| Pluribus | |
|---|---|
| Genre | |
| Created by | Vince Gilligan |
| Showrunner | Vince Gilligan |
| Starring | |
| Composer | Dave Porter |
| Country of origin | United States |
| Original language | English |
| No. of seasons | 1 |
| No. of episodes | 9 |
| Production | |
| Executive producers |
|
| Production location | Albuquerque, New Mexico |
| Camera setup | Single-camera |
| Running time | 42–63 minutes |
| Production companies |
|
| Original release | |
| Network | Apple TV |
| Release | November 7, 2025 (2025-11-07) – present |
Pluribus is an Americanpost-apocalypticscience fiction television series created byVince Gilligan forApple TV. Set and filmed primarily inAlbuquerque, New Mexico, the series follows novelistCarol Sturka (Rhea Seehorn), who finds herself isolated after analien virus transforms the rest of humanity into a peaceful and contenthive mind, which nevertheless seeks to assimilate her and other immune individuals.
Pluribus premiered on Apple TV on November 7, 2025. A second season has been ordered. The title of the series refers toe pluribus unum, aLatin motto of the United States which means'out of many, one'.Pluribus has received acclaim from critics, with praise for Gilligan's writing and direction and Seehorn's performance, as well as the show's originality, tone, and stylistic influences, though its pacing received some criticism. It has been nominated for twoGolden Globe Awards and twoCritics' Choice Awards, with Seehorn winning Best Actress in a Drama Series in both ceremonies.
Pluribus followsAlbuquerque authorCarol Sturka, who is one of only 13 people in the world immune to the effects of the "Joining", an event in which anextraterrestrial virus[4] transformed the rest of humanity into a peaceful and contenthive mind known as the "Others".[4] The hive mind happily accommodates the wishes of those who remain unaffected, but admits that it will ultimately seek to assimilate them when it learns how to do so. Carol is adamantly against their efforts as she searches for a way to reverse the Joining.[2][5][6][7]
| No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "We Is Us" | Vince Gilligan | Vince Gilligan | November 7, 2025 (2025-11-07) | |
Astronomers detect a radio signal from space that spells out aviral RNA sequence. Over a year, researchers reproduce the viral sequence in a lab, but an outbreak occurs one night, causing those infected to act collectively, spreading the virus through saliva.Romantasy novelist Carol Sturka returns toAlbuquerque after her latest book tour with her manager and partner Helen. After planes disperse an aerosol, everyone around Carol, including Helen, begins to suddenly convulse. Carol rushes Helen to a hospital, finding the city overrun with chaos and destruction along the way. Carol is alarmed to find everyone at the hospital is infected and knows her name; Helen soon dies from her injuries. Carol flees to her house, where she discovers a TV broadcast showing a man in theWhite House press room with alower third showing Carol's name and a phone number on-screen. When she calls, the man explains that the virus has transformed humanity into a permanently happy and peacefulhive mind. He tells Carol that she and eleven others appear immune, and the hive mind will grant their requests, but shares that the hive mind still seeks to assimilate them. | |||||
| 2 | "Pirate Lady" | Vince Gilligan | Vince Gilligan | November 7, 2025 (2025-11-07) | |
While burying Helen, Carol is approached by Zosia, a member of the hive mind (the "Others"), who explains that all infected humans share one consciousness, containing each other's memories—including Helen's. When Carol lashes out at her, Zosia convulses. After recovering, Zosia reveals that Carol's anger overwhelmed the hive mind and that many died. Carol demands to meet the five other immune English speakers, and the Others arrange a meetup inBilbao, Spain. One survivor, the hedonistic Koumba Diabaté, arrives aboardAir Force One, where the group assembles. Carol discovers the other survivors have accepted the new collective existence, despite her pleas to search for a cure. Zosia explains that the Others are nonviolent, but admits that over 886 million people died during the initial "Joining". Enraged, Carol accidentally triggers a second deadly global seizure, prompting the other survivors to abandon her. Koumba tells Carol he plans to travel toLas Vegas with Zosia as a sexual companion, but he requires Carol's permission. Carol protests but allows it before getting on her own commercial jet to return home. When she sees Zosia leaving with Koumba, she has a change of heart and rushes to stop their departing plane. | |||||
