Think your fan conversations about Apple TVโs โPluribusโ are heated? Try being on the actual series set. โWe have healthy, sometimes tongue-in-cheek debates about different questions that the show brings up, whether itโs your personal take on what you would do or what you think your character would do,โ star Rhea Seehorn tells the Variety Awards Circuit Podcast.
Of course, this isnโt new for Seehorn on a Vince Gilligan show. She remembers having spirited debates with โBetter Call Saulโ co-star Bob Odenkirk back in the day. โHe would be like, โwell, obviously Kim thinks blah blah blah,โ and I was like, โyeah, well, I donโt think so.โ Heโs like, โyes, she does,โ and I was like, โyou canโt make me say she thinks that!โ Itโs good to have like different perspectives on the same scene.โ
Seehorn credits Gilligan for leaving his stories and characters open to interpretation. โThere are times where people are telling me their interpretation of what they think Carol is doing, thinking, or is feeling, that itโs interesting to take in,โ Seehorn says. โItโs just a facet that Iโm like, โoh, that could be interesting for me to explore,โ or sometimes they are saying something that I already was thinking about exploring. And then thereโs other things, that Iโm like, โIโm just gonna let that be your interpretation.’โ
That includes the viewers that are hoping Carol and Zosia (Karolina Wyndra) might get back together. A problem with that theory: Carol has snapped out of her infatuation, as sheโs reminded that Zosia is really a part of the hive mind that wants to also erase her humanity.
See, complex stuff! As Emmy Phase 1 voting comes to an end on Monday, Seehorn drops by Varietyโs Awards Circuit Podcast to talk about โPluribusโ theories, how her co-stars are nothing like their characters, her anticipation for Season 2 and more. She also looks back at her first time in Variety and takes the 10 Questions quiz. Listen below!
Given the tremendous success Seehorn had playing Kim Wexler on Gilliganโs โBetter Call Saul,โ she admits it was daunting starting a new collaboration โ knowing that the anticipation and expectations would be tremendous.
โThis was not only leaving that world but entirely different character, and sci-fi, although his โX-Filesโ fans were thrilled that he was going back to sci-fi,โ she says. โAnd a female lead, maybe they arenโt going to want that. A lot of factors. And then probably the thing that kept me up more at night in the beginning was not wanting to disappoint Vince. He wrote this for me, and Apple took a gamble on me being the lead of it. A lot, of factors that kept me up, but at the end of the day, I was pretty good at putting that away and realizing the best I could do to service any of those worries was to put my head down and do the work.โ
So, does she have any details on Season 2 yet?
โIโve stopped by the writerโs office to have lunch or say hi, but I havenโt stopped to snoop, and I havenโt called and asked any of them for details,โ she says. โItโs not because I donโt care, because I care deeply. Thereโs an immense amount of trust that their abilities far exceed whatever I was gonna show up and offer, but I also donโt want to put them in a position where they are worried about what to reveal to me and what not to reveal to me. One of the reasons that we get our scripts one at a time is not to manipulate the actors. Because there are things that just arenโt cemented. Vince Gilligan and Peter Gould, on โSaul,โ would tell me that they didnโt want to be in a position where they said, โoh my god, this huge thing comes up in Episode 6 for you,โ and then it changes, and itโs not there.โ

Seehorn first appeared in Variety on Aprul 26, 1996, via a production chart listing for the independent film โFloating.โ โI hadnโt moved out here yet,โ Seehorn recalls. โThat is a for real, legit indie. Tiny budget, self-funded. I remember that I shot it in Washington, D.C.โ
Back then, she was doing theater in the D.C. area, and every once in a while indie films or productions would do through the area. โI remember โNixonโ was shooting there and Barry Levinson would shoot something in Baltimore, and weโd all hustle over there,โ she says. โI think โHomicideโ was still being shot in Baltimore at the time. I think that was my first full episode of a television series. And then, as Iโve spoken about in the press before, another way that people would get on-camera experience in the theater community there was doing industrials, in-house training videos. Because thereโs so many, not just government buildings, but flagship headquarters for different companies, so you would do training videos, which was kind of fun.โ
10 QUESTIONS WITH RHEA SEEHORN:
