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Where to Stream Episodes of Gilligan’s Show – Hollywood Life
Hollywood

Where to Stream Episodes of Gilligan’s Show – Hollywood Life

by jummy84 December 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Image Credit: Anna Kooris

Vince Gilligan created a whole Emmy-worthy television world thanks to Breaking Bad and its spinoff, Better Call Saul. But his latest series, Pluribus, is streaming on another platform that’s not AMC — and this one introduces viewers to an extraterrestrial plot in a post-apocalyptic world.

The series, which premiered in November 2025, follows Albuquerque, New Mexico-based author Carol Sturka (Rhea Seehorn), who discovers that she’s one of the last few humans on earth with their own free will. Humanity has been exposed to an alien virus, which has infected people with a peaceful hive mind. Carol and a dozen other people on the planet are immune to it — at least for now — and she has to come to terms with this new earth.

Find out how to watch all episodes of Pluribus right here.

Where to Stream Pluribus

All episodes of Pluribus are available to stream on Apple TV+. The show is still in its debut season, and the finale doesn’t air until December 26, 2025.

How Many Episodes of Pluribus Are in Season 1?

There are nine episodes in total in Pluribus‘ first season. Here is the full guide to each episode and what date each is released.

  • Episode 1: “We Is Us” — November 7, 2025
  • Episode 2: “Pirate Lady” — November 7, 2025
  • Episode 3: “Grenade” — November 14, 2025
  • Episode 4: “Please, Carol” — November 21, 2025
  • Episode 5: “Got Milk” — November 26, 2025
  • Episode 6: “HDP” — December 5, 2025
  • Episode 7: “The Gap” — December 12, 2025
  • Episode 8: TBA — December 19, 2025
  • Episode 9: TBA — December 26, 2025

Is There a Season 2 of Pluribus?

Yes! During its first season, Apple gave Pluribus the green light for a second season. In fact, Vince is eager to keep building the show.

During a red carpet interview with Variety, the Breaking Bad creator said he’d “love to see Pluribus go as long as Rhea Seehorn wants it to go.”

“I’m really doing it, as much as anybody, I’m doing it for her,” he pointed out. “At this point, maybe four seasons, I’m guessing, but who the hell knows?”

How to Watch 'Pluribus': Where to Stream All Episodes of Vince Gilligan's Show
Courtesy of Apple

When Does Season 2 of Pluribus Come Out?

It’s too early for a season 2 release date. Filming has yet to commence on the second season.

December 9, 2025 0 comments
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Pluribus review: Vince Gilligan's sci-fi takes you to happy place
TV & Streaming

Pluribus review: Vince Gilligan’s sci-fi takes you to happy place

by jummy84 November 7, 2025
written by jummy84

A star rating of 5 out of 5.

TV titan Vince Gilligan is known for writing bad guys. Think Walter White in Breaking Bad or Saul Goodman in Better Call Saul. But for his highly anticipated follow-up, Gilligan dares to imagine a world where there are no bad guys, where evil has been eradicated in its entirety. And therein lies a very different kind of horror.

Pluribus begins with a scientific discovery gone awry, as is often the case with post-apocalyptic stories of this nature. One simple mistake breaks the world as we know it, unleashing a virus that melds the globe into one collective group mind. The horrific imagery that follows evokes everything from the devastating stillness of 28 Days Later to the chilling paranoia embedded throughout Invasion of the Body Snatchers (in all its incarnations).

So why was Pluribus surrounded by so much secrecy prior to its release? We’ve seen this all before, right? Well no, it turns out that Gilligan’s twist on the genre quickly takes these familiar tropes in wildly unexpected directions that intrigue, unsettle, and might occasionally test your patience at points.

Without spoiling too much, this global shift in thinking isn’t hellbent on domination. The virus has essentially won already, yet that was never its goal. Melding the world’s population into one singular mind was just necessary, a biological imperative akin to breathing. The result is a happy one, creating a utopia on earth where there is no more crime. Discrimination is a thing of the past and every caged animal has been set free.

At its core, this apocalypse brings peace and happiness to everyone on earth except the one woman who can’t stand it.