| 3 | "Grenade" | Gordon Smith | Gordon Smith | November 14, 2025 (2025-11-14) | |
More than seven years before the Joining, Carol and Helen visit anice hotel, after Carol had heregg cells frozen, where they witness theaurora borealis. In the present, Carol and Zosia fly back to Albuquerque, during which Carol calls Manousos, one of the immune, but he curses at her. Zosia provides Carol with a gift that Helen had ordered before the Joining; Carol demands the hive mind completely forget about Helen. Carol refuses a meal prepared by the Others and instead goes grocery shopping, finding her local store empty because of the Others' allocation of resources. At Carol's request, the store is immediately restocked. Angered by a forced power outage, Carol sarcastically asks for ahand grenade. Later, Zosia brings a grenade to Carol's home. Over drinks, Carol vents her frustrations and primes the grenade, thinking it is fake, but is shocked to learn it is real. Zosia quickly throws it away, but is injured in the explosion and taken to a hospital. While waiting for Zosia to recover, Carol speaks to a representative of the hive mind, asking if they would give her anything, even anatom bomb. When the hive mind confirms that they would, Carol dismisses the representative as she contemplates. | |||||
| 4 | "Please, Carol" | Zetna Fuentes | Alison Tatlock | November 21, 2025 (2025-11-21) | |
In a flashback, Manousos, living in a storage facility office in Paraguay, refuses help from the Others. He ransacks the lockers for food when he receives Carol's call. In the present, Carol returns home from the hospital and starts to compile a list of facts she has learned about the Others, determining they cannot lie. Carol goes to Zosia at the hospital to ask if the Joining is reversible, but the hive mind refuses to answer. Carol secretly takes vials ofsodium thiopental and tests its effectiveness as atruth serum at home, revealing to herself that she is sexually attracted to Zosia. Back at the hospital, Carol takes Zosia for a walk outside the hospital, stealthily injecting the serum into herIV bag. When Zosia starts to lose clarity, Carol tries to probe the answer from her about reversing the Joining. Zosia struggles to speak, while several Others arrive to surround them, repeatedly chanting "Please, Carol". Zosia collapses fromcardiac arrest, with members of the hive mind coming in to try to revive her. | |||||
| 5 | "Got Milk" | Gordon Smith | Ariel Levine | November 26, 2025 (2025-11-26) | |
After Zosia is returned to the hospital, Laxmi, one of the immune, calls Carol and berates her for disrupting the Others. Carol naps, during which the entire Albuquerque population departs, leaving a recorded message telling Carol they need space from her. She records a video message to the other twelve immune, explaining what she's learned and asking for their help. In trying to prevent wolves from digging in her garbage, she takes her trash to town and discovers a large number of empty milk cartons from a localdairy. She investigates and finds that, instead of milk, the dairy was producing a strange fluid created from a bagged crystalline substance. Carol performs tests on the bagged substance, recording her observations in a video for the immune. She postulates the Others drink it to maintain the hive mind. The wolves return for more food and attempt to dig up Helen's body. Carol scares them away with her police car and lays heavy tiles over the grave to protect it. After finding abarcode on the bag, she traces its origin to a localfood packaging plant and discovers something shocking hidden under a tarp. | |||||
| 6 | "HDP" | Gandja Monteiro | Vera Blasi | December 5, 2025 (2025-12-05) | |
Carol records her discovery from the packaging warehouse, which is filled with hundreds of shrink-wrapped human body parts. She drives to Las Vegas, where Koumba is living in the penthouse of theWestgate, causing the Others to leave the city. When Carol arrives, Koumba reveals he is already aware of her findings. He shows her a recording that explains that the Others cannot kill any animal or plant; hence, to sustain their bodies, they supplement their diet with human-derived protein (HDP) from dead bodies. Koumba also reveals that he and most of the immune stay in touch over video calls from which Carol is excluded due to a majority vote, which devastates her. The next morning, Koumba reveals the Others have learned how to convert the immune by extracting theirstem cells and customizing the virus for each individual – but they require the person's consent to do so. Carol calls the Others to firmly refuse consent before leaving. Three days prior, Manousos receives the first of Carol's video messages and realizes he is not alone. Taking Carol's address from the package, he gets in his car and drives away. | |||||
