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Pluribus
Or is it Plur1bus? Either way, it's the latest show from Vince Gilligan of Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul fame.
It has a similar premise to an old Rick and Morty episode where they encounter an old flame of Rick's on an alien world that's supplanted the local civilization. A hive mind named Unity. And it turns out that jerky individuals can be worse than involuntary conformity.
Pluribus diverges from that episode with a lot more loneliness. The logline for the show is "The most miserable person in the world must save humanity from happiness."
That's sort of it. But it's more than that. An alien signal results in bio engineering of a virus that breaks free and soon gets spread throughout the world through atmospheric contrails. This converts everyone into parts of a very polite and non-violent hive mind.
Except about 10 ish people. Including Carol, played by Rhea Seehorn. And the hive mind of humanity will do ANYTHING to make her happy. And also stop at nothing to figure out why she and the others did not convert over so they can "fix" her.
It's a strangely small cast, with one of them having several billion faces. The John Cena cameo in particular was hilarious with their PR campaign following Carol's discovery of something just unpleasant.
It's a thought-provoking show with a thoroughly flawed protagonist. Highly recommended.
Also. I gotta wonder. If humanity became such doormats as a result of this, with the inversion of loving the "other" rather than fearing the "other", what happens if that's by design, rather than an unintended side effect of having singular minds outside the connected consciousness?
What happens if whatever sent the signal to Earth shows up? And then says, "Hello. Please give us all your resources. Please and thank you."
Not sure if that's where the series is going, but food for thought.
Puppet's Shadow by Emersyn Park
Full disclosure: I'm friends with Emersyn. We've attended a few book events with our other friends, and we virtually meet as part of a monthly authors' group.
With my bias duly noted, I still really liked her teenage, mean girl thriller with one of the most evil of evil twins I've ever encountered.
Piper's a pleasant rule follower. Maddy is a dark-hearted, popular girl. And they will switch identities for fun and higher stakes. Maddy calls Piper her Puppet as part of this switching.
The inciting incident at the beginning of the book leaves you wondering who survived a fatal house fire. And the extended flashback paints a dark picture. In particular, an event Maddy orchestrates that is shocking in the best way.
Something reprehensible. Something she doesn't even consider as crossing a line she can't step back over.
It's not usually the kind of book I read, but it's definitely a page-turner. Give it a read if you want a story like Gone Girl, where you're not sure which girl is gone.
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