Albuquerque Journal

Friends in high places

Brandon Micheal Hall (“The Mayor”) stars as an atheist who begins to question his lack of faith in “God Friended Me,” airing Sunday.

- By Kyla Brewer

In many areas, church attendance has been on the decline as people continue to question the existence and nature of God. A new television series has the potential to spark thoughtful conversati­ons about spirituali­ty and religion, for believers and non-believers alike.

Brandon Micheal Hall (“The Mayor”) stars as Miles Finer, an atheist whose life is turned upside down when he accepts a social media friend request from someone claiming to be God in “God Friended Me,” airing Sunday, Oct. 21, on CBS. Through a series of friend suggestion­s, “God” has led Miles to Cara Bloom (Violett Beane, “The Flash”), a struggling young journalist who becomes an unlikely sidekick as he inadverten­tly helps those in need.

While the premise may require a leap of faith, TV industry pundits seem to have an open mind about the series, which has been featured in such high-profile publicatio­ns as Vanity Fair and Variety. In a September vanityfair. com article, creator Bryan Wynbrandt (“Gotham”) explained the purpose of the show.

“The hope of the show is to focus on the positive when there is so much negative,” Wynbrandt said.

Before accepting the friend request, Miles had been promoting his atheist views on his podcast, which put him at odds with his father, Rev. Arthur Finer (Joe Morton, “Scandal”). A prominent preacher at Harlem’s Trinity Church, Arthur is, not surprising­ly, hurt by his son’s lack of faith. Miles’ sister, Ali (Javicia Leslie, “Killer Coach,” 2016), works as a bartender by day and studies psychology at night, often offering up advice to her brother and Cara as they try to solve the mystery behind the God account. They also enlist the help of Miles’ best friend, Rakesh (Suraj Sharma, “Life of Pi,” 2012), a hacker who tries to find informatio­n about the account.

In an effort to promote the show and get people talking about it, CBS served up an early release of the pilot episode, which the network made available on a variety of platforms — including CBS.com, CBS All Access, the CBS app, Facebook Premieres and Twitter — as of Friday, Aug. 31. CBS executive George Schweitzer had high praise for the unique series when the early release was announced.

“This is a show that deserves advance exposure,” Schweitzer said. “Once people see ‘God Friended Me,’ they respond to its positive and lifeaffirm­ing values.” In the vein of such iconic television series as “Touched by an Angel” and “Highway to Heaven,” the show aspires to inspire viewers as Miles helps those in need, whom he finds via “God’s” friend suggestion­s. Whether he’s saving a doctor from stepping in front of a train or helping Cara reconnect with her long-lost mother (Rachel Bay Jones, “Dear Evan Hansen”), Miles can’t help but wonder if the God account is really a hoax or something more. As it turns out, Miles discovers he has an unexpected connection to Cara: her mother was a nurse to his mother, who died of breast cancer when he was still a child. His experience­s with the God account soon prompt him to question his long-held stance on spirituali­ty and religion.

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 ??  ?? Violett Beane stars in “God Friended Me”
Violett Beane stars in “God Friended Me”

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