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Tag: Goldstein
Supreme Court lawyer Tom Goldstein arrested after hiding cryptocurrency
Tom Goldstein, a partner at the law firm of Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLC, poses for a photo outside the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Monday, Jan. 11, 2010.
Stephen Voss | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Leading Supreme Court lawyer Tom Goldstein was rearrested Monday after federal prosecutors told a judge that the high-stakes poker player is a “serious” flight risk from his criminal tax evasion case and should have his bail revoked because he failed to disclose he controls two cryptocurrency wallets through which he received more than $8 million.
Over the last five days Goldstein “sent more than $6 million of cryptocurrency” from those wallets, despite having been ordered by a judge not to transfer any funds without approval, prosecutors wrote in a filing in Maryland federal court.
“Defendant’s conduct demonstrates that he is a serious risk of flight, that he cannot abide by the conditions of release, and that he has lied to this Court and Pretrial Services,” the Maryland U.S. Attorney’s Office said in the filing.
“A rebuttable presumption that Defendant is a danger to the community now applies, and Defendant’s conditions of release should be revoked,” the filing says.
The SCOTUSblog publisher Goldstein was indicted in January on federal tax evasion charges that allege he failed to declare millions of dollars in poker winnings and used his law firm’s money to pay his gambling debts.
Goldstein, who has argued before the Supreme Court more than nearly any other attorney in private practice in modern times, is accused of willfully failing to pay more than $5.3 million in taxes.
One of the wallets Goldstein failed to disclose after his indictment in January has been used to send more than $73.6 million and to receive $75.6 million in cryptocurrency since it was first used in November 2022, the filing says.
Although no assets were in the wallet when Goldstein was indicted on Jan. 16, $10 worth of Tether crypto was sent to it on Feb. 4 — six days after his first appearance in court — and an hour later about $8 million worth of Tether was sent to the wallet, the filing says. Within two hours of that, about $6 million in Tether was sent out of the wallet in two separate transactions, the filing said.
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Supreme Court lawyer Tom Goldstein arrested after hiding cryptocurrencyRenowned Supreme Court lawyer Tom Goldstein has been arrested for allegedly hiding cryptocurrency assets from the government. Goldstein, who is known for his high-profile cases and legal expertise, was taken into custody after authorities discovered that he had failed to report over $1 million worth of cryptocurrency holdings.
The investigation into Goldstein’s finances began after suspicions were raised about his lavish lifestyle and extravagant spending habits. Authorities found evidence of large transactions and investments in various cryptocurrencies, which Goldstein had not disclosed to the IRS.
Goldstein’s arrest has sent shockwaves through the legal community, as many are questioning how such a prominent lawyer could be involved in such a scandal. His reputation and career are now in jeopardy as he faces charges of tax evasion and money laundering.
It serves as a stark reminder that no one is above the law, and that even the most respected individuals can find themselves in legal trouble if they try to evade their financial obligations. Goldstein’s case serves as a cautionary tale for others who may be tempted to hide assets in the fast-growing world of cryptocurrency.
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Supreme Court lawyer Tom Goldstein, cryptocurrency, arrest, legal news, Supreme Court, lawyer arrested, cryptocurrency news, Tom Goldstein arrest, legal troubles, bitcoin, blockchain, digital currency, crime, legal issues, lawyer scandal.
#Supreme #Court #lawyer #Tom #Goldstein #arrested #hiding #cryptocurrencySCOTUSblog Publisher Tom Goldstein Indicted In Tax Case
By Phillip Bantz ( January 16, 2025, 3:52 PM EST) — Tom Goldstein, a publisher of SCOTUSblog and one of the most experienced U.S. Supreme Court lawyers in the country, was indicted Thursday in Maryland federal court on charges he schemed to evade paying taxes for years and used funds from his boutique law firm to cover gambling debts. …
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In a shocking turn of events, SCOTUSblog publisher Tom Goldstein has been indicted in a tax case. Goldstein, a prominent figure in the legal world, is facing serious charges related to tax evasion.This news has sent shockwaves through the legal community, as Goldstein is known for his expertise in Supreme Court cases and his influential blog. Many are wondering how this will impact his work and reputation going forward.
