Brown plays Xavier Collins, a Secret Service agent who shows up to work one morning to find the president dead on the floor of his bedroom. Looks like murder. But the official story — determined by those higher up the food chain than Xavier — will be natural causes.
Hulu’s latest offering, “Paradise“, is set to blow your mind with its killer cast and jaw-dropping plot twists. Trust me,
Paradise was released on Hulu on January 28, 2025, and has been garnering praise from both critics and viewers.
“They don’t make ‘em like they used to,” goes the common saying, and in some ways, anyone can see why. In today’s world of franchise sequels and nostalgia-baiting reboots of older properties, studios rarely spend big bucks on starry original stories like they used to back in the 1990s. Back then, big Hollywood studios could...
Dan Fogelman's latest TV series starring Sterling K. Brown and James Marsden is a mystery wrapped in a conspiracy wrapped in a sci-fi premise.
A consistently easy watch, only feeling hollow in retrospect. It moves quickly enough that you don’t really notice it’s not nutritionally satisfying. Sometimes that doesn’t matter.
The new Hulu series, starring Sterling K. Brown, is exhilarating in all the right ways, even if it sometimes tips over into ridiculousness.
Paradise is a different variety of Fogelman twist. It has just as much of a topsy-turvy rug-pulled-out-from-under-you impact, but it has a different kind of relationship to the broader show and puts Paradise into an increasingly crowded collection of television shows all meditating on the same general idea.
Sterling K. Brown continues to elevate television with his latest project "Paradise," where he serves as both executive producer and lead actor. The
"Paradise" brings lots of mystery and plenty of twists. The new series starring Sterling K. Brown, James Marsden, Julianne Nicholson, Sarah Shahi will stream on Hulu.
The first episode of Hulu ’s new TV show Paradise ends with a moody cover of Phil Collins’ “Another Day in Paradise,” by JOYNER. However, things could have gone in a different direction for the twisty political thriller, if Guns N’ Roses had gotten on board.
"Paradise" centers on the relationship between a Secret Service agent and the President he is assigned to guard at the beginning of the President's second term.