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A Show Few Have Seen: Inside The Savant

by Jai Singh Nanda March 17, 2026
written by Jai Singh Nanda

There are shows you watch along with everyone else.

And then there are shows that, for one reason or another, never fully make it out into the world.

The Savant falls into the second category.

Originally developed as a limited series for Apple TV+, the crime thriller—created by Melissa James Gibson and inspired by a real-life article about a woman infiltrating online extremist groups—was set for release before being pulled back entirely. No rollout. No weekly drops. No real audience reception in the traditional sense.

Which makes the experience of watching it—and speaking to the people who made it—feel different from the start.

Because this is a show that exists, but in a way, also doesn’t.

I was one of the few people given access to see it, and then had the opportunity to speak with Jessica Chastain and Nnamdi Asomugha about what drew them to the project, what it demanded from them, and what they hope people take from it, whenever and however it finds its way to an audience.

A Story That Started With Reality

For Jessica Chastain, the entry point into The Savant wasn’t just the role.

It was the story itself.

She described coming across the article that inspired the series and being struck by the idea that there are people whose work exists entirely in the shadows of the internet, embedding themselves inside dangerous online spaces in order to prevent real-world violence. It wasn’t just the concept that stood out to her, but the fact that it was centered on a woman balancing that work with a personal life.

That combination, the scale of the responsibility and the intimacy of the character’s life outside of it, is what made her want to be involved not just as an actor, but as a producer.

From her perspective, it wasn’t enough to simply perform in the story. She wanted to help shape how it was brought to screen.

And that meant committing to a process that was significantly larger than a typical film.

Building Something Long-Form

When I asked her about the difference between producing a series and producing a film, her answer was straightforward.

It’s the same job.

Just amplified.

Instead of telling a story over the course of a couple of hours, you’re building something that stretches across multiple episodes. More characters, more moving pieces, more time spent developing the world and shaping the narrative. It becomes a longer, more intensive process at every stage, from development to production.

She walked through how the project evolved from a single article into a full series. First comes the idea. Then the pitch. Then the process of finding a home for it. Then the development. Then the actual production.

Each step adding another layer.

By the time you arrive at the finished product, you’re not just looking at a single piece of work. You’re looking at something that has been built over years.

A Character Living Between Worlds

On the other side of the conversation, Nnamdi Asomugha spoke about his character, Charlie, and what it meant to exist within a story where so much is happening beneath the surface.

Charlie is navigating a family dynamic shaped by secrets, responsibilities, and the kind of pressure that doesn’t always present itself directly. For Asomugha, the connection to the role came less from the specifics of the storyline and more from the emotional structure around it.

He talked about the experience of being away from home for extended periods during production and then returning to reintegrate into his own family life. That rhythm—leaving, returning, recalibrating—mirrored what his character goes through in a different context.

The circumstances may not be the same, but the feeling of trying to reestablish your place within a family after time away is something that translates.

That sense of grounding becomes important in a show built around a subject that most people don’t encounter directly.

Work That Happens Out of Sight

Both actors kept returning to a similar idea when talking about what they hope audiences take from the series.

Awareness.

For Chastain, it’s about understanding the reality of what exists online, particularly for younger people, and the importance of paying attention to it. The idea that the digital world is not separate from real-world consequences, and that there are people actively working to monitor and prevent harm within those spaces.

For Asomugha, it’s about recognizing the individuals doing that work.

The people who operate behind the scenes, often without recognition, whose job is to prevent something from happening rather than respond after it already has.

It’s a different kind of heroism.

One that doesn’t announce itself.

One that, in many cases, people don’t even realize exists.

A Project in Limbo

What makes The Savant especially unusual is that these conversations are happening around a show that has not been released in the traditional sense.

It was developed. Produced. Completed.

And then, just before it was meant to reach audiences, it was pulled back.

There’s no standard way to talk about something in that position.

There’s no audience reaction to point to. No rollout to contextualize it. No shared experience of people watching it at the same time and forming a collective response.

Instead, what you’re left with is the work itself, and the people who made it.

And in this case, those people are talking about a project that, for now, exists in a kind of in-between space.

Not fully public.

Not entirely unseen.

Just waiting.

Final Thoughts

By the end of my conversation with Jessica Chastain and Nnamdi Asomugha, what stood out most wasn’t the scale of the production or the unusual circumstances surrounding the show’s release.

It was the intention behind it.