Stay tuned as more details unfold in this developing story.
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SCOTUSblog, Tom Goldstein, tax case, indictment, legal news, Supreme Court, tax evasion, criminal charges, legal blog, court news, legal updates, legal expert
#SCOTUSblog #Publisher #Tom #Goldstein #Indicted #Tax #CaseBrett Goldstein and Season 3
[This story contains major spoilers from the Shrinking season two finale, “The Last Thanksgiving.“]
Shrinking co-creator Bill Lawrence has come a long way since thinking Brett Goldstein wasn’t the right actor to play the pivotal role of Louis in the Emmy-nominated show’s second season.
While speaking with The Hollywood Reporter at the start of season two, the showrunner explained that he saw Goldstein as Ted Lasso‘s Roy Kent and couldn’t picture him playing a more sensitive, sweet character, like Louis.
“This show would only work if you could have somebody that did awful things and yet still want it to work out for them anyway,” Lawrence said of the character. “So, I almost blew it. He would never be so forward as to ask, and Jason Segel made it happen.”
Now, looking back at the season as a whole, Lawrence doesn’t think it would have worked without the actor as Louis this season.
Episode eight, “Last Drink,” gave audiences their first (and only) glimpse at Louis’ life before the accident, and how Jimmy (Jason Segel) and Alice (Lukita Maxwell) weren’t the only ones whose lives were ruined by it.
“That probably confused some people who wanted to hate Louis,” Lawrence now tells THR, speaking about the finale. “Brett is so good. This show wouldn’t have worked this year had Brett Goldstein not been able to do moments, like when you see him kick Meredith Hagner [who played his girlfriend-then-fiancée, Sarah] out and how much he’s suffering. If that had not felt completely authentic and hadn’t crushed you, I don’t think the season would have worked.”
The final moments of season two put Goldstein’s dramatic acting to the test even further when his character, still holding on to so much grief and heartbreak over the accident, is steps away from jumping in front of a train. But Jimmy shows up and does what Alice has been asking him to since she forgave Louis in episode six: talk to him.
“We really wanted to drive home the point in a hopeful and optimistic show, especially where we’re all at in our own lives right now, the power of forgiveness,” the co-creator shares. “If the season’s about forgiveness, that the simple act of doing it can save you. It can save someone else. It can save relationships. It’s viral by its nature. If it goes from one person, it goes to another.”
Below, the co-creator also opens up about the thought process behind not showing the car accident that killed Tia (Lilan Bowden); how Jimmy’s real journey with forgiveness wasn’t actually with Louis but with himself; if he’d be open to Cobie Smulders returning; where Paul’s (Harrison Ford) progressing Parkinson’s disease will take him in the already renewed season three; and more.
***
When we spoke earlier this season, you had teased that Liz (Christa Miller, who is married in real life to Lawrence) would cheat on Derek (Ted McGinley). Why did you decide to incorporate that into the storyline this season?
Not to be nerdy, but we were talking about the first year is about grief, and the second year is about forgiveness, right? And when we say it’s about forgiveness, everybody goes, “Oh, it’s about Jimmy forgiving this drunk driver.” It’s not. It’s about Jimmy forgiving himself, and it’s about every character. You can go through every character having to have a forgiveness thing. I wanted to make sure that we did something that poignant for Liz’s character as well, because my wife’s a rock star and a good dramatic actress, and so we knew we wanted to subtly set up the fact that she was kind of losing control of who she was and where she was in the world. I’m going through that in real life sometimes at my age when your kids leave and stuff, and we knew it was a direct line to a pretty significant forgiveness arc for those two characters. It’s also a great way to give Ted McGinley some meaty stuff because that guy earned it this year. He’s so good.
From what I’ve seen online, people are happy he was upped to a series regular for this season. They’ve loved seeing more of Derek. There are several ways he could have reacted to Liz’s news, but he kind of fell somewhere in the middle. He was upset. He took his space, but he also forgave her fairly quickly when he realized that he wasn’t there for her the way that he should have been.