| 7 | "The Gap" | Adam Bernstein | Jenn Carroll | December 12, 2025 (2025-12-12) | |
Carol returns to Albuquerque and exploits luxuries abandoned by, or requested from, the hive mind as they continue to avoid her. Manousos ventures across South America alone, running low on fuel, food and water, but refusing help from the Others. He practices English by listening to language lesson tapes along the way. When he reaches theDarién Gap, the Others warn him of dangerous conditions and urge him not to continue his journey on foot, offering to transport him and his car directly to Carol. In response, Manousos defiantly burns his car and tells the Others that he will never accept their help because everything they could offer him is stolen. During his trek through the jungle, Manousos trips and is impaled on achunga palm tree. Despite attempts tocauterize his wounds, he collapses and is rescued by the Others. Having spent over a month in isolation, Carol succumbs to depression. She paints a message on the street asking the Others to come back to her, leading to Zosia's arrival at her home. Carol tearfully embraces her. | |||||
| 8 | "Charm Offensive" | Melissa Bernstein | Jonny Gomez | December 19, 2025 (2025-12-19) | |
Manousos wakes up in aPanamanian hospital, being treated for his injuries. Despite the Others' caution that he still needs time to recover, he forcefully demands to leave and drives away in an ambulance. In Albuquerque, Carol spends the day with Zosia as the Others return to the city. Zosia shows Carol how they sleep in groups inside big spaces, and Carol stays with the Others overnight. The two spend more time together the next day, and Zosia tells Carol about the alien signal's origin and the Others' plan to build a giantantenna to transmit the signal to other planets. Later, they visit a diner with connections to Carol's writing career which was rebuilt from scratch by the Others. That night, Carol explains that the situation with the Others is unsustainable, and she knows the hive mind is attempting to distract her from pursuing a solution. Zosia kisses Carol and they sleep together. The next morning, Carol produces the first chapter of the next book in herWinds of Wycaro series. Several days later, Zosia informs Carol she is about to have a visitor as Manousos nears theMexico–U.S. border. | |||||
| 9 | "La Chica o El Mundo"[a] | Gordon Smith | Alison Tatlock & Gordon Smith | December 24, 2025 (2025-12-24) | |
Manousos arrives at Carol's home. Carol uses a translator app to communicate with him, and he reveals his intent to destroy the Others if the Joining cannot be reversed. Manousos searches Carol's home forlistening devices. Carol brings him to stay at one of her neighbor's homes. After seeing Carol call Zosia, Manousos asks the Others to send Zosia to talk to him privately. Carol takes her away, but Manousos calls for another member of the Others to replace Zosia. Zosia suddenly goes into convulsions and Carol finds that Manousos has intentionally triggered a global seizure to test theradio frequency he discovered. Carol stops him, and Zosia and the Others leave the city to protect themselves from Manousos. Carol leaves with Zosia, and they tour the world together for two weeks. During this time, Kusimayu, an immune teenager in ruralPeru, willingly joins the Others. Zosia reveals Kusimayu's fate to Carol and confesses that the Others are working to extract Carol's stem cells from her frozen eggs, expecting to complete her custom virus in about a month. Carol has Zosia return her home with a large crate containing an atom bomb and tells Manousos that she is ready to help him. | |||||

