How 5 Emmy-nominated TV shows kept their big twist a secret

Thereโs only one thing more shocking than your favorite TV show pulling the rug out from under you with a plot twist you didnโt see coming: Not getting spoiled about it beforehand. Itโs a feat several of this yearโs Emmy nominees miraculously pulled off. Did you cover your mouth when one show killed off a main character? Scream when anotherโs conflicted hero made a fateful romantic choice? Gasp when that perfect-looking world was revealed to be anything but? If you answered yes to any of those, then the steps the folks below took to protect their showโs big shockers worked. Letโs break down the biggest twists of the season and how they were kept a secret. (And it should go without saying: spoiler alert.)
โParadiseโ

Aliyah Mastin, left, Sterling K. Brown and Percy Daggs IV in โParadise.โ
(Brian Roedel / Disney)
The Twist: Secret Service agent Xavier Collins (Sterling K. Brown) discovering the murdered body of President Cal Bradford (James Marsden) isnโt the biggest shock in the dramaโs pilot. The first is when, at the end, โ[The camera] pulls up and you realize everyone is in an underground bunker with a fake sky,โ explains executive producer Dan Fogelman. The Nerves: How to keep from losing sleep? Plan, plan, plan. โYou get less nervous because you start going, โOK, hereโs how weโre going to execute it,โ he says.
The Security: Fogelman recalls the twist-filled โThis Is Usโ as โfrantic,โ with code words and red script pages. But heโs since mellowed, even giving press episodes early to screen. โIf you start worrying about everybodyโs worst impulses, youโll just be hamstrung,โ he says.
โOnly Murders in the Buildingโ

After a recurring role in Season 3 of โOnly Murders in the Buildingโ (pictured), Paul Rudd returned, in unexpected fashion, for Season 4.
( Patrick Harbron / Hulu)
The Twist: In Season 4โs fourth episode, Paul Rudd, who, as pretentious actor Ben Glenroy, was murdered the prior season, suddenly reappeared โฆ as Glenroyโs Irish-accented stunt double, Glen Stubbins. The Nerves: โWeโd kept Paulโs return under wraps purposefully, and Paul was the cheerleader of that,โ says executive producer John Hoffman, who admits concern over the surprise. โWe had big talks in the writersโ room, like, โThis probably is a bit too far for us.โ What eased his mind? โThe great charm of Paul Rudd,โ he says. The Security: Besides NDAs and watermarked scripts, Hoffman says, โI always want the mystery to be preserved, so Iโm oftentimes on set freaking out and realizing, โWait, whoโs here? How locked down is the set?โโ
โSeveranceโ
Adam Scott and Britt Lower in โSeverance.โ
(Apple TV+)
The Twist: In the trippy dramaโs Season 2 finale, Outie Mark (Adam Scott) rescues his captive wife, Gemma (Dichen Lachman), but, reverting to his innie self, sends Gemma through the exit door to stay behind with his other love, Helly (Britt Lower). โThat was always seen as the end point of the season, with Mark stuck between Gemma and Helly,โ says Scott. The Nerves: Scott worried more about the post-episode โSeveranceโ podcast with executive producer Ben Stiller and letting spoiler-y details slip too soon. โWeโd all listen through [episodes] separately to make triple and quadruple checks.โ
The Security: โThe actors are trusted with the material and the information,โ says Scott, also an executive producer on the show. โThere arenโt big secrets being kept from the cast. Weโre not particularly precious like that.โ
โThe Diplomatโ

Allison Janney as (Vice) President Grace Penn in โThe Diplomat.โ
(Alex Bailey / Netflix)
The Twist: In the political dramaโs Season 2 finale, former U.S. Ambassador Hal Wyler (Rufus Sewell) calls his wife, current U.S. Ambassador Kate Wyler (Keri Russell), and tells her the president (Michael McKean) has died, making Vice President Grace Penn (Allison Janney) the new POTUS. The Nerves: Executive producer Debora Cahn originally thought the twist โsounded like the dumbest idea ever,โ and was embarrassed to pitch it in the writersโ room. Even after working out all the details, Cahn admits, โI still thought it was going to suck.โ The Security: Cahnโs reservations kept the scriptโs last pages redacted to everyone but Russell and Sewell until the cast table read. โWe got to that last page, they read the last line and there were gasps and screams,โ she says. The moment finally convinced her that the shocking twist worked.
โThe Last of Usโ

Kaitlyn Dever as Abby in โThe Last of Us.โ
(Liane Hentscher / HBO)
The Twist: In Season 2โs second episode, hero Joel Miller (Pedro Pascal) is brutally murdered by a vengeful Abby (Kaitlyn Dever) while a helpless Ellie (Bella Ramsey) watches, an event that comes from โThe Last of Usโ video game.
The Nerves: Between game fans and viewers who only know the show, executive producer Craig Mazin isnโt worried. โOur obsession with spoilers sometimes obscures the fact that that is not why we watch things,โ he says, citing โTitanicโ as a favorite even though โwe knew it was gonna sink.โ The Security: Scripts are watermarked and sides on set are collected and shredded but filming multiple scene versions like โGame of Thronesโ famously did? Nope. โIf I start writing a fake ending, I might be like, โWait, this fake ending is pretty good, right?โโ