Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Fish-out-of-water story unfolds in third season of FX’s ‘Atlanta’

- By Neal Justin

The writers for “Atlanta” have long been inspired by a message scrawled on their office whiteboard: Do what others cannot.

That theme is evident in the season three premiere March 24 on FX. The new season’s episodes will also stream on Hulu.

In the kick-off episode, the first new one in nearly four years, almost none of the regular cast members make an appearance. Instead, the story revolves around a Black teenager who finds himself trapped in a foster home that could be in the neighborho­od from “Get Out.”

In the second episode, viewers are subjected to one of the oddest death scenes in TV history, as well as an action sequence populated with Dutch people in blackface.

“Atlanta” may contend for awards in comedy categories, but it’s always gotten more inspiratio­n from “The Twilight Zone” than “I Love Lucy.”

“I’m not really a horror fan, but I like things that scare me or thrillers where you’re kind of creeped out or not sure where to place your feelings,” said star and creator Donald Glover during a recent virtual event with TV critics.

Most of the new season takes place in Europe, where Glover’s character, Earn Marks, is trying to manage his cousin Paper Boi’s red-hot rap career while dealing with an unshakable case of jet lag.

Being sleepy is the least of his problems. The setting for him and his friends seems so foreign that they might as well be touring Mars.

“It’s kind of a fish-outof-water story,” said coexecutiv­e producer Hiro Murai, who directed the first episode. “We play a lot with ambiguity. I think that’s our lane, a lot of interactio­ns that kind of hit you in a weird way and you don’t know how to take it. I think we lean into that a little bit more this season.”

The cast and crew had a few surreal moments of their own while shooting overseas last year. Because of COVID-19 restrictio­ns in London, Amsterdam and Paris, they often had hotels and museums to themselves. When they did run into people, it wasn’t always pleasant.

During a press event, the cast cracked one another up rememberin­g a late-night encounter with Londoners who were convinced that all Black Americans carry hammers in their pockets.

But overall, the group seemed to have a positive experience, even though it was known the show was coming to an end. Season four, which will be the last, has already been shot. Those final episodes are expected to drop in the fall.

Glover admitted that he originally planned on ending the series after just two seasons. He changed his mind after the writers convinced him there was enough material for two more.

“I’m really glad that we are ending on what feels like a peak and not letting it just peter out,” said Zazie Beetz, who plays Earn’s ex-girlfriend Van. “I’m glad I knew it was ending because I think I could really lean into the relationsh­ips, knowing this was my last chance to play her. I do think Van changed my life, and I love her. I don’t want to say farewell, because she’ll always be there in a way, but it’s like, ‘I’m going to put you in the back for now.’ ”

 ?? FX NETWORKS ?? LaKeith Stanfield, from left, Donald Glover and Brian Tyree Henry in “Atlanta.”
FX NETWORKS LaKeith Stanfield, from left, Donald Glover and Brian Tyree Henry in “Atlanta.”

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