I love stories that are not going to make everybody happy. We’re TV fans, too, all the writers on this show. There’s plenty of people going, “I can’t believe anybody would ever forgive the person who killed their mom or their wife,” and sometimes I can’t either. But once you type it up on the internet, there’s 9,000 stories, some heartwarming, some unbelievable. We told everybody that it was connected to a real one, and it was. I dealt with a kid who was drunk driving and killed another kid, and the parents — without saying names — embraced that kid. They didn’t want two lives to be ruined. So you’re like, “Oh, it’s out there.” And what an interesting challenge to hopefully make people think about whether or not they could ever find that in their heart.
If I were doing a show just about Derek and Liz’s marriage, which is oddly akin to my marriage, I would go, “It’s no accident that they have been married without blips for — if you do the math — almost 27 years because of their kids’ ages.” She was having an awful time, and she had a horrible weak moment.” You saw all of it. You literally saw kind of an emotional transgression and one kiss and an immediate admission. I would say just as many people that went, “Derek shouldn’t forgive her that quickly.” If you had Derek not forgive her — those are the stories I like — and I was a fan of the show, I would write, “what the fuck? They’ve been married for 27 years, and he ignored her, and she did a kiss and came and admit it, and he’s just throwing it away?” So that’s why those things are fun because they aren’t neat and tight.
Christa Miller as Liz and Ted McGinley as Derek in Shrinking season two.
Courtesy of Apple TV+
In episode eight, we get the first look at Louis’ life before the accident. How did you decide what his life would be like before that happened?
It was huge. We use, in the writers room, the word manipulative as a good word because I think it’s mean if you’re doing it to friends and family. But as a writer, you want to elicit empathy or tears or laughter. You know, it’s a good word. We knew a very manipulative thing to do in that flashback episode was to show that Louis and Jimmy through intercutting and their own past stories were essentially the same people that got their lives ruined by the same accident. So I think that probably confused some people that wanted to hate Louis. That’s why I had to say — I hate saying it because it makes me mad — Brett is so good. It’s been out there that I didn’t want to cast him as Louis, and Jason fought for him. This show wouldn’t have worked this year had Brett Goldstein not been able to do moments, like when you see him kick Meredith Hagner out and how much he’s suffering. If that had not felt completely authentic and hadn’t crushed you, I don’t think the season would have worked.
In that episode, we see the events surrounding the accident but not the accident itself. What was the thought process behind that?
It was, without a doubt, twofold. We didn’t want people to leave Louis as a villain, and I think it’s hard if you had that visceral moment of seeing it happen. I would have, as a viewer, been like, “Oh, fuck that guy!” I mean, it’s the same reason it was intentional that we called him a drunk driver, and because everybody goes like, “Some guy got really fucking drunk and whatever.” And then we knew when we showed it, he was gonna have two drinks and not even have finished his third, which, by the way, warning to everybody, if you’re Brett Goldstein and you’re 5’10” and you weigh a buck something, and you have two liquor drinks and a half of a third one, and you get in an accident, you’re fucked. So it’s a good public service announcement because a lot of people are like, “He wouldn’t be!” I’m like, “I got news for you: He would be.” And so I think we just wanted to make it not so easy for people to dislike him.
It also looked like he was drinking Old Fashioneds, and those things are strong.
Look at you! We nerded out in the writers room. We’re literally like, “Nope. Can’t be wine.” “It can’t be whatever.” “It also can’t be something that looks like a daiquiri.” It has to look like that dude is on his third Old Fashioned or his third Bourbon and Coke, and you’re like, “Oh, shit. Are they doubles? What are they?”
In that same episode, we also see Paul (Harrison Ford) choose Jimmy to be the person he wants to have his last drink with. Why Jimmy?
Paul, we always play him as slightly omniscient, and he knows what’s coming. Because when Jimmy says, “Do you ever think I’m going to be able to forgive myself?” And Paul says, “Yeah.” And Jimmy says, “Really?” And Paul says, “I hope so,” but he doesn’t say it confidently. He says it emotionally. So I think it’s because we’re trying to imply that Paul’s character is still very worried about how this is going to end for his younger friend.
Jason Segel as Jimmy and Harrison Ford as Paul in Shrinking season two.
Courtesy of Apple TV+
It was so interesting to see that’s where Jimmy’s forgiveness storyline went. It wasn’t so much Louis, though, that was definitely a part of it. It was his and Alice’s relationship. Was that always where you wanted to take his storyline?