Vince Gilligan conceived the premise of the series after becoming "weary of writing bad guys",[15] following a decade of working onBreaking Bad andBetter Call Saul.[16] During production ofBetter Call Saul, he came up with the premise of a man who everyone in the world suddenly adored after some cataclysmic event. He expanded on the idea, turning the lead into a female character that was written withBetter Call Saul starRhea Seehorn in mind, and coming up with the idea of a hive mind.[12] As he wanted the story as grounded as possible, he came up with the idea of the hive mind coming from a signal sent from space containing code forRNA that would transform humanity.[17][18] Gilligan crafted Seehorn's character to be a "flawed good guy" who tries to save the world.[19]
Gilligan told Seehorn that he was working on something he wrote for her, and she immediately agreed to be a part of it even before seeing the initial drafts.[18] AfterBetter Call Saul ended in August 2022, Gilliganpitched a new series that he would develop withSony Pictures Television.[20] His pitch triggered the first bidding war for one of his works,[18] withApple TV winning the rights to the show in September 2022 and giving it a two-season order. Gilligan was named asshowrunner and executive producer. Seehorn was cast as Carol Sturka, a successful but discontentedromance novel author.[21] Gilligan said he felt that he had about four seasons' worth of ideas forPluribus, and did not envision that there would be a demand for more beyond that, nor would he have the energy to pursue more, given how long each episode takes to produce.[22]
In March 2024, Karolina Wydra was cast in the lead role of Zosia, one of the "Others" that serves as Carol's liaison.[23] The series title was chosen from a list of over 100 names as "a tip of the hat to the unofficial motto of America",E pluribus unum, aLatin phrase meaning "out of many, one".[24]

In October 2023, after writing for the first season was interrupted by the2023 Writers Guild of America strike, Gilligan and thewriters' room regrouped to finish the last two episodes. The strike also pushed back the plans to begin shooting, possibly into the early part of 2024, inAlbuquerque, New Mexico.[5] The strike also affected some cast and crew decisions that were made before the strike;Gordon Smith, an executive producer and screenwriter forPluribus, had to step in to direct at least one episode due to scheduling conflicts with their original planned director.[25] Filming ran from February to September 2024,[26] taking place in Albuquerque under theworking title ofWycaro 339.[27] Each episode had a reported $15 million budget.[28]
In contrast toBreaking Bad orBetter Call Saul, the long-term story ofPluribus has been planned out farther in advance with more time to develop the show. This allowed them to avoid mistakes that had been made in the earlier shows, such as the inclusion of the machine gun in the first episode of the final season ofBreaking Bad, "Live Free or Die", which Gilligan did not know how to resolve until a breakthrough was made at the writers' table. In the case ofPluribus, the final episode of the first season included the delivery of an atom bomb to Carol, which the writers know will come into the story over its planned four-season run.[29] Season 1's original ending did not include the atom bomb but was changed based on notes from Apple and Sony executives, which Gilligan states created a "better ending".[30] However, Gilligan said he would be willing to drop these plans should a better idea come along in the future.[22]
The official series title ofPluribus, along with its planned release in November 2025, was announced in July 2025.[31] Denise Pizzini serves as production designer.[32] Once Gilligan had selected Seehorn for the starring role, he was reluctant to use Albuquerque again for filming, fearing that viewers would conflate Seehorn's role as Carol with herKim Wexler role fromBetter Call Saul. However, it proved more effective to use Albuquerque as the setting, given Gilligan's previous work in the city forBreaking Bad andBetter Call Saul along with pre-existingsoundstages that were used for those shows.[32] He also cited the city's available production talent and the financial incentives offered by the state: "I love shooting in New Mexico...But also, frankly, as a business person, I love this rebate."[33] To avoid confusion with his earlier shows, Gilligan avoided filming at locations that he had previously used.[32]