Rhea Seehorn and Karolina Wydra star in Pluribus Apple TV

Carol Sturka, an unhappy romance novelist who peddles “mindless crap” numbers among the very few people on earth who have retained their minds still, somehow immune to the virus. As such, the collective is keen to draw Carol into their embrace, quite happily informing her that they’re working on ways to push through and infect her somehow.

It’s in this tension that the show’s defiance of straightforward tone and genre is most evident. Much like Carol herself, Pluribus pushes back against notions of good and evil, what’s right and wrong, in a funhouse mirror version of the grey areas Gilligan played with so adeptly in his previous works.

With a placid smile (smiles?) and kind reassurances, the virus wishes to erase Carol’s individuality and assimilate her completely. But would that be so bad? Other survivors reject Carol’s idea of “saving humanity”, believing themselves to be saved already in what could be considered a new utopia on earth.

It would be easy to read this as a push back against group think or conformity, but Pluribus doesn’t offer easy answers. Instead, the writing opens itself up to interpretation on multiple levels (unlike Carol’s own tawdry fantasy series). This idea that the ones who wish you harm will smile at you as they do so also speaks to religious extremism, gay conversion therapy, and even our political reality, while assumptions that the virus is bad also touch on the differences between individualist and collectivist societies.

Rhea Seehorn stars in Pluribus; in this scene, her character is panicked and holding on to a medical worker by his shoulders

Rhea Seehorn stars in Pluribus Apple TV

Pluribus does offer easy answers in another sense, however, as the virus readily gives up information Carol seeks in her attempts to uncover what’s really happening. These tranquil admissions might lack the tension that a puzzlebox mystery show usually provides — with one even going so far as to undercut its own horror almost immediately — but this in itself sets Pluribus further apart as an entirely unique viewing experience.

That’s also true of its scale. Gilligan’s return to TV makes full use of that Apple TV budget with vast settings that ram home the global impact of what’s happened. Jumps back and forth in time expand this even further again, plus international locales beyond Albuquerque, New Mexico (also the setting of both Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul) are just a plane ride away, easily accessible thanks to “The Afflicted” and their endless altruism.

While you’re sometimes left wondering at the implications of this global shift beyond Carol’s perspective, Pluribus constantly finds ingenious new ways to touch on that through dialogue or outlandish scenarios that could only come from a premise this strange. Hearing a child draw on the group mind to discuss the ins and outs of gynaecology is as disconcerting as it sounds, for example, while a politician talking to Carol through her TV delivers one of the premiere’s most shocking moments through what’s essentially exposition.

Pluribus is alien in more ways than one, so it was smart to ground this story through a protagonist like Carol, a cynical grump whose anger is as useful as it can be destructive. Her outrage at what’s become of humanity spikes against the happiness of the collective, creating a push and pull dynamic that grows central to what Pluribus has to say.

Gilligan wrote this story specifically for Rhea Seehorn following their work together on Better Call Saul, and it’s the exact kind of calling card that could nab her an Emmy at last following three previous nominations. Whether she’s seething or yearning, raging or grieving, Seehorn is magnificent, adding dimension upon dimension to Carol against the smoothed-out flatness on the faces of everyone who surrounds her.

Rhea Seehorn in Pluribus on the phone looking shocked

Rhea Seehorn in Pluribus. Apple TV+

Pluribus is essentially a one-woman show in that respect, yet Karolina Wydra also does phenomenal work as Zosia, an avatar for the collective who Carol comes to rely on. Her prominence deliberately complicates our perception of what’s happening while also giving us a face to connect with in this multitude of billions.

Pluribus works as an inverted version of Sense8 in some ways, another marvellously inventive spin on what’s possible within sci-fi. Elements of Lost’s puzzle box enigma, the existentialism of The Leftovers and even the quirkiness of The X-Files — a show Gilligan worked on extensively before Breaking Bad — are also apparent in the DNA of Pluribus (not to mention the influence of seminal sci-fi authors such as John Wyndham or Kurt Vonnegut).

Much like the virus does to everyone except Carol, Pluribus twists familiar storytelling beats into something new and otherworldly. The result is one of this year’s most inventive stories across any medium, making Gilligan’s return to TV a bonafide rarity in a sea of recycled ideas we’ve seen countless times before.