The biggest plan — the trick of forgiveness — was you think it’s about forgiving this other guy because, to be honest, one of the things that we argued back and forth was whether or not Jimmy was ever going to forgive Louis. But we knew that what the story was really about — and we knew this even the first year — was, “How can you forgive yourself for when the one thing you said to your wife is that you’re not going to fuck up the best thing you ever did, which is this kid, and you absolutely shit the bed on being a dad?” That’s why we showed it. It’s why we showed it again. So we always knew we were going to do that. I forget who pitched — it’s such a talented writers room — someone had pitched the whole thing of, in our heads, we always think, if something bad happens, when you have dreams or fantasy or whatever, that you’re going to be the hero and rise to the occasion. But you don’t always do that.
It was so interesting to see Brian (Michael Urie) develop a friendship with Louis before anybody else. Why did you want him to be the first one to forgive him?
The interesting thing for us was less about forgiveness for Brian. I enjoy the massive comedy of narcissism, and Michael Urie’s amazing at playing it. And if you wanted to know what a line that we had early on that summed up his character, it was, “Narcissism is having the courage to put yourself first.” And Jimmy’s like, “That’s not what narcissism is.” And so, if we were doing a story about this guy eventually, who always, deep down, wanted a kid but didn’t think, because of his narcissism and who he is, that he would be good at this. We wanted to do a story that was so clear that he had the ability to put someone else above himself and above his own feelings. And so it was really important that he saw this guy, that he was really suffering. And also it was a great excuse for Michael Urie to do that speech two and a half times. We had to do the Paley Center last night, and someone asked him, could you still do it? And they gave him the queue line. He just started doing it again. It just fucking kills me.
The second time I heard it, I was like, “Wait, I’ve heard this before.”
The Easter egg, just so you know, is the only joke that was changed. In the first version, he imagined his baby would be Bernadette Peters if it was a girl, or Peter Bernadette if it was a boy. Michael is currently starring on Broadway — it’s now moved to L.A. — in Once Upon a Mattress with Sutton Foster. So, in the second version, it was Sutton Foster if it’s a girl, or Foster Sutton if it’s a boy, but we knew that was the only thing that would change.
Brett Goldstein and Lukita Maxwell in Shrinking.
Apple TV+
So through his forgiveness of Louis, we also see Brian encourage Alice to speak to him, leading to her eventually reading him his letter and ultimately forgiving him, because that’s what Tia would do. How did you decide how she would go about forgiving him?
It was a Brett Goldstein pitch because he thought it would be really cool — I think he wrote that one; I could be wrong — he thought it’d be really cool if she went there needing to continue to be mad at him and want him to get the fuck out of her family’s life. But he asks her questions, and because of him, she remembers something about her mom that she had forgotten. I don’t know if you remember, the first year we did a thing of how she was starting to forget her mom’s laugh and forget different things, and that’s such a gift from this guy. She forgave him because it crystallized her that’s who her mom was, probably overly forgiving always. So just kind of a cool journey. One of the things we try to do on this show, whether it works or not, is set up the things that happen even in previous seasons, much less previous episodes.
The scene where Jimmy sees Brian, Louis and Alice eating at that restaurant was heart-wrenching. How did you all decide that’s how you wanted him to find out that Alice was in communication and had even been hanging out with Louis in a friendly way?
Well, here’s what we knew. We wanted to go back and show everybody’s lives before the accident, and the best way to do it was literally right after the moment that he sees that guy is still in his life and around his family. And so that was the trick of it. We almost biffed one thing, and I’ll tell you, because you probably didn’t even notice, right? Everybody’s like, “Oh, it’s such a random coincidence that Jimmy is outside the restaurant where they all happen to be after he drops that guy off.” It’s not. I just wish we’d shot it a little clearer. That’s the restaurant that they had breakfast at that morning, him and that Dan guy. It’s just we shot it in an angle. In the morning, when he was there with that patient and eating pancakes at a table, that table is just a little to the left, and he’s like, “Let’s go.” They went together in their car to the next place to the next place, and he’s dropping him off at the same restaurant we started that. Sometimes, I can always see and hear things that make me insane and bother me forever. It bothers me forever that it was not crystal clear it was the same restaurant.
