Brown plays Xavier Collins, a Secret Service agent who shows up to work one morning to find the president dead on the floor of his bedroom. Looks like murder. But the official story — determined by those higher up the food chain than Xavier — will be natural causes.
"Paradise" brings lots of mystery and plenty of twists. The new series starring Sterling K. Brown, James Marsden, Julianne Nicholson, Sarah Shahi will stream on Hulu.
In Paradise, nothing is how it appears, a fact that becomes increasingly obvious as the first episode plays out on Hulu. If you have yet to tune into the series from creator Dan Fogelman ( This Is Us ), now would be the time to stop reading as we dive into major spoilers.
If there's a Plot Twist Hall of Fame, Dan Fogelman might've just earned himself entry. Fogelman is the creator of Hulu's Paradise, a drama positioned as a murder mystery involving the president of the United States and the head of his Secret Service detail.
Paradise was released on Hulu on January 28, 2025, and has been garnering praise from both critics and viewers.
FandomWire reviews PARADISE, a new drama series from Dan Fogelman about a secret service agent investigating the president's murder.
Ahead of its premiere on Hulu later this month, a new trailer has been released for the upcoming thriller series Paradise. Created by Dan Fogelman (This Is Us), the series stars Sterling K. Brown stars as a Secret Service agent who finds himself at the centre of a conspiracy after becoming the prime suspect in
“They don’t make ‘em like they used to,” goes the common saying, and in some ways, anyone can see why. In today’s world of franchise sequels and nostalgia-baiting reboots of older properties, studios rarely spend big bucks on starry original stories like they used to back in the 1990s. Back then, big Hollywood studios could...
Paradise stars Sterling K. Brown as a secret service agent who was the last person to see the US President before his assassination.
“Paradise” has themes of climate change, privilege and the pecking order of who in society gets saved during an emergency. There's a relevance to the series which Brown says is coincidental because Dan Fogelman — creator and writer of “This is Us” — conceived “Paradise” 10 years ago. It makes sense to him though why it would provoke thought.