The actors star in Hulu's "Paradise," which reunites Brown with "This Is Us" creator Dan Fogelman and meditates on climate change and technology.
Paradise' stars Julianne Nicholson and Sarah Shahi exclusively told Us Weekly their reaction when they found out who killed James Marsden's character
Marsden tells TheWrap he keeps finding himself in situations where his character is killed off, like "Dead to Me" The post James Marsden Breaks Down ‘Odd Couple’ Relationship With Sterling K. Brown in ‘Paradise,
Critic Peter Travers reviews "Paradise," created by Dan Fogelman and starring Sterling K. Brown, Julianne Nicholson and James Marsden.
The Sterling K. Brown-starring political thriller is not what it seems. "There are a lot things in the ether right now that are in this show," says Fogelman.
Sterling K. Brown tells 'Entertainment Weekly' that he and costar James Marsden bonded over their shared love of music by singing on the set of 'Paradise.'
Why the heck is the Paradise community living in a bunker?! Where is secret service agent Xavier Collins’ (Sterling K. Brown) wife?! How did President Cal Bradford (James Marsden) betray Xavier?! And crucially, who killed Cal?! And what was their motive?
Two IndieWire staffers unpack the twisty Hulu sci-fi mystery from Dan Fogelman ('This Is Us') starring Sterling K. Brown and James Marsden.
Dan Fogelman’s political thriller, Paradise, just gifted the world one of the most badass TV sex scenes of all time.
This article contains spoilers from the series premiere of Hulu’s “Paradise.” In an overly saturated media market, it’s hard for any show to break through. And it becomes even harder when a network or streamer can’t truthfully answer this simple question regarding new TV series: “What’s it about?
Sterling K. Brown returns to television in the new Hulu drama series “Paradise,” created by Dan Fogelman. Brown plays Xavier Collins, a secret service agent who must protect the president
Disney/Brian Roedel Dan Fogelman's newest show, Paradise, shocked viewers — and the cast — by killing off James Marsden's character Cal during the first episode. During an exclusive interview with Us Weekly,