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For Pluribus fans, the song from the most recent episode is "Esperanza" by "Hermanos Gutiérrez."

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  • For Pluribus fans, the song from the most recent episode is "Esperanza" by "Hermanos Gutiérrez."

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=DrIQLiB3HPI

    You're welcome.

    This show is so well written and made. Levels.👍🏿

    A US character upgrades from a cop car to a Rolls, while a South American one downgrades from a convertible to walking the Darién gap?

  • For Pluribus fans, the song from the most recent episode is "Esperanza" by "Hermanos Gutiérrez."

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=DrIQLiB3HPI

    You're welcome.

    This show is so well written and made. Levels.👍🏿

    A US character upgrades from a cop car to a Rolls, while a South American one downgrades from a convertible to walking the Darién gap?

    (Rare work post, you know what I do)

    Yes I'm a fan of the creative team that produces Pluribus. Yes, it's an Apple TV show. Because yes, Android users can get the Apple TV App on Google Play, subscribe to it, and watch the show.

    Yes I still ask the interview question "Do you like creative people?"

    The X-Files producers had a problem: Season 1 was a big hit, but where would they get ideas for another 24 episodes for season 2?

    A sci-fi nerd / Twilight zone fan from Virginia went to film school, saw season 1 of the X-Files, and thought it was the coolest show ever. He wrote a fan script for it.

    The X-Files producers saw his fan script, and said "This is really good!" So they hired him to be a writer for X-Files season two.

    He worked on the X-Files for 7 years.

    Then he had a weird idea for a disturbed show about a high school chemistry teacher that becomes a meth dealing drug kingpin.

    Great Movies and TV, are made by great Movie and TV makers. Creative people, working together, to produce something new.

    Human beings love stories. Some of us go so far as to say that human beings need stories.

    Sometimes I think that people forget that our role is to support creative people.

    I've never met Vince Gilligan. I don't know him personally. I don't know if he's a nice person.

    I only know his work.

    Or more accurately, the output of his work. The tiny bit that makes it through all the rough drafts and bad takes, and didn't get cut in editing, and that studios released.

    And I know that he didn't produce his shows by himself. He was part of a team, that is in turn part of an entire ecosystem of people and companies and organizations that support the production of creative work that we all enjoy.

    I like creative people, and the ecosystem that supports them.

    No Twilight Zone? No X-Files.

    No X-Files? No Breaking Bad.

    No Breaking Bad? No Pluribus.

    It's easy to see how the world would be missing something if those never happened.

    What's harder to see, is that there are other stories that didn't happen because we didn't support Black producers in 1959.

  • (Rare work post, you know what I do)

    Yes I'm a fan of the creative team that produces Pluribus. Yes, it's an Apple TV show. Because yes, Android users can get the Apple TV App on Google Play, subscribe to it, and watch the show.

    Yes I still ask the interview question "Do you like creative people?"

    The X-Files producers had a problem: Season 1 was a big hit, but where would they get ideas for another 24 episodes for season 2?

    A sci-fi nerd / Twilight zone fan from Virginia went to film school, saw season 1 of the X-Files, and thought it was the coolest show ever. He wrote a fan script for it.

    The X-Files producers saw his fan script, and said "This is really good!" So they hired him to be a writer for X-Files season two.

    He worked on the X-Files for 7 years.

    Then he had a weird idea for a disturbed show about a high school chemistry teacher that becomes a meth dealing drug kingpin.

    Great Movies and TV, are made by great Movie and TV makers. Creative people, working together, to produce something new.

    Human beings love stories. Some of us go so far as to say that human beings need stories.

    Sometimes I think that people forget that our role is to support creative people.

    I've never met Vince Gilligan. I don't know him personally. I don't know if he's a nice person.

    I only know his work.

    Or more accurately, the output of his work. The tiny bit that makes it through all the rough drafts and bad takes, and didn't get cut in editing, and that studios released.

    And I know that he didn't produce his shows by himself. He was part of a team, that is in turn part of an entire ecosystem of people and companies and organizations that support the production of creative work that we all enjoy.

    I like creative people, and the ecosystem that supports them.

    No Twilight Zone? No X-Files.

    No X-Files? No Breaking Bad.

    No Breaking Bad? No Pluribus.

    It's easy to see how the world would be missing something if those never happened.

    What's harder to see, is that there are other stories that didn't happen because we didn't support Black producers in 1959.

    @mekkaokereke Mekka, I know this is not the point of your post, BUT.

    Vince Gilligan, since Breaking Bad, has been making a series of podcasts in which he and various team members talk about the fun and difficulty of making the episode in question. Where did the ideas come from? What were the tough shots? Who were the interesting guest stars? Who on the team did what amazing technical feat to make the fantastical seem real?

    They are great podcast episodes.

    https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/pluribus-the-official-podcast/id1846198705


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