





Rhea Seehorn has teamed up with Breaking Bad auteur Vince Gilligan once again for a new series. Only this time, she’s the hero — if a reluctant one. Pluribus stars Seehorn as romance author Carol Sturka, who’s one of 11 people on Earth seemingly immune to an out-of-this-world virus that transforms humanity into an agonizingly pleasant hive mind. The show breaks new creative ground for Gilligan, whose cult favorite Better Call Saul (more on that below) earned Seehorn a Hollywood Critics Association award for Best Supporting Actress in a Drama in 2022.
Of course, that’s not where the actor’s work begins or ends. Outside her collaborations with Gilligan, Seehorn has also starred in The Shaggy Dog, The Thick of It, Dollhouse, Burn Notice, Roseanne, Veep, and The Twilight Zone. You can watch her in these additional projects on Netflix.





Seehorn got her big break in Better Call Saul, a neo-noir legal series created by Gilligan and Peter Gould that racked up 53 Emmy nominations over its six-season run. In this prequel to Gilligan’s Breaking Bad, Bob Odenkirk (Nobody) stars as Jimmy McGill, an aspiring lawyer and former con artist whose moral devolution lands him in the criminal underworld. He eventually takes on the Saul Goodman persona viewers know from Breaking Bad. Seehorn plays Kim Wexler, Saul’s colleague and love interest.

This horror film based on author Elizabeth Brundage’s All Things Cease to Appear stars Amanda Seyfried (Mamma Mia!) and James Norton (House of Guinness) as a couple, Catherine and George, who move into a farmhouse in upstate New York for a fresh start — only for their lives to unravel. Seehorn co-stars as George’s colleague, Justine, who helps Catherine unearth her husband’s secrets.

M.J. Bassett directs this follow-up to Spike Lee’s Inside Man (2006) starring Denzel Washington (Training Day). In the sequel to the crime thriller, Aml Ameen (The Maze Runner) plays Remy Darbonne, an NYPD hostage negotiator who must work with Dr. Brynn Stewart (Seehorn), an FBI hostage negotiator, to stop the theft of a stash of Nazi gold from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.









































