‘Pluribus’ Season 1 finale: Drop the bomb or save humanity?
This article contains spoilers for the Season 1 finale of Apple TVβs βPluribus.β
Fellow misanthropes, Season 1 of βPluribusβ is done. Now what do we do, other than lean into our usual harsh judgment and mistrust of others?
Our spirit series left us wondering who or what will put the final nail in humanityβs collective coffin: an alien virus or a malcontent with an atomic bomb. As for saving everyone? Cranky protagonist Carol Sturka (Rhea Seehorn) struggled to find ways to preserve the human race for much of the series, but by the finale, she was fairly convinced that the planet would be better off without us.
For those of you who havenβt kept up with the best show on television this year, Carolβs among 13 people left on Earth who are immune to an alien virus thatβs otherwise fused all of humanityβs consciousness together into one blissful hive mind. Now everyone thinks alike and has the same knowledge base, which means TGI Fridays waiters can pilot passenger planes and children can perform surgeries. No one is an individual anymore. They simply occupy the body formerly known as Tom or Sally or whomever. βUsβ is their chosen pronoun.
This army of smiling, empty vessels just wants to please Carol β until they can turn her into one of them. Joining them will make her happy, sheβs told. Itβs a beautiful thing, having your mind wiped. But the terminally dissatisfied Carol would rather stew in her own low-grade depression and angst that forfeit her free will. Plus, her ire and rage is kryptonite against those whoβve been βjoined.β When confronted with her anger, they physically seize up and stop functioning. Their paralyzing fear of Carolβs ire is empowering, pathetic and hilarious. The world literally comes to a standstill when she snaps. No wonder sheβs my hero.
βPluribusβ comes from Vince Gilligan, the same brilliant mind behind βBreaking Badβ and βBetter Call Saul.β The Apple TV series is nothing like his previous successes except that itβs set in Albuquerque, stars Seehorn and is singularly brilliant. And like those other seminal dramas, it plumbs deeper questions about how we see ourselves, who we really are and who we strive to be.
To be fair, Carol was irritated by the human race long before the alien virus converted them into worker bees. She was convinced most people were sheep β including those who loved the flowery writing and cheesy romance plots of her novels. But the the total loss of a free-thinking community isnβt all that satisfying, either.
In the finale, she connects with Manousos Oviedo (Carlos-Manuel Vesga), a fellow survivor whoβs also immune to the virus. He wants nothing to do with the afflicted, no matter how peace-loving they appear. In the before times, it appears he was a self-sufficient loner. Postapocalypse, he travels all the way from Paraguay to meet Carol after he receives a video message from her. He drives most of the way before arriving at the treacherous DariΓ©n Gap, where heβs sidelined after falling into a thorny tree β but βtheyβ save him, much to his chagrin. He eventually continues the journey, via ambulance.
Now saving the human race is up to two people who never had much love for it in the first place. They converse through a language translation app, which makes their arduous task all the more complicated β and hilarious.
Multiple theories have sprung up around what βPluribusβ is really about. One prevailing thought is that βthe joiningβ is a metaphor for AI creating a world where all individual thought and creativity are synthesized into a single, amenable voice. Surrender your critical thinking for easy answers, or in the case of βPluribus,β an easy life where youβll never have to make a decision on your own again. Most humans would rather be a doormat than a battering ram, regardless of the urgency or circumstance.
Optimists might say, βWhy pick one extreme or the other? Thereβs surely a place in the middle, where we can all live in harmony while holding onto our opinions and sense of self.β Thatβs sweet. Carol and I heartily disagree given the arc of history and all.
Just how my favorite new antihero will deal with her disdain for the Others is yet to be seen. Save the world or destroy it? Weβll all have to wait until next season to find out. Until then, βPluribusβ just needs some space.