For exterior shots, Carol'scul-de-sac was temporarily constructed inWest Mesa outside of Albuquerque, including Carol's home exteriors and interiors, six surrounding homes, a park, and roadways.[34][32] Gilligan and the crew constructed fake residences forPluribus to avoid drawing tourists to a real Albuquerque residence, as had occurred with the home used asWalter White's residence inBreaking Bad.[35] Smith said this was also to minimize the impact to the people of Albuquerque, as some of the shots they planned around Carol's home would normally require shutting down roads and businesses if they had used existing residences.[25] Additional footage was filmed in Spain, featuring locations such asOviedo,Bilbao,Gipuzkoa and several places inGran Canaria andLa Palma in theCanary Islands.[36]
Dave Porter, who composed music forBreaking Bad andBetter Call Saul, serves as composer for the series.[37] Volume 1 of the soundtrack was released digitally on November 21, 2025, while Volume 2 was released digitally on December 26, 2025 byMilan Records, and is available to stream on all major digital music services.[38] The label had previously released the main title theme as a digital single on November 7, 2025.[38]
AfterPluribus was announced, very few details of the show were released publicly, even with the series's full trailer released in late October 2025.[39][40] It was known to be a science fiction series at the time it was pitched,[41] and Gilligan distanced the show fromBreaking Bad andBetter Call Saul, in that "the world changes very abruptly in the first episode, and then it is quite different."[42]
An advance invitation-only screening of the series's first two episodes was held in New York City on October 10, 2025.[43] The series held its official premiere event at theDirectors Guild of America in Los Angeles on November 4.[44]Entertainment Weekly released an exclusive preview of the series's first four minutes one day before the Apple TV premiere.[45]
Pluribus premiered its first two episodes on November 7, 2025, exclusively on Apple TV.[31] Episodes were promoted as being released on Fridays globally from November 7, but were released inEastern Time Zones on the preceding Thursday evenings.[46] The fifth episode was released two days early due to theThanksgiving holiday in the United States and the season finale was also released two days early, due to theChristmas holiday.[47][48]
Various teaser trailers for the series have included the phone number "(202) 808–3981", which when dialed plays the following message:[49][50]
Hi, Carol.
We're so glad you called.
We can't wait for you to join us.
Dial "zero" and we'll get back to you via text message.
Subsequent text messages included alerts for teaser trailers and an invitation to the October 2025 advance screening event in New York City. The messages, which continued through the series premiere, referred to all recipients as "Carol."
On November 14, 2025,Apple Books released an 11-page "excerpt" fromBloodsong of Wycaro, the fourth book in Carol'sWinds of Wycaro book series, which was featured in the series's first episode.[51] The excerpt contained a "Letter from the Author", Chapter 16 of the fictional book, and an "About the Author" biography page.[8]

The first season ofPluribus received widespread critical acclaim, with critics praising Seehorn's performance, Gilligan's writing and direction, and the series' originality, tone, and stylistic influences. On the review aggregatorRotten Tomatoes, the series holds a 98% approval rating based on 166 critic reviews. The website's critics consensus reads, "Genuinely original science-fiction fare from television veteran Vince Gilligan,Pluribus leads Rhea Seehorn through a brave new world with plentiful returns."[52]Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, gave the series a score of 87 out of 100 based on 38 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[53]
Nicholas Quah ofVulture called the series "an entrancing piece of television", praising Seehorn's "remarkable" performance, writing, "she makes it easy to comply withPluribus's insistence on total presence as it meditates on something essential about humankind." He compared Gilligan's direction to his work on theBreaking Bad franchise for emphasizing sequences that "luxuriate in depicting process and atmosphere", describing the series' pace as "deliberate and meandering, both thrilling and confounding in its refusal to yield payoff, immediate or otherwise" and praising its "gorgeous" cinematography and production design.[54] Kaiya Shunyata ofRogerEbert.com calledPluribus "one of this year's most complicated and thrilling television series", describing the show as a "bewildering mix of science fiction and noir". She praised Seehorn's performance for "commanding" the screen, while describing the "push-and-pull" between her and co-star Wydra as "fascinating to watch".[55]
