The new Hulu series, starring Sterling K. Brown, is exhilarating in all the right ways, even if it sometimes tips over into ridiculousness.
"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.
FandomWire reviews PARADISE, a new drama series from Dan Fogelman about a secret service agent investigating the president's murder.
Packed with twists and turns, the Hulu series, from This Is Us creator Dan Fogelman, kicks off with the assassination of the fictional President of the United States, Cal Bradford (James Marsden). Secret service agent Xavier Colins (Sterling K.
Tulsi Gabbard, President Trump’s nominee for director of national intelligence, refused to fully denounce the 2013 leaks by Edward J. Snowden, eliciting concern from both parties.
Tulsi Gabbard, President Donald Trump's pick to be director of national intelligence, has faced tough questions from lawmakers during a fiery confirmation hearing Thursday.
Paradise was released on Hulu on January 28, 2025, and has been garnering praise from both critics and viewers.
James Marsden co-stars in this post-apocalyptic Hulu series that continues to raise more questions than it answers
Get ready for a White House drama (no, not the real one) starring James Marsden, a ghostly US comedy, an underappreciated legal drama and the return of Cameron Diaz.
While the most compelling part about Paradise remains the mystery surrounding President Cal's death, it does drop that massive game-changing twist on us at the very end. Not only is the President dead,
Paradise comes from Dan Fogelman, one of the creators of This Is Us (his frequent collaborator Glenn Ficarra also serves as executive producer). This Is Us excelled at pulling emotional heartstrings while seamlessly weaving together past and present storylines. Paradise does the same, only this time, within a sci-fi mystery.
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.