Rhea Seehorn steps into the spotlight as the lead in Vince Gilligan’s ambitious sci-fi series Pluribus. The Apple TV+ drama launched on November 7, 2025, marking Gilligan’s bold departure from crime drama. It’s one of the most anticipated television events of the year.
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🔥 Quick Facts:
- Pluribus premiered with 2 episodes on November 7, 2025 exclusively on Apple TV+
- New episodes drop every Friday through December 26, 2025 for 9 total episodes
- Rhea Seehorn returns to work with Vince Gilligan after starring in Better Call Saul for 7 years
- 100% on Rotten Tomatoes from 66 critics calls it one of 2025’s smartest shows
- Apple has ordered 2 seasons, each episode has a reported $15 million budget
Breaking New Ground: How Rhea Seehorn Becomes the Hero
After years playing supporting legal roles in Better Call Saul, Seehorn leads Pluribus as Carol Sturka. She’s a cynical romance novelist facing an apocalypse. Nearly all humanity transforms into a blissful hive mind via an alien virus. Only twelve people remain immune. Carol is one of them.
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The premise sounds familiar, but Gilligan executes it brilliantly. Carol doesn’t want to save the world from destruction. She must save it from happiness. Nobody expects that twist.
“I feel like for me as a woman specifically playing this role, one thing that I got really interested in was that a woman’s anger is seen as a detriment and having dire consequences. But then, it’s this special quality that makes her different.” – Rhea Seehorn, Variety
Seehorn delivers an emphathetic yet darkly funny performance grounding the sci-fi premise. Her droll skepticism refreshes the apocalyptic genre. She cracks jokes even facing impossible odds.
From Walter White to World Savior: Vince Gilligan’s Bold Pivot
Gilligan conceived Pluribus after growing weary of writing villains. Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul consumed his creative energy for nearly two decades. He wanted to tell a different story now. A story about heroes, not antiheroes.
“I created Pluribus for Rhea Seehorn because I wanted to work with her again,” Gilligan revealed at the Los Angeles premiere on Nov. 4, 2025. “I was very selfish. I knew she’d be so talented other people would snatch her up.”
The series references The Twilight Zone and Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956). But Gilligan wraps timely social commentary inside sci-fi tropes. The show blends genuinely human emotions with outlandish plot turns. It feels like George Orwell meets The Good Place.
The Cast & Release Schedule
The ensemble brings depth to this unique world:
| Role | Actor | Character Details |
| Carol Sturka | Rhea Seehorn | Romance author immune to the virus |
| Zosia | Karolina Wydra | Hive mind member assigned to Carol |
| Helen | Miriam Shor | Carol’s manager and life partner |
| Koumba Diabaté | Samba Schutte | Another immune survivor living hedonistically |
| Release Schedule | Episodes | Air Date (Fridays) |
| Episodes 1-2 | NOW STREAMING | November 7, 2025 |
| Episode 3 | Coming Soon | November 14, 2025 |
| Episodes 4-9 | Weekly Releases | November 21 – December 26 |
Production took place in Albuquerque, New Mexico from February to September 2024. That’s the same city where Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul were shot. Gilligan hid Easter eggs throughout the series.
Why This Show Matters Right Now
In 2025, Pluribus arrives with prescient timing. Society debates artificial intelligence and algorithmic control constantly. The show asks: What if humanity chose happiness over individuality? What if everyone agreed to be happy? Would that be utopia or dystopia?
Carol’s anger becomes her superpower because individual thought matters. Her resistance to conformity drives the entire narrative. Seehorn’s commanding performance makes you root for her cynicism against enforced optimism.
The show includes a powerful disclaimer: “This show was made by humans.” It’s both a troll of AI concerns and a plea for human creativity. Gilligan crafted every scene intentionally.
Critical Reception: One of 2025’s Best
- Rotten Tomatoes: 100% fresh from 66 critics – “Genuinely original sci-fi from television veteran Vince Gilligan“
- Metacritic: 86/100 – Universal acclaim for originality and execution
- BBC called it: “One of 2025’s smartest shows and George Orwell meets Invasion of the Body Snatchers“
- The Guardian praised: “Seehorn gives a magnificent performance as a cynical woman fighting forced happiness”
- IMDb rating currently sits at 9.0 out of 10 from over 6,800 viewers
Critics universally praise Seehorn’s comedic timing and dramatic range. Her character carries the show through strange genre shifts and philosophical questions about conformity.
Is This Show Worth Your Time?
Yes. Pluribus breaks conventional television storytelling. It doesn’t preach or lecture audiences on its themes. Instead, it trusts viewers to wrestle with complex ideas through Carol’s journey.
The first two episodes introduce the apocalypse, reveal Carol’s immunity, and set up impossible choices ahead. Each episode runs 56-62 minutes, giving Gilligan room to develop characters beyond typical streaming constraints.</n
Apple TV+ has already ordered Season 2, confirming the streamer’s confidence in this ambitious original series. Whether you loved Breaking Bad or not, Pluribus stands on its own merits entirely.
Watch Now on Apple TV+
Stream Pluribus exclusively on Apple TV+ starting Friday, Nov. 7, 2025. The first two episodes are available immediately. New episodes arrive every Friday through December 26, 2025.
Sources
- Variety – Original interview with Rhea Seehorn and Vince Gilligan at premiere
- BBC Culture – In-depth review and critical analysis
- Wikipedia – Comprehensive production and release information

Daniel Harris is a specialist journalist focused on the crossroads of breaking news, extraordinary history, and enduring legends. With a background in historical research and storytelling, he blends timely reporting with timeless narratives, making complex events and ancient myths resonate with today’s readers. Daniel’s work often uncovers surprising links between present-day headlines and legendary tales, offering unique perspectives that captivate diverse audiences. Beyond reporting, he is passionate about preserving oral traditions and exploring how extraordinary stories continue to shape culture and identity.
