Apple TV+’s new dark comedy Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed arrived on May 20 to broadly positive reviews, landing an 86% score on Rotten Tomatoes and earning early praise for an Emmy-winning lead performance that critics have already compared to Tatiana Maslany’s career-defining work on Orphan Black.
The ten-episode series, created by David J. Rosen and directed in its opening episode by David Gordon Green, centers on Paula, a divorced fact-checker and single mother in Queens juggling a bitter custody battle, a demanding job, and a private arrangement with a cam boy named Trevor — an arrangement that turns fatal when she witnesses his violent abduction during one of their sessions. The pilot closes with Trevor’s body confirmed dead, pulling Paula into a sprawling criminal conspiracy that only deepens from there.
Rosen has said the show grew out of pandemic-era observations about loneliness and technology, particularly watching his wife manage an impossible volume of competing demands. “I was thinking about this epidemic of loneliness that we’re in, how a lot of it’s caused by technology,” he explained. “The same tech that you can use to say hi to your grandma is also making us all alone at night.” For him, a single mother navigating that landscape, specifically around a subject society tends to judge harshly — female sexuality — created what he called “delicious conflict.”
Maslany, for her part, was drawn to Paula’s opacity. “I couldn’t get a grasp on her,” she said. “There were so many things she did that I couldn’t relate to, and that was exciting.” She has described hoping audiences finish the season feeling genuinely uncertain about Paula’s choices.
Murray Bartlett, who plays Dennis — Trevor’s sociopathic boyfriend revealed in episode two as the killer — prepared for the role by reading Sociopath: A Memoir by Patric Gagne, treating the book as what he called a “Bible.” Bartlett says Dennis operates with genuine affection for Trevor beneath his violence, which makes the character’s unraveling more psychologically textured than a standard villain.
Green, who also directed The Righteous Gemstones, helmed the premiere with a deliberate focus on tone — building levity and adrenaline into what could easily have been a grimmer story. The series runs weekly on Wednesdays through mid-July. Some critics noted the show’s thematic proximity to Apple’s recent Margo’s Got Money Troubles, which also centered on a single mother and online sex work, though Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed uses that world primarily as a launching pad for its crime thriller mechanics rather than as its central subject.





















