Linda Holmes ofNPR felt Gilligan's "genius" to be in "the deft way he marbles brutality, humanity and humor into a single creation in which each element retains its punch, but the whole still makes sense". She praised the collaboration between Gilligan and the "extraordinary" Seehorn for tapping into the actress's comedic sensibilities, while also praising the series's "crushingly sad" depiction of existential loneliness, as well as its "philosophical frankness", which she found "more refreshing than didactic".[56] Ben Travers ofIndieWire gave the show a B+, writing that the series "rewards acute attention and an engaged mind, which would be more than enough reason to recommend it even if it wasn't also a sharply observed celebration of the human condition". He praised the "steady and stunning" cinematography and the "colorful and clarifying" production design, but in contrast to Quah, felt that Gilligan's "devotion to process" as a director "throws off the pacing, which is already unsteady thanks to the general shapelessness of our protagonist's overall journey".[57]
James Poniewozik ofThe New York Times likened the seriesto several others, while consideringPluribus to be "its own mystifying thing" and "a wildly fanciful series that feels unsettlingly real at its core". He praised Gilligan as "a master of disorientation" and called Seehorn's performance "enormous, in quality and quantity".[58] Summarizing the first season's pacing,Variety critic Alison Herman stated, "Pluribus may be slow, but it was never boring."[59]
In contrast, negative reviews focused on the show's slow pace and underdeveloped ideas. Erik Kain ofForbes expressed that his "frustration withPluribus stems largely from two major problems. First, the pacing and repetitiveness. Second, the stretched-thin plot. This show’s story is like too little butter spread over too much bread."[60] Nick Hilton ofThe Independent concluded that "WherePluribus could be an authorial send-up of modern America – a compelling vision of trying to stay sane in destabilizing times – it ends up being a bit listless."[61]James Delingpole ofThe Spectator found that "most of the time it’s too busy being ponderous, dry, uncertain of tone (the black comedy isn’t funny enough; the dark bits aren’t dark enough; the moral message is incomprehensible) and hinting at depths it resolutely fails to fathom."[62] Hannah Brown ofThe Jerusalem Post foundPluribus "incredibly slow-paced, with awkward dialogue that makes its points over and over."[63] Inkoo Kang ofThe New Yorker found that "the A.I. analogy gives way to something much less satisfying: a horror story about what their version of living in harmony would really entail."[64]
According to Apple TV, the first two episodes ofPluribus broke its viewership record for a drama series launch, surpassing the premiere of the second season ofSeverance.[65] For the week ending on November 16, 2025,Pluribus was the most-streamed original series in the United States.[66] Prior to the season finale, Apple TV announced thatPluribus had become its most watched series in platform history, surpassing bothSeverance andTed Lasso.[67]
| Year[b] | Award | Category | Nominee(s) | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | American Film Institute Awards | Television Program of the Year | Pluribus | Won[c] | [68] |
| Astra Creative Arts Awards | Best Cinematography | Marshall Adams and Paul Donachie | Nominated | [69] | |
| Best Editing | Skip Macdonald,Chris McCaleb, and Joey Liew | Nominated | |||
| Best Main Title Design | Joey Reinisch | Nominated | |||
| Best Production Design | Denise Pizzini | Nominated | |||
| Screen Awards | Best TV Series | Pluribus | Nominated | [70] | |
| Best Lead Performance by an Actress – TV | Rhea Seehorn | Won | [71] | ||
| Best New TV Series Debut | Pluribus | Nominated | [70] | ||
| 2026 | Critics' Choice Awards | Best Drama Series | Pluribus | Nominated | [72] |
| Best Actress in a Drama Series | Rhea Seehorn | Won | [73] | ||
| Golden Globe Awards | Best Television Series – Drama | Pluribus | Nominated | [74] | |
| Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series – Drama | Rhea Seehorn | Won | [75] | ||
| Society of Composers & Lyricists Awards | Outstanding Original Title Sequence for a Television Production | Dave Porter | Nominated | [76] | |
| Outstanding Original Score for a Television Production | Dave Porter | Nominated | |||