In episode 10, you had a How I Met Your Mother reunion with Cobie Smulders. She said that you all approached her for it. How did you decide on her being the actress to play Sofi?
Well, here’s the coolest thing. I told you the third year is about moving forward, and we always, kind of, put Easter eggs about what the next year is about the previous [one]. So we knew as writers from a starting place, we go, “Man, for the 10th episode, just to show people where Jimmy is, let’s present a personification of the ultimate version of what he should be doing moving forward with his life, like the perfect girl for him.” And if you’re only going to do one scene and do the perfect girl, you have to do that thing, which is find immediate chemistry. In Shrinking terms, because we’re at a cool place right now, we’re able to cast really cool people. People actually, in a great way, are interested in being on the show. We’re very grateful. So, instead of auditioning and hunting, we get to sit around and go, “Who would it be cool to do with?” Not only does Jason have a great rapport with Cobie, and she’s a great actress doing romantic comedy, I love, as long as times past, revisiting dynamics like that. We as a writing staff love the challenge of going, “Let’s write a scene that people don’t right away go, ‘Oh, that’s How I Met Your Mother.’” I watched the scene, and I was a How I Met Your Mother fan, and even though it was cool that it was her, I was lost in watching the two of them have crazy chemistry and wishing that he would answer her text later.
I’m going to tell you something embarrassing. I was also a How I Met Your Mother fan, and I didn’t even make that connection in my head. My brain wasn’t like, “They’ve been onscreen together before.” It was like, “This is two actors I know and love, and look at them being together.” My brain didn’t even go there.
That’s awesome. You just made me happy. If you can pull that off, and it works on two levels, how cool is that, man? It was just really neat. The passage of time helps and how talented they are helps.
Cobie Smulders and Jason Segel in Shrinking season two.
Apple TV+
Not much came of Jimmy and Sofi, besides a really nice moment for them, but there is clearly a connection there, like you said. Could we potentially see her again?
(Laughs) It’s a good idea.
I spoke to her. She said she’d be down.
I read that interview. That’s a good idea. Without a doubt. Our fingers being crossed. The only bummer of working with people that great is they often have lots of jobs. Lily Rabe, who plays Harrison’s daughter, is definitely in the show in the third year, and she’s starting a Broadway play right when we start shooting. So, we’ll work it all out, but yeah. Our intent was that the representation of what moving forward looks like for Jimmy would be back.
What does that mean for people who are shipping Jimmy and Gaby (Jessica Williams)?
I’m not saying it’ll work, it’ll not work. I like things where not everybody’s going to be happy and people aren’t sure where it’s going to go. So, the same thing with are people mad at Jimmy? Why would anybody be nice to the person that killed whatever? I like that because it’s a challenge. So I think it’s cool that it’s not so cut and dry and people don’t know where it’s gonna end up. But I think it’s even more complicated that people are like, “Oh, fuck. I like Damon Wayans, and I like what he does for her character.” I think that’s the fun, confusing of it all.
There was just so much growth from every character this season. With Sean (Luke Tennie) coming so far in his recovery, and Gaby trying to make strides and put herself first, instead of always worrying about caring for other people. What was it like exploring their arcs, and what can you say about what comes next for these two characters?
We’re therapied-up. We’re comedy writers, and we have great consultants on the show, and my favorite thing that was from a therapist’s mouth that we put in Jason Segel’s character’s mouth is when he’s talking to Michael Urie. He says, “What I worry about the most are people that are stuck. If you’re growing, there’s cause for optimism.” I generally write hopeful and optimistic shows, but I think we’ve really teed up the next year not to focus on Jason as he’s like I worry most about characters that are stuck. And I told you that next year is about moving forward, and he’s still a guy in this one that couldn’t answer a text from a girl that he should be out having coffee with. So, I’m optimistic but excited to see if the dude can end this kind of three-season story in a positive way.
Jason Segel and Jessica Williams in Shrinking season two.
AppleTV+
Louis almost jumped in front of a train in the season finale. I was so stressed and so concerned about what it would do to Alice if he did it and he died. Talk to me about that decision of seeing him on the cusp and then having Jimmy finally come through for him.
