People of Earth is an American science fiction comedy television series created by David Jenkins about a support group for alien abductees as well as the aliens who have previously abducted them. TBS ordered the pilot under the name The Group in May 2015, and announced a 10-episode order in January 2016. The series premiered on October 31, 2016, on TBS. On September 13, 2017, TBS renewed the series for a third season.
Video People of Earth
Plot
The series follows city journalist Ozzie Graham (Wyatt Cenac), who travels to Beacon, New York to write a piece on a support group, "StarCrossed", for survivors of alien encounters. Although skeptical at first, Ozzie realizes the truth of the group's claims when he begins to recall similar experiences. Ozzie eventually quits his city job and moves to Beacon to further investigate the town's strange occurrences, as well as resolve issues in his past related to his possible abduction.
As the series progresses, Ozzie gradually learns that his employer, Jonathan Walsh, is a reptilian in disguise. Jonathan, who has considered him a friend since he abducted the young Ozzie, explains that there is an alliance among three races of extra-terrestrials: greys, whites, and reptilians, which was sent many years ago to conquer Earth under reptilian leadership. However, in his time on Earth, Jonathan has developed sympathy for humans and wants to expose the truth about the invasion, so he hopes to persuade his alien coworkers and the humans he calls friends to help.
Maps People of Earth
Cast
"StarCrossed" members
A support group for "experiencers" - the term they prefer to abductees.
- Wyatt Cenac as Ozzie Graham, a reporter who travels to Beacon to investigate StarCrossed, then joins them upon realizing that he, too, is an experiencer
- Aaron Davis as young Ozzie
- Ana Gasteyer as Gina Morrison, a therapist
- Luka Jones as Gerry Johnson, a toll booth attendant who is passionate about aliens
- Brian Huskey as Richard Eugene Clancy Schultz, VP of a tech company that makes terminators for ethernet cables
- Alice Wetterlund as Kelly Grady, a temp receptionist at a funeral home
- Da'Vine Joy Randolph as Yvonne Watson, a mailcarrier
- Tracee Chimo as Chelsea Wheeler, a homemaker
- Daniel Stewart Sherman as Ennis Hart, a farmer (Season 1)
- Nancy Lenehan as Margaret Flood, a retiree
Aliens
- Ken Hall as Jeff, a grey working on the alien spaceship (the "Sub-Ship")
- Björn Gustafsson as Don, a white working on the Sub-Ship
- Drew Nelson as Kurt, a reptilian working on the Sub-Ship
- Nelson also voices the deer Ozzie hallucinates after his experience
- Michael Cassidy as Jonathan Walsh, a reptilian working on Earth as owner of the Glint media empire Ozzie works for
- Debra Lynne McCabe as Nancy, an android working as Jonathan's Earth assistant
- Victor Williams as Assessor, a reptilian and senior operative on Earth
- Peter Serafinowicz as Eric, a floating robotic cube and new boss on the Sub-Ship
- Ted Jefferies as Eric's guard
- Paul Lieberstein as Assessor, a reptilian assassin
Supporting characters
- Oscar Nuñez as Father Doug, the priest in charge of the church where StarCrossed meets, who renounces his priesthood to pursue a relationship with Chelsea
- Nasim Pedrad as Agent Alex Foster/Crystal, an FBI agent who was abducted as a baby
- Pedrad also plays Jasmine, Foster's twin sister
- Amy Landecker as Debbie Schultz, Richard's ex-wife
- Michael Crane as John Wheeler, Chelsea's husband
- H. Jon Benjamin as Officer Lance Glimmer, a police officer working for the aliens
- Kevin Hanchard as Agent Jim Saunders, an FBI agent working for the aliens, and Foster's superior
- Eddson Morales as Brian
- Sam Malkin as Glenn, Richard's neighbor
- Douglas Nyback as Todd, Richard's boss
Episodes
Season 1 (2016)
Season 2 (2017)
Production
TBS first began developing the show in May 2015 and was going by The Group as its working title at the time, and then the pilot was ordered to series with a 10-episode order by TBS in January 2016. It was directed by Greg Daniels and shot in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Reception
Critical response
People of Earth has received mostly positive reviews from television critics. The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes gives the first season an approval rating of 92%, based on 24 reviews, with an average rating of 7.25/10. The site's critical consensus reads: "People of Earth skillfully grounds its high-concept premise with a strong story, quirky humor, and sweetly relatable humanity." On Metacritic, the first season has a score of 72 out of 100, based on reviews from 20 critics, indicating "Generally favorable reviews".
Mike Hale of The New York Times gave it a positive review, writing: "People of Earth provides a funny line or detail just often enough to keep you watching." Maureen Ryan of Variety also praised the series, declaring "People of Earth may be slight and decidedly modest in its ambitions and execution, but it's not a show that sets out to mock or belittle unconventional people."
References
External links
- People of Earth on IMDb
Source of article : Wikipedia