the,
you know, you're doing all of the things. You're trying to check all of the boxes in some ways,
but it's nice when you didn't necessarily plan it and that it was organic.
coming from something that was your own creative drive.
And I think people smell that.
I think people smell when something's authentic or not, essentially.
Right. Well, in the business today,
where do you think the opportunities are?
Like, who are doors opening for and who are doors closing for?
Yeah, I mean, that's a huge question.
I guess I feel like people, somebody asked me the other day,
like, what advice would you give young people in the industry?
right? What advice would you give young people who are coming up? And I guess I felt like I need their
advice. I feel like the landscape is so different right now, so massively different that actually
what we're seeing is like a young cohort and a young generation of storytellers that are really
doing it their own way and playing by their own rules, whether that's on Instagram or TikTok or on
YouTube and they're really
kind of creating
these new paradigms and
when I see that
I'm kind of
I don't know I'm kind of
really inspired by them
I'm actually questioning
what it is that we're doing in long
form storytelling I'm wondering how
we can bridge the gap between those two things
at all
and so I don't know I think there's something
of a revolving door there's a door opening and
closing in that
I'm personally interested in how we can get more of that young creative talent and those influences
out of the kind of algorithm industries and into the long-form storytelling industries,
how we can get them switching away from creating moments that are viral to creating stories that are lasting
because a lot of them are really, really talented storytellers.
But there's a strange kind of gap, I think, in terms of process.
You're going to ask these people with a huge following and with a decent income to forego that
to be unpaid and work developing a project for two years.
We're not gonna be attracting the best talent
of the next generation when we do that.
So I don't know, that's something that I think about a lot.
And do you think that's a question of like craft
and getting them interested in a slightly different version
or a very different version of what they're doing?
Or is it a more like a platform business question?
Do you know what I'm saying?
Like is it like trying to get them interested
in more long form stuff?
How do you, what do you think about?
How do you think about that?
I think about how we can kind of,
kind of remove some of the barriers to entry.
You know, again, like unpaid development, for example,
is like a big issue that we have.
I remember the producer of everything everywhere all at once
was saying that, you know, he was driving Uber's throughout
the whole of development and half of production, you know,
to make ends meet.
That's not a sustainable model.
You're not going to be attracting the best talent
and keeping them in this industry
if you're asking them to work unpaid.
for example.
So I think that's something we can think about
is like how do we compensate people
for the journey of development,
not just the fruits of it,
because it can be a marathon.
Right.
And I mean, the flip side of that,
do you think about making content
for those platforms,
short-form stuff as part of your art,
your craft?
Is that interesting to you at all?
I think, actually,
this is an example of something that's necessary.
You know, for the bait,
marking rollout,
you can't just put the trailer up.
you have to create content.
Right.
That could go viral and this speaks to the themes of the show.
So what we did was we filmed a series of fake press conferences
where the interviewer says to me,
oh, you know what?
I thought the show was hilarious.
I'm like, thank you very much, thank you.
He said particularly the idea of you as James Bond, hilarious.
I go, sorry, what do you mean?
How's that hilarious?
And she goes, oh, you know, it's funny.
It's hilarious.
It was actually not hilarious.
And I have this whole kind of crash-out meltdown kind of thing.
And then we kind of leaked it, right?
And it really blew up.
It went viral.
And it was really funny about it.
It was actually got conversation going because it was like 20% of the people was like,
this guy's a douche, how dare he.
That's so arrogant.
And 80% of people are like, you don't get it.
That's exactly what it is.
Yeah, exactly.
Like, this is bait.
The show is called bait.
And it's a meta thing.
You took the bit.
Yeah.
And so, but that's the kind of thing that we, you know,
it takes a lot of time and effort actually
and it's a real art form
trying to distill storytelling down to haiku in that way
so yeah it's something
actually we've had to become more adept in
you have said in past interviews
that you think stories should inspire people
I think we've taken away from this conversation tonight
that you care very deeply about storytelling
what do you hope to inspire in people
with projects like Bait and Hamlin?
I guess
you know
I guess I'll say that I myself, rather than putting myself on a position of, you know, paving
away or anything, I've been inspired by other people who are telling stories that are unapologetically
specific. I think of something like sinners and think about how that's broken out, you know,
a kind of blues vampire movie set, a period movie in the deep south, like breaking out in the way it has.
You could tell that those filmmakers, those artists,
were just really passionate about it.
And I hope to kind of do the same with my projects, really, you know,
is to be unapologetic,
to give people something that is really distinctive.
I think that's what people want, you know.
And that's also just one of the only ways
you can stand out from the crowd at the moment.
Well, unfortunately, that is all the time we have for tonight.
Thank you so much, Chris.
I know.
I know.
Thanks very much.
Appreciate it.
Thank you very much.
Thanks so much.
Thank you.
Just give it up one more time for Riz Ahmed, everybody.
Before we go, I just wanted to thank everyone who came out to our live show in L.A.
It was so amazing to meet you all.
If you want to see photos and other behind-the-scenes content from the show, you can check out my Instagram.
At underscore Jessica Mendoza.
And we plan to do more events like these.
Let us know where you want us to go next.
And look out for more live shows later this year.
That's all for today, Monday, May 18th.
The Journal is a co-production of Spotify and the Wall Street Journal.
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