I can tell you two things. One, we use manipulation in a good way on this show. With a friend or with whatever it’s a mean word, but with an audience, you’re trying to manipulate them to laugh or have expectations or feel tension. We knew how the first year ended, and people might have noticed that was very intentionally shot, similar to the first year of cutting from happiness to “Oh shit, is somebody gonna get pushed off of a cliff like the first year?” And in the writers room, we said, “how dark do we want to get?” And the decision we made is, I think we really wanted to drive home the point in a hopeful and optimistic show, especially where we’re all at in our own lives right now, the power of forgiveness. If the season’s about forgiveness, that the simple act of doing it can save you, it can save someone else. It can save relationships. It’s viral by its nature. If it goes from one person, it goes to another.
So we knew we didn’t want anything bad to happen to Louis, because we thought it would almost be trauma porn. But we did want to drive home that forgiving someone or yourself can at least start the path toward healing the most dire of circumstances and dire of things. The only thing that was an issue for the show is we knew, if we went that dark, that even if the show ends on a hopeful note, in a season that’s about moving forward in the third season that I would have to convince Brett, to see that character again and to know what’s going on and that he’s OK and having to annoyingly negotiate with my friend is not only business-wise, but for his time when I was not the one that hired him in the first place is, I think, karmically, just desserts.
By the end of the season, we see that Paul’s Parkinson’s is progressively getting worse and he’s not responding to treatment anymore. What can you tell us about where that may take us in season three?
You’re a really good viewer, because you’re hitting all the stuff that we talked about, and I’m a TV fan, and I watch TV like you watch TV. I’m sure you did your homework, and you know Brett and my connection to this, and we didn’t want to do it for three years because it’s hard to watch. It’s in our lives, but a very realistic portrayal of what Parkinson’s means — and when I say realistic, it doesn’t necessarily mean just devastating. My first mentor, Michael J. Fox, I find to be the most inspiring person that I’ve ever met and busier than I am somehow, which is just absolutely bananas. And so we knew that for this kind of three-season story, and we’re still hoping to tell another three-season story with this group, that we wanted to end with showing what that means, and having hopefully gotten Paul to a place in his life that if he’s going to navigate it, he’s going to navigate it not on an island but with the people around him, and so it’s gonna be a huge part of next year.
***
Shrinking season two is now streaming on Apple TV+.
Brett Goldstein has been a standout in the hit TV series “Ted Lasso,” but fans are buzzing with excitement about what’s to come in Season 3. Goldstein, who plays gruff and lovable Roy Kent, has been a fan favorite since the show’s debut, and his character’s journey has been one of the most compelling arcs on the show.As we eagerly await the premiere of Season 3, speculation is running rampant about what lies ahead for Roy Kent. Will he finally find happiness in his personal life? Will he continue to be a key player on the AFC Richmond team? And most importantly, will we get to see more of his hilarious and heartwarming interactions with his fellow characters?
One thing is for certain – Brett Goldstein’s portrayal of Roy Kent has been a highlight of “Ted Lasso,” and fans can’t wait to see what Season 3 has in store for this beloved character. Stay tuned for more updates as we countdown to the premiere of the new season!
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Brett Goldstein, Season 3, Ted Lasso, Jason Sudeikis, Emmy nominations, sports comedy, television series, character development, feel-good show, Apple TV+, British actor, comedy-drama, football coach, award-winning series, heartwarming moments.
#Brett #Goldstein #Season‘Shrinking’ stars Jason Segel, Brett Goldstein on season 2 finale
Warning: This article contains spoilers about the Shrinking season 2 finale, “The Last Thanksgiving.”
Shrinking and its characters have a knack for towing the line between feel-good comedy and the drama of grief’s challenges.
The season 2 finale is no exception, with the characters celebrating Thanksgiving. Jimmy (Jason Segel), Alice (Lukita Maxwelll), Gaby (Jessica Williams), Liz (Christa Miller), Derek (Ted McGinley) and Brian (Michael Urie) all gather at Gaby’s for the holiday. Paul (Harrison Ford) hopes to have a restful Thanksgiving, just him and Julie (Wendie Malick), until Julie tricks him into also going to Gaby’s house.