Beyond the premiere — a truly perfect hour of television — you’ll need to be open to seeing the bigger picture at points, and patience is vital if you’re to go along with some of the wilder swings this show takes. But if you’re up for it, prepare yourself for what could eventually turn out to be a genuine masterpiece on the same level as Breaking Bad or Better Call Saul.

All it took was for Gilligan to make everyone and no-one the bad guy all at once.

Pluribus is now available on Apple TV.

Check out more of our Sci-fi coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

Add Pluribus to your watchlist on the Radio Times: What to Watch app – download now for daily TV recommendations, features and more.

November 7, 2025 0 comments
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Pluribus Review: Vince Gilligan Remixes The Twilight Zone For One of the Year’s Best New Shows
Music

Vince Gilligan’s Brilliant New Sci-Fi Series

by jummy84 November 7, 2025
written by jummy84

When Apple TV’s Pluribus was first announced, all we knew was that it was a science fiction series from Vince Gilligan, and that it would star Rhea Seehorn, who had just finished giving one of TV’s most captivating performances on Better Call Saul. Everything about that equation was exciting, especially because before changing television on a fundamental level with Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul, Gilligan was a key writer on The X-Files during some of its best years. The potential for what he might bring back to the genre, after spending so long in the world of Albuquerque drug dealers and crooked lawyers, was reason enough to tune in.

It turns out, though, Pluribus has far less connection with The X-Files than it does with The Twilight Zone’s particular brand of storytelling — ordinary people caught up in an extraordinary situation. There is an investigatory element, especially early on, when the questions feel overwhelming. Yet that’s really not the thrust of the series, at least based on the first seven episodes provided to critics. Instead, it’s a show about the individual, as well as society, and how those concepts might exist in direct opposition to each other.

When Pluribus begins, the scientific world is on the verge of a major discovery — but most people have no idea, just living their lives as if there’s not a giant countdown clock looming above them. This includes Carol (Rhea Seehorn), a frustrated writer whose speculative historical romances are best-sellers, but not exactly creatively fulfilling. (“Mindless crap,” she calls it.) Still, as her partner Helen (Miriam Shor) reminds her, it pays the bills for their otherwise content existence.

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When everything changes, though, it changes fast. Soon, Carol finds herself alone and scared — unsure what’s happened to the world, and if it can even be fixed. Especially since there are some people who might argue that the world doesn’t need fixing.

The list of things that can be said about Pluribus in this review is much shorter than the list of things that cannot be said, due to Apple TV’s desire to keep much of the plot under wraps. While these sorts of embargo restrictions are never fun for a critic, it does speak to how much of the show’s power comes not from its twists, but the way the writers approach those twists. There are no shortage of elements here that might feel familiar on the surface, but the creative team here is just as familiar with the tropes as we are. The glee they take in subverting them is just one element of what’s so fascinating here.

It’s very close to the storytelling style we saw evolve during the Breaking Bad-verse, executed on a global scale. No easy answers are provided, making the pleasure of each revelation all the more satisfying, all executed with top-tier unconventional cinematography and editing that speaks to a fresh narrative voice. Such care has gone into this show’s making that every detail on screen is worth savoring.

It’s also worth noting that for as much time as characters might spend on their own, the writing never lapses into lazy quirks like having the person talk to themselves, narrating their actions. Instead, the show puts its faith in the audience to watch carefully. Breaking Bad composer Dave Porter handles the score here, creating a totally different sound for the show’s music that’s largely choral-based — a choice, considering the premise, that’s more than apt. Yet it’s also conscious of how powerful silence can be.

Gilligan, Seehorn told Consequence back in 2022, wrote the role of Carol specifically for her, and it truly is an incredible showcase for her talents. She’s not in every scene, but the weight of the show largely rests on Seehorn’s shoulders. Fortunately, Carol is so well-drawn as a character, both in the writing and the performance, that she offers steady support for the action. She’s far from perfect, with flaws that perhaps make the situation worse as opposed to better, yet that draws out her humanity all the more. Not the hero we need, but the only one we’ve got.