| ACE Eddie Awards | Best Edited Drama Series | Skip Macdonald (for "We Is Us") | Pending | [77] | |
| ADG Excellence in Production Design Awards | Excellence in Production Design for a One-Hour Contemporary Single-Camera Series | Denise Pizzini[d] (for "Grenade") | Pending | [78] | |
| Producers Guild of America Awards | Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television – Drama | Vince Gilligan, Jeff Frost,Gordon Smith, Alison Tatlock, Diane Mercer, Allyce Ozarski, Jenn Carroll, Trina Siopy, Chris Smirnoff, and Julie Hartley | Pending | [79] | |
| Actor Awards | Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series | Rhea Seehorn | Pending | [80] | |
| GLAAD Media Awards | Outstanding New TV Series | Pluribus | Pending | [81] | |
| Cinema Audio Society Awards | Outstanding Achievement in Sound Mixing for Television Series – One Hour | Phillip W. Palmer, Larry Benjamin, Tim Hoogenakker, Judah Getz, Jamison Rabbe, and Ron Mellegers (for "We Is Us") | Pending | [82] | |
| Satellite Awards | Best Drama Series | Pluribus | Pending | [83] | |
| Best Actress in a Drama or Genre Series | Rhea Seehorn | Pending | |||
| Saturn Awards | Best New Genre Television Series | Pluribus | Pending | [84] | |
| Best Actress in a Television Series | Rhea Seehorn | Pending | |||
| Best Supporting Actress in a Television Series | Karolina Wydra | Pending | |||
| Best Guest Star in a Television Series | Samba Schutte | Pending | |||
| Writers Guild of America Awards | Television: Drama Series | Vince Gilligan, Gordon Smith, Alison Tatlock, Ariel Levine, Vera Blasi, Jenn Carroll, Jonny Gomez, andPeter Gould | Pending | [85] | |
| Television: New Series | Vince Gilligan, Gordon Smith, Alison Tatlock, Ariel Levine, Vera Blasi, Jenn Carroll, Jonny Gomez, and Peter Gould | Pending | |||
| Television: Episodic Drama | Ariel Levine (for "Got Milk") | Pending | |||
| Jonny Gomez (for "Charm Offensive") | Pending |
While developing the series, Gilligan incorporated tropes from many works in thescience fiction genre, taking inspiration from the anthology television seriesThe Twilight Zone and the 1956 filmInvasion of the Body Snatchers in depicting the assimilated humans.[39]
Several critics noted the series' stylistic influences and philosophical commentary. Sean T. Collins ofDecider noted influences from several science fiction and horror works in the series premiere, includingInvasion of the Body Snatchers,Night of the Living Dead, and28 Days Later. He also described the series as "a big-budget reimagining" ofThe Prisoner.[86]James Poniewozik compared the series toThe Leftovers,The Twilight Zone, andThe Last Man on Earth. He noted that Gilligan, who was a writer onThe X-Files and one of the showrunners of its spin-offThe Lone Gunmen, returned to many of the themes from that universe.Pluribus was also compared to anotherApple TV show,Severance, as both are complex sci-fi mysteries that deal with "transforming human consciousness".[58][87] Michael Ahr ofDen of Geek proposed thatPluribus took the concept and consequences of a hive mind takeover farther than other science fiction media such asStar Trek andThe Expanse.[88]
Some critics found the story to be relevant to the topical subject ofartificial intelligence. Poniewozik found parallels between the show's premise and "the modern lure of AI, which promises to deliver progress and plenty for the low, low price of smooshing all human intelligence into one obsequious collective mind".[58] Josh Rosenberg ofEsquire also interpretedPluribus as an allegory for humanity's "bizarre acceptance" of artificial intelligence, writing that "for once, we're watching a meaningful story about our connection to AI that isn't solely about choosing whether to fall in love with it or kill it".[89] Gilligan has noted his own disdain for AI, and an anti-AI disclaimer in the end credits ofPluribus states that "this show was made by humans", though he also pointed out that he was not thinking of AI while writing the show since the story was conceived more than eight years prior.[90]
The show makes a direct comparison between the hive mind's attempts to assimilate the immune andconversion therapy.[91] Parallels have also been drawn between the effects of the alien virus and theCOVID-19 pandemic.[92][93] Kayla Kumari Upadhyaya ofAutostraddle noted that the show touched onsettler colonialism, stating, "the hive can be seen as representing a very extreme form of assimilation, one in which all cultural differences are replaced with a homogenous monoculture".[94]