Sean (Luke Tennie), meanwhile, shows immense growth and spends the holiday cooking for his family, a plot point that might have been the hardest for the writers. “We wanted Sean with everyone else because we like people together,” admits Brett Goldstein, who co-created the show. “But it’s like, no, he has to be with his family because annoyingly, he’s grown so much that we have to separate him. And it was sad.”
The only person without a table full of turkey waiting for him is Louis (Goldstein), who is disinvited to his coworker’s meal after they learn that his DUI resulted in someone’s death. “There’s so many things that were references, but one of them is Manchester by the Sea,” Goldstein says of the harshness of this moment of rejection. “You can’t shake this thing. It doesn’t go away. We have these couple of episodes where it’s like, maybe his life’s going to be all right, but this thing is always going to be there. The thing that we’ve seen him go through with say, Alice, doesn’t necessarily happen with everyone. People are judgmental, and it is a difficult thing.”
Brett Goldstein and Jason Segel on ‘Shrinking’.
apple TV+ (2)
Heartbroken, Louis goes to the train station, where he previously brought Alice and told her about sitting there with his ex-fiancée. Since his role in Tia’s death, he’s contemplated taking his own life by jumping in front of one of the trains.
After texting Alice that he needs a friend (who doesn’t see his message thanks to Gaby’s attempt to have an unplugged holiday), he edges closer and closer to the tracks, seemingly about to jump in his loneliness and despair. But Jimmy pops up in the nick of time, and the two finally have the heart-to-heart they’ve been building toward all season.
“For two seasons, it’s been leading to this moment for Jimmy,” says Segel, who co-created the series with Goldstein and Bill Lawrence. “He’s been avoiding looking in the mirror, which is the same as looking Louis in the face. It is really, really hard, and also, it is time, if that makes sense. This moment between the two of them is inevitable. One of the ways that we wanted to highlight that is how Jimmy plays that game with Louis about making up the lives of the passengers on the other side of the tracks, but we never see Jimmy learn about that game. That was intentional. We wanted there to be this little hint of magic realism.”
Ted McGinley, Jessica Williams, Jason Segel, Brian Urie, and Christa Miller in ‘Shrinking’ season 2.
Beth Dubber/Apple
Goldstein notes that there was never any question in the writers’ minds that they would bring Louis so close to an irreversible decision. “It was the whole thing of, ‘We are doing this story so we’ve got to do it properly.’ We’ve created this world and these characters and we’re putting out this forgiveness experiment. As much as we hopefully always balance it out with laughs, lightness, and heart, it is also like, what is the reality?”
Most likely, audiences expect Alice to show up as Louis’s guardian angel in those final moments. But surprisingly, it’s Jimmy, even though we never see the conversation between father and daughter that gets him there. “Those were big story questions about what we show and what we don’t show in order to pull off the magic trick of him showing up,” Segel notes. “You want the audience to feel a certain way when Jimmy shows up behind him, so we chose to leave out the sausage making of how he gets there.”
For Goldstein, however, it always had to be Jimmy, and not Alice, to complete the season 2 arc theme of forgiveness. “Alice had found peace in episode 6 where she forgives him and that sets her free,” he explains. “The whole story from the end of episode 1 is Jimmy has to free himself and he is in denial the whole season that he’s okay. It has to be him for there to be some peace.”
Jason Segel on ‘Shrinking’.
Apple TV+
“The anger you hold on to doesn’t necessarily help anyone and only hurts yourself,” Goldstein continues. “And that’s Jimmy’s story. Louis can punish himself. Louis can hate himself for the rest of his life very easily without the help of anyone else. He doesn’t need Jimmy to hate him [in order to] to feel bad. If Jimmy never forgave this guy, we would not be angry at him as an audience. It’s difficult, but by doing it, it will benefit his life as much as everyone around him because it doesn’t serve him to hold onto it.”
Thankfully, there was never a version where someone didn’t reach Louis in time. “It would’ve been another failure for Jimmy,” Segel reflects. “But I like to believe that it was never going to happen. Something larger was at play between the angel that Paul is in Jimmy’s life, the angel that Tia is in Jimmy’s life, and the fact that Jimmy and Alice are trying and that Louis is trying, that brought them to a perfect moment.”
