
Looks like what happens in Thailand doesnβt always stay in Thailand.
βThe White Lotusβ Season 3 was filled with a slew of headline-making, shock-inducing storylines and deaths.
But some viewers have decided to take the on-screen drama off-screen and into real life, reading into what may have happened between the ensemble cast during their seven months filming in Thailand.
While the internet is buzzing with theories on what happened between the cast members, Jason Isaacs has a message for βamateur Sherlock Holmes.β
βFirst of all, itβs none of your business,β the actor, who portrayed businessman and father Timothy, said on an April 9 episode of SiriusXMβsΒ βThe Happy Hour.β βNobody has the slightest clue what theyβre talking about.β
Why did he feel the need to address the matter? Read on to learn more about what the internet believes has been brewing between βThe White Lotusβ cast, and what the actors have shared before and after the April 6 finale.

Walton Goggins and Aimee Lou Wood
Internet sleuths began speculating about the status of Walton Goggins and Aimee Lou Wood’s relationship after they paid tribute to their characters, as well as their experience on “The White Lotus,” without tagging each other.
In his April 6 post about their characters on Instagram, Goggins did shout out Wood, writing, βThank you Aimee Lou for being my partnerβ¦ a journey I will never forget.β Wood posted a photo of her with Goggins on April 8 with the caption, βA perfect storm.β
The two are not following each other on Instagram, but follow other “White Lotus” Season 3 cast members. Goggins also previously had a slideshow of photos with Wood pinned to his Highlights on Instagram, which is no longer available to view.
Fans took note of the lack of tags and follows. βWhy did you unfollow each other?β one person asked on Goggins’ post.

Additionally, Goggins and Wood had different reactions to the divisive April 12 βSNLβ political spoof calledΒ βThe White Potus.βΒ The sketch was a political take on the Trump administration and poked fun at Wood by having cast member Sarah Sherman wear prosthetic teeth.
Wood called out the sketch and called it βmean and unfunny.β Meanwhile, Goggins commented that the sketch amazing on the βSNLβ Instagram account.
βHahahahahhahaha Amazzzingggg,β he wrote in a since-deleted comment.
TODAY.com has reached out to Wood and Goggins for comment.
Creator Mike White and composer Cristobal Tapia de Veer
Composer Cristobal Tapia de Veer said in a New York TimesΒ that he was quitting and not returning for the showβs fourth season. The creative said that he had been having disagreements with Mike White since the showβs first season, which aired in 2021.
He recalled people being βfuriousβ about the change of the theme song for Season 3, which didnβt include the fan-favorite βooh-loo-loo-loos.β
βI texted the producer and I told him that it would be great to, at some point, give them the longer version with the ooh-loo-loo-loos, because people will explode if they realize that it was going there anyway,β he said. βHe thought it was a good idea. But then Mike cut that β he wasnβt happy about that.β
Tapia de Veer added, βI mean, at that point, we already had our last fight forever, I think. So he was just saying no to anything.β He then uploaded his longer version to his YouTube.
White, on his end, responded to Tapia de Veer quitting, saying anΒ interview with Howard SternΒ on April 8, that he “honestly” didn’t know what happened.
βExcept now Iβm reading his interviews because he decides to do some PR campaign about him leaving the show,β White said. βI donβt think he respected me.β
White claimed that they βnever really even foughtβ and said the composer βwasnβt a team player and that he wanted to do it his way. I was thrown that he would go toΒ The New York TimesΒ to s— on me and the show three days before the finale,β he said. βIt was kind of a b—- move.β
Jason Isaacs stirs the pot with his comments across interviews
February 2025: He was involved in off-screen drama, he says
In an interview with The Guardian, published in February 2025, Isaacs called the set βa theater camp,β as well as βan open prison camp.β
βYou couldnβt avoid one other. There are tensions and difficulties, I donβt know if they spilled from on screen to off-screen, or if it would have happened anyway,β he said. βThere were alliances that formed and broke, romances that formed and broke, friendships that formed and broke. Itβs a long period of time for people to be away from their family with an open bar and all the wildness being in Thailand allows.β
He then got candid about the instances that even White and producer David Bernad witnessed.
βI canβt pretend I wasnβt involved in some off-screen drama,” Isaacs said. “I canβt speak for them, but I imagine they think it feeds into the on-screen drama, and they might well be right. I think the heat contributed to these fissures appearing.”
At the time, the actor believed that they would put their differences behind them at the premiere.
βWeβll all see one other again (for the premiere) and Iβm sure weβll be hugging and kissing and remembering it fondly. But there were times when things were not quite so fond,β he said.
βI was in some ways used to it, but within a couple of weeks my wife (who was with him on set and used to be an actor) went, βSome of these people are f—— mad.β I said, βNo, itβs just a bunch of actors away on location, love. Youβve forgotten what itβs like.ββ

March 2025: Jason Isaacs says the set was like ‘White Lotus,’ with ‘fewer deaths and just as much drama’
The actor continued to spill just enough tea to keep fans interested. In a March interview with Vulture, Isaacs once again touched on the workplace dynamics.
βIt wasnβt a holiday. Some people got very close, there were friendships that were made and friendships that were lost. All the things you would imagine with a group of people unanchored from their home lives on the other side of the world, in the intense pressure cooker of the working environment with eye-melting heat and insects and late nights,β he said.
βThey say in the show, βWhat happens in Thailand stays in Thailand,β but thereβs an off-screenΒ βWhite LotusβΒ as well, with fewer deaths but just as much drama,β he added.
When asked to elaborate on the drama he said, he would βabsolutely not.β
βI became very close to some people and less close to others,β was all he added. βBut we still all had that experience together and thereβs a certain level of discretion required.β
April 2025: Jason Isaacs says there were issues, but itβs βnone of your businessβ
Isaacs addressed the chatter his comments were generating head-on in an April 9 interview on SiriusXMβsΒ βThe Happy Hour.”
βLike anywhere you go for the summer, thereβs friendships, thereβs romances, thereβs arguments, thereβs cliques that form and break and reform and stuff like that. Iβm careful,β Isaacs said. βIβm not stupid. I look at the Internet.β
βAnd all these amateur Sherlock Holmes out there and nobody has the slightest clue what theyβre talking about,β he continued. βPeople who think theyβre onto something, it then gets magnified … Iβm talking about people youβve never met before half the time, in different departments and the people in the hair and costume and in the accounts department and stuff.β
He added that any drama βitβs none of your business,β before acknowledging that being on set βwasnβt a holiday.β
βPeople think we were on a seven-month holiday, and believe me, it felt like work a lot of the time. It was insanely hot, and thereβs all the normal social tensions, you get anywhere,β he continued, before sending a message to people. βAnd for all of you who think youβve cracked it by something you think someone has posted, or whoβs in the photo or not … youβre just so far from the truth.β
Producer David Bernad hinted that actors took on their characters’ personalities
Producer Bernad reflected on workplace drama in the same The Guardian interview Isaacs first shared some set secrets.
βWhether itβs subconscious or conscious, people take on the persona of their character. Like any workplace, if you spend that much time together, people start to get annoyed with one other,β Bernad said, also touching on the heat in real life and on the screen.
βThatβs another aspect of the show thatβs unique. On normal productions, you work, then you go home to your family,β he said. βHere you work, and you go home to the same people.βΒ