1. Childhood nickname:ย โโBritches.โ I had a habit, Iโve been told, as a toddler, running away from the house and just running to other neighbors and playing with their dog, or going in their backyard, joining other peopleโs barbecues. People would call my parents and let them know where I was, but they would run after me, calling me โBritches,โ because when I would go on my teetering escape, could not keep my pants up to save my life, apparently.โ
2. Something you loved as a kid but canโt believe you were into it now:ย โEating Campbellโs cream of potato soup in its condensed cold form straight out of the can.โ
3. Go-to Karaoke or sing-in-the-shower song:ย โIโm not a karaoke person, but when I am dragged or somebody has a birthday and they really, really want me to do it, itโs Whamโs โCareless Whisper.’โ
4. Give me an alternate title for your show:ย ย โOh, dude, thatโs so hard. I canโt believe they were even able to come up with a log line. I give them all so much credit. Itโs an impossible show to explain!โ
5. Whatโs your secret talent?: โTedious, methodical following of instructions, like everything from a Lego set to like building an Ikea piece of furniture, or somebody saying we canโt figure out how the VCR works, learning to caulk a bathtub. I will sit and patiently and start over when I mess up again and again and again.โ
6. Favorite ice cream flavor: โPeanut Butter and Chocolate, together.โ
7. The one item you couldnโt live without: โMy family and my pets. I have two cats, Auggie and Milo. They have their own Instagram account.โ
8. What TV show in all of history do you wish you were a cast member of?: โโSix Feet Under.โ Or โPen15.’โ
9. Fictional character you most admire: โSarah Lancashireโs character in โHappy Valley.’โ
10. Your favorite piece of advice: โI think one that I come back to all the time is, and Iโve gotten it in various different phrasings from various different parts of my life, but itโs โKeep your side of the street clean.โ If something goes poorly, you can still examine, what was my side in this, is there anything I could do differently. The things that you canโt change, at least make sure your side of the street was clean.โ
Also on this episode of the Awards Circuit Podcast: โMatlockโ star Kathy Bates.

Batesโ first appearance in Variety was on March 10, 1976, for the play โVanities.โ Says Bates: โThat was the first really cool role I had to play. A friend of mine from school wrote it. We were one of the longest-running plays off-Broadway for awhile โ five, six years.โ
But then, when the show moved to the Mark Taper in Los Angeles, established stars were cast in the play. โSandy Duncan played my part, and so we got to be the โB teamโ that went in at the
10 QUESTIONS WITH KATHY BATES:
1. Childhood nickname:ย โWell, my grandmother called me Dosha when I was bad and Kitty when I was good.
2. Something you loved as a kid but canโt believe you were into it now:ย โCanoeing. It was my favorite thing. I went to the YMCA camp, and in a beautiful place in Hardy, Arkansas, and I learned how to canoe, and I was really, really good at it. I was about 11 or 12. I loved it.โ
3. Go-to Karaoke or sing-in-the-shower song:ย โIโll Be Seeing You.โ
4. Give me an alternate title for your show:ย ย โMrs. Opioidโ
5. Whatโs your secret talent?: โI can whistle.โ
6. Favorite ice cream flavor: โDepends, thereโs a restaurant in New York called Balthazar, and they have profiterol with vanilla and this wonderful hot fudge sauce, but my favorite flavor would probably be Salt and Straw, the one that they have with salted caramel. Oh no, you know what my favorite one is? Mint chocolate chip.โ
7. The one item you couldnโt live without: โIt would probably be a pillow of some kind.โ
8. What TV show in all of history do you wish you were a cast member of?: โThe first one that came to mind was โThe Twilight Zone.โ The other first one was โPonderosa.’โ
9. Fictional character you most admire: โI was going to say Scout in โTo Kill a Mockingbird.โ There was another one, my favorite, but she was a real.. she wasnโt fictional. She was a real woman. She was part of the English underground during World War II, and she had one leg because she had one foot was blown off and she did all of these amazing things there.โ
10. Your favorite piece of advice: โSomebody said to me about this business, โyou have to have a head like a bullet and a heart like a baby.โ I think thatโs probably a good advice for life..โ
Varietyโs โAwards Circuitโ podcast, hosted by Clayton Davis, Jazz Tangcay, Emily Longeretta and Michael Schneider, who also produces, is your one-stop source for lively conversations about the best in film and television. Each episode, โAwards Circuitโ features interviews with top film and TV talent and creatives, discussions and debates about awards races and industry headlines, and much more. Subscribe via Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Spotify or anywhere you download podcasts.