This text incorporates spoilers for episode 2 of “Pluribus.”
I am as responsible of this as anyone else: I generally notice that I am watching a giant display whereas holding a smaller display and really feel like I am going insane. I have been making an effort just lately to place my cellphone away whereas I watch stuff (and albeit, that is why I will by no means quit on going to film theaters at the same time as streamers hold undercutting their very own success by releasing motion pictures for a couple of weeks earlier than punting them to Netflix). With that mentioned, there’s some kerfuffle on the Web concerning the second episode of “Pluribus” and its unsettling chilly open, and the confusion could be on account of multitasking.
Within the near-silent opening of “Pirate Girl,” the second episode of Vince Gilligan’s new sci-fi drama on Apple TV starring his “Higher Name Saul” star Rhea Seehorn, we see a girl lined in filth and dirt navigate her method by means of an empty metropolis that seems to be within the Center East someplace. As she boards a moped and drives by survivors of the virus loading useless our bodies into vehicles and makeshift morgues, she commandeers an deserted cargo aircraft (who does she suppose she is, Nathan Fielder?!) and flies it to Albuquerque, the place Seehorn’s Carol Sturka is likely one of the few individuals unaffected by the sudden virus.
Apparently, over on social media, some customers had no concept that the lady within the chilly open is Zosia, a consultant of the world’s newly fashioned hive thoughts performed by Karolina Wydra, who seems all through the remainder of “Pirate Girl” (and, by the way, provides the episode its identify). “Simply noticed some individuals in a ‘Pluribus’ group say they only realized this was Zosia … like individuals actually do not listen once they watch TV, huh,” @shortnsevered wrote on the social media platform X.
Some individuals on social media mentioned that though they gave Pluribus their full consideration, they nonetheless missed this huge element
Within the replies to this publish, some “Pluribus” followers who gave the present their full consideration nonetheless mentioned they did not notice that the raveled girl firstly of “Pirate Girl” is similar clean-cut and impeccably offered Zosia we see for the remainder of the episode. “Properly, I do not blame them,” @luffyfootball wrote earlier than saying they thought she was, like Carol, an individual unaffected by the mysterious and certain alien-borne virus. “Many individuals initially thought she could be one of many 13 who weren’t affected. That being mentioned, I simply came upon from this tweet. Consumer @OurTwoone42058 made a very good level, pointing to the kind of “makeover” sequence that Zosia undergoes earlier than she meets Carol and the opposite unaffected denizens of Earth: “That was form of the purpose of it. The entire transformation. Useless our bodies. Physique language. Precise language. She wasn’t American. They made her into somebody Carol needed. They weren’t presupposed to be seen as the identical particular person.”
Consumer @Gtwy was fairly blunt: “So that they principally had been taking a look at their cellphone for the whole scene that she travels. I hate that that is how individuals watch TV now.” To be truthful, a couple of individuals admitted that they felt dense for not catching this, and Zosia’s transformation is dramatic, however I feel there is a bigger challenge at play right here. Like I mentioned, we’re all responsible of realizing that we have simply spent half an episode of TV doomscrolling on our telephones. There’s actually a lot occurring consistently that it feels unattainable to completely unplug, even for a present that solely runs for one hour. Plus, some streamers have began to capitalize on this actual phenomenon.
Some streamers are creating content material that encourages multitasking, however creators like Vince Gilligan nonetheless demand our consideration
When Apple TV launched its function movie “Fountain of Youth” this previous Could, I wrote right here at /Movie about how the streamer made its first “Netflix film,” which is not a praise. Briefly, that time period does not actually check with a proprietary Netflix film, however a bigger motion amongst movie executives to make it simpler for individuals to scroll on their telephones whereas watching stuff; experiences have surfaced that these execs need screenwriters to spell out each single factor characters do and repeat data ceaselessly so to principally half-watch their product. I need not clarify why this method is, put merely, unhealthy for the medium. There isn’t any inventive advantage to a undertaking that is meant to be watched when you’re additionally scrolling by means of TikTok.
Elsewhere on Apple TV, although, its initiatives do demand your consideration. “Pluribus” is a brand new instance of this, as a result of Vince Gilligan’s present, which has solely aired two episodes as of this writing, is clearly establishing an exciting and thrilling mystery-box story. The identical is certainly true, although, of “Severance,” Dan Erickson’s supremely messed-up office drama that completely requires you to look at each second. Whereas the second season of “Severance” was airing in early 2025, I went to nice lengths to place away my good watch, put my complete face-side down, and absolutely expertise every episode of “Severance,” and I am doing my absolute damndest to do the identical with “Pluribus,” the long-awaited subsequent undertaking from Gilligan. Nonetheless, even should you lock your cellphone in a secure and miss a element just like the Zosia factor, do not beat your self up.
“Pluribus” airs new episodes on Apple TV each Friday.