A story pulled from reality.

A character built around that reality.

A process that expanded from a single article into something much larger.

And a group of people trying to bring attention to a world that most audiences don’t regularly see.

Whatever happens next with The Savant, whether it finds its way back to audiences or remains in its current state, the work behind it is already there.

And for now, that’s the version of it that exists.

March 17, 2026 0 comments
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Entertainment

Chaos, Christmas, and a Breaking Point: Inside Oh. What. Fun.

by Jai Singh Nanda March 17, 2026
written by Jai Singh Nanda

In Oh. What. Fun., Christmas is not just a holiday. It is a pressure cooker.

The Amazon MGM Studios holiday comedy, directed by Michael Showalter, takes a familiar idea and pushes it just far enough to feel fresh. What happens when the person holding everything together finally decides she’s done?

Michelle Pfeiffer leads the film as Claire Clauster, a mother who spends the entire year planning the perfect Christmas for her family, only to realize that no one seems to notice. When her efforts go unappreciated, she does something unexpected. She leaves.

What follows is a chaotic unraveling on both sides. Claire sets off on her own strange, impulsive journey, while back home, her family is left to deal with the reality of what happens when the glue disappears.

I sat down with Chloë Grace Moretz and Dominic Sessa, who play two of Claire’s children, to talk about stepping into that world, the shifting dynamics of family during the holidays, and how a story like this manages to feel both heightened and uncomfortably real.

When the Holiday Spirit Cracks

At its core, Oh. What. Fun. works because it taps into something instantly recognizable.

Everyone knows what the “perfect holiday” is supposed to look like. The decorations. The traditions. The expectations.

And everyone, at some point, has seen what happens when that image starts to crack.

The film leans into that tension. It takes the familiar chaos of family gatherings and pushes it just a little further, letting moments spiral into something bigger, funnier, and sometimes more revealing than expected.

That balance between comedy and reality is what gives the film its edge.

Growing Up in a Changing Industry

Our conversation started in a different place.

I asked Moretz about the evolution of the industry, having started her career in a time dominated by theatrical releases and traditional media, compared to today’s streaming-driven landscape.

For her, the difference is not subtle.

She spoke about the shift in pace, moving from shooting on film with more time to build something, to an era where everything can feel faster and more compressed. One word she kept coming back to was “content,” and how that mindset can sometimes take away from the process.

That is what made this project stand out to her.

She described Oh. What. Fun. as a rare experience where time was actually given to the film. A longer shoot, a more intentional process, and a team that treated it like something worth building, not just something to finish.

You can feel that in the final product. Even in its chaos, there is structure. Even in its comedy, there is intention.

What Success Actually Looks Like

For Dominic Sessa, the conversation shifted toward what it means to enter the industry today.

There is no longer one clear path. No single blueprint to follow.

His answer was simple.

Work with people you like.

It sounds obvious, but it is not something people always prioritize. For Sessa, success is not just about the project itself. It is about the environment you create while making it.

If you enjoy the people you are working with, that becomes its own version of success.

It is a perspective that feels especially relevant for a film like this, one that relies so heavily on ensemble energy and chemistry.

Finding the Humor in the Mess

Even within a story built on frustration and miscommunication, humor plays a central role.

That is where the film finds its rhythm.

The characters are flawed. They interrupt each other, misunderstand each other, and occasionally make everything worse. But that is also what makes them feel real.

The comedy does not come from perfection. It comes from the mess.

And that mess feels familiar.

A Holiday Story That Feels Lived In

What Oh. What. Fun. ultimately understands is that the holidays are not just about celebration. They are about expectation.

They are about the roles people fall into. The traditions they feel obligated to maintain. The quiet frustrations that build over time.

By pushing those ideas to their limit, the film finds something honest underneath the chaos.

And talking with Moretz and Sessa, that same awareness comes through.

There is a clear understanding of what the film is doing and why it works. It is not trying to present a perfect version of family. It is showing what happens when that version falls apart.

Controlled Chaos

By the end of the conversation, one thing stood out.

This is a film that embraces chaos, but it does it with purpose.

It knows exactly how far to push its characters. It knows when to let things spiral and when to pull them back. And most importantly, it understands that underneath all the noise, there has to be something real.

Because no matter how messy things get, the reason these stories work is simple.

They feel familiar.

And sometimes, that is more than enough.

 

March 17, 2026 0 comments
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