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It’s been nearly five years since Netflix introduced the story to its subscribers Joe Goldberg, a serial killer “You” who often has a toxic obsession with the women he crosses his path. embodied Penn Bradley- said the actor RPP news how he became interested in the project when Sera Gamble and Greg Berlanti, the creators of the series, offered him the lead role.
“I was drawn to the fact that the show was really a conversation about how we feel about love and love stories and how it affects our relationships,” she said. At the center of his dialogue with showrunners there has always been a dilemma: do our ideas about love intersect with stories that tell us about this feeling. “What does he say [‘You’] about love? I don’t consider it a love story, but in a way it’s about how we see love,” he said.
It is this “meta-study” that is the point that continues to fascinate Penn Bradley Netflix project, which just released its 4th season on February 9th. Also, of course, the “journey” that Joe Goldberg has taken in past seasons, as this elusive protagonist has gone from being a bookseller in New York to a fugitive in Los Angeles, from a confirmed bachelor to a married man in trouble.
Distancing from Jeffrey Dahmer
What “You”has a serial killer as the protagonist doesn’t turn fiction into a ‘clinical theater’ of a sociopathic person.” [Joe] he is psychologically too contradictory to be a real person,” said Bradgley. And this is its difference, for example, from the recent production, focused on Jeffrey Dahmer.
“I think that [Joe] this is a different model, this is not a real person at all. The series is not about a serial killer, I think it’s about love again. A love story in which he is not in love, but believes that he is in love, and represents not with his violence, but with his thought what happens to many of us who are captured by fantasies of romance, ”he said.
It is these illusions that affect the protagonist “Youand undermined his ability to “be in a more meaningful relationship”. “The fact that he is a serial killer is just a gimmick. The show is not about mental illness. Also, there’s an aspect of humor that I think really elevates it and sets it apart from the automatic consumption of a serial killer,” he explained.

Joe Goldberg’s makeover
From the first season to the current one, for Penn Bradley Not only “Joe Goldberg is changing,” but the series itself. “The balance tends to be that he understands that it doesn’t matter who he is or where he is, but that his problems are actually within himself. For Joe, this is a pretty important symbol of growth,” he wrote.
The protagonist “You”, according to the person who interprets it, “seems to know what it takes to grow and change”. “He’s trying to get things, I think perhaps more desperately than ever,” he said. And what is it like for Bradgley to bring these transformations to life? “At the moment I’m a little easy, I just know him,” he said.
“I literally lace up his shoes and it’s hard for me to be Joe when I’m not wearing them. Putting yourself in his shoes is very stressful and usually gets me in trouble for about two months throughout the series. But I could put Joe anywhere. place and I think it would make sense for me because I know how to play with it,” he said.
EER 5×01 HARRY AND MEGAN: ‘Real’ gossip gives us life
We have returned! And we dedicate the first episode of season 5 to the controversy surrounding the Netflix documentary in which Prince Harry and Meghan Markle tell their love story. Yes, it took us a while to release the chapter, but it was worth it. Who was behind the media bullying? Is the royal family racist? Laura Amasifuen and Lucia Barja analyze salsa about this soap opera love story. Come and listen.
Source: RPP