Brett Goldstein on ‘Shrinking’.
Beth Dubber/Apple TV+
Of course, we know this isn’t the first time that Louis has contemplated taking his own life. Goldstein posits that what has always stopped Louis before is this sense of needing to make amends, or at least, apologize with Jimmy and Alice. Now that he’s made an effort to do so, without Jimmy’s sudden appearance, he might’ve gone through with it.
“If we’re going to be super, super real,” Goldstein says. “If you speak to people who have been that low, it’s always, ‘If you can hang on one moment more, it will pass. And maybe there’ll be some change, some resolution, some positivity, something.’ And I think that’s it. Just waiting one more day. There is, within him this need for — it’s what Paul says to Jimmy about the act of revelation regardless of how it is received. He has needed this moment with Alice and Jimmy — even if they had just told him to f— off, which they did — of needing to at least speak to them. That’s something that kept him going.”
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Harrison Ford and Jason Segel on ‘Shrinking’.
Beth Dubber / Apple TV
Now that Jimmy and Louis have had this heart-to-heart, what lies ahead? Will Jimmy strike up a friendship with Louis in the same way that Alice has? Goldstein says it’s too early to say, noting, “I can’t say if we’ll even see Louis again.” But Segel also notes how important it was to cast someone similar to his age as Louis, to emphasize the potential for friendship, even if it never comes to fruition.
“I don’t think we quite know what season 3 has in store yet,” Segel says. “But the reason that it was important to me that it be somebody who is a contemporary of Jimmy’s is that I wanted looking at Lewis to be looking in the mirror. It’s built into the storyline that these guys could have been friends.”
Regardless of what happens between them, Jimmy being willing to save Louis and offer him forgiveness marks a major milestone. “That was a very big step,” says Segel.
Cobie Smulders and Jason Segel on ‘Shrinking’.
Apple TV+
There were other baby steps this season, including Jimmy flirting with Sofi (Cobie Smulders) after buying her used car. “You got to see these little sparks of what pre-accident Jimmy was probably like,” Segel says of the tiny move toward opening Jimmy back up to the world outside his patients and friends. “With grief and depression, there’s the acute stages of it where it’s all you’re talking about. But at some point, it becomes tiresome to keep talking to everybody about that. Then, you’re living with an emotional sprained ankle where you’re walking around and you’re doing life, but you know that every time you put weight on it, it hurts. That’s how Jimmy has been living since the accident.”
So, having mastered the depths of his grief and depression and now moved to a place of forgiveness, what growth should Jimmy tackle next? “I would like to see him try to be happy,” says Segel. “This is something I’ve only arrived at in the past couple of years for Jason — that’s supposed to be part of the deal. You have so much ambition and drive and you want to make sure you’re being there for other people that it’s easy to realize like, Oh, I haven’t really thought much about if I’m happy. For Jimmy, he does not feel like he deserves to be happy. So, it would be nice to see Jimmy get to a place where he puts himself first in a way of, ‘What would make me happy after all this sadness?’”
Perhaps he’ll find the answer in season 3.
“Shrinking” Stars Jason Segel, Brett Goldstein on Season 2 FinaleFans of the hit comedy series “Shrinking” are in for a treat as the highly anticipated season 2 finale is set to air this week. The show, which follows the misadventures of therapist Ray (played by Jason Segel) and his eccentric clients, has garnered a dedicated following for its unique blend of humor and heart.
In the season 2 finale, tensions run high as Ray finds himself facing a crisis in his personal life while trying to help his clients navigate their own struggles. Brett Goldstein, who plays the lovable but unpredictable client Greg, delivers a standout performance that is sure to leave viewers in stitches.
As the season comes to a close, fans can expect plenty of laughs, tears, and surprises in store. Will Ray finally find the peace he’s been searching for? Will Greg ever get his life together? Tune in to the season 2 finale of “Shrinking” to find out!
Don’t miss out on the hilarious and heartwarming conclusion to this unforgettable season. Catch “Shrinking” starring Jason Segel and Brett Goldstein on [network/platform] this [day/date] at [time]. You won’t want to miss it!
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