While the stakes are quite high, there’s still a sense of real fun to be had, whether it be in Carol’s reactions or some of the wilder cameos that occur. However, speaking of flaws, Pluribus’s biggest one might be found in how close it holds its cards to its chest: Key information gets doled out at a pace that could frustrate viewers more eager for answers than understanding. There are no shortage of clues, of course, though how many of them are actually relevant isn’t explicitly clear. As one example, some of the numbers being thrown around do have Biblical overtones, though the degree to which that’s an actual hint as to what’s going on is more than murky at this time.

When you dig a little deeper into Pluribus, though, it does reveal that it may have a little something to do with that recent period of time we all spent sheltering in place, every cough heard in public a potential harbinger of doom. There’s a lot being explored here about community, and the kind of value we put on acceptance as opposed to independence. Not just because of the isolation some characters experience, but because of what that isolation draws out of them.

This might be the best pandemic-related art we’ve gotten yet, because it comes at those themes from the most unexpected of angles, prying open the lingering trauma from those years to explore the deeper ways that time hurt us all. The title of the show, a Latin word drawn from the American motto E pluribus unum, emphasizes the “many” out of the translation “Out of many, one.” Seehorn might be the star of the show, but it really is a series about all of us.

The first two episodes of Pluribus are streaming now on Apple TV. New episodes premiere on Fridays.

November 7, 2025 0 comments
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Another Cryptic Short Teaser for Vince Gilligan's 'Pluribus' New Series
Hollywood

Another Cryptic Short Teaser for Vince Gilligan’s ‘Pluribus’ New Series

by jummy84 August 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Another Cryptic Short Teaser for Vince Gilligan’s ‘Pluribus’ New Series

by Alex Billington
August 19, 2025
Source: YouTube

“Hello, Carol. We’ll put things right…” Apple TV has unveiled a second 30-second teaser for the new series from Breaking Bad creator Vince Gilligan titled simply Pluribus. They’re slowly building up early buzz until a full trailer reveal and we can find out what’s really going down. This next teaser doesn’t explain or reveal anything either – and includes the viral phone number you can contact as well (202-808-3981). The sci-fi drama series is titled Pluribus – the Latin word is an adjective that means “much, many” (commonly used in the U.S. slogan “E pluribus unum“). The only one-line intro available so far to setup the concpet: The most miserable person on Earth must save the world from happiness. Pluribus stars Rhea Seehorn (who was in Gilligan’s “Better Call Saul”) along with Carlos Manuel Vesga, Karolina Wydra, Miriam Shor, and Samba Schutte. It still seems like this will turn out similar to something like Apple TV’s other sci-fi show Severance rather than their series Foundation (one of my faves) in terms of the sci-fi aspects of it. I’m ready to find out WTF this is all about and what she’s up to in here. Both teasers so far are intriguing.

Here’s the “Sorry About the Blood” teaser for Vince Gilligan’s series Pluribus, from Apple TV’s YouTube:

Pluribus First Look Teaser

You can rewatch the announcement teaser for Vince Gilligan’s Pluribus series right here for the first look.

“A new series from the creator of Breaking Bad.” The most miserable person on Earth must save the world from happiness. The series is set in a present-day Albuquerque, New Mexico that faced an abrupt change away from the world as it is known. Pluribus is a sci-fi series created and showrun by TV writer / producer Vince Gilligan, best known as the creator of “Breaking Bad” and “Better Call Saul” who worked on them until they finished; also a writer on “The X-Files”, Hancock, “Metástasis”, and “Battle Creek”. With writing by Gordon Smith, Alison Tatlock, Vera Blasi, Jenn Carroll, Jonny Gomez, Ariel Levine. And eps directed by Vince Gilligan and Byron Howard. Made by High Bridge Productions, Bristol Circle Entertainment, & Sony Pictures Television. Executive produced by Vince Gilligan, Jeff Frost, Gordon Smith, Alison Tatlock, Allyce Ozarski, Diane Mercer. Apple debuts Gilligan’s Pluribus 9-episode series streaming on Apple TV+ starting November 7th, 2025 this fall with new episodes every Friday into December. Intrigued to find out more?

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August 20, 2025 0 comments
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