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Something is definitely up in the new Netflix series the Burrows, which is about a seemingly idyllic mid century modern retirement community in the middle of the desert. Is it monsters? Is it aliens? Well, it's something weird anyway.
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Yep, that's the plot. But the real draw here is the cast. Alfred Molina, Geena Davis, Alfre Woodard, Denis o', Hare, Clark Peters. It is fun to watch them get drawn into investigating these creepy goings on like a kind of septuagenarian Scooby Gang. I'm Linda Holmes.
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And I'm Glenn Weldon. Today we're talking about the Burrows on Pop Culture Happy Hour from npr.
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Joining us today is film and culture critic Kate Young. Hey Kate. Welcome back.
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Hi. Delighted to be back again.
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Great to have you in the boroughs. Alfred Molina plays Sam, a recent widower whose family moves him into a Pict Desert retirement community very much against his will. Takes a while, but he eventually falls in with his neighbors Judy and Art, played by Alfre Woodard and Clark Peters, Renee, played by Geena Davis and Wally, played by Dennis o'. Hare. When Sam starts seeing things, the powers that be dismiss his concerns. But his fellow residents don't. Soon they're investigating the weird occurrences and mysterious deaths, which brings them to the Attention of the young man who runs the Burrows, Mr. Shaw, played by Seth Numrik, who oozes charm and maybe some other stuff as well. The Burroughs is streaming now on Netflix. Linda, what you think?
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I really liked this. I thought it was really fun. You know, the Duffer brothers who made Stranger Things are credited as executive producers. They didn't create it, but they're EPs. And I didn't really know whether it was gonna feel like the things about Stranger Things that I liked or the things about Stranger Things that I didn't like. It does have a similar feel in a lot of ways. It is a group of people kind of getting together to fight forces they don't understand. But I liked seeing that, first of all, executed with, you know, older people rather than kids. And second of all, with this incredibly appealing cast. Everybody in this main cast, this sort of Scooby gang, as we said in the intro, is somebody that I'm always happy to see. I'm always actively happy to see. Geena Davis and Alfre Woodard and Alfred Molina and Clark Peters and Denis o'. Hare. It's really a terrific group of people. And as they kind of cohere into this group of friends, I think there is a really good combination of some, I think, compelling emotional material about what it's like for them at this stage of their lives. Especially because you see Sam, played by Alfred Molina, moving into this place that, you know, the original plan was that he was gonna come with his wife, but she has since died. But he is sort of in this contract to live in this place, so now he's moving there by himself. His daughter, played by Jenna Malone, kind of moves him into this place, and she loves him, but she also moves him there. And I found kind of his interior life very moving a lot of the time. I think he's wonderful in it. I think the marriage of Alfre Woodard and Clark Peters is really well explored. This is not a show that believes that when you are 70 or 72, the only things going on in your life are activities at the senior center. These people still have a marriage that still has its own complications that revolve around the same things that any marriage can have in it. I liked the kind of underlying story. By the end of Stranger Things, they had made the lore so complicated that I was totally and completely lost. I don't know if there will be more seasons of this. They certainly leave the door open to it. But I did not feel in this season like it became difficult for me to manage. So I enjoyed and was invested in the kind of. The underlying, I think we can say, monster story, given the opening scene. So, yeah, I really liked this. I was quite pleasantly surprised.
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Cool.
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What about you, Kate?
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I mean, I feel mostly similarly. I think especially the cast is easily the best thing about it. I think for me, though, there was too much stranger things. And not necessarily because of the monsters, but because I felt like the monster story wasn't substantial enough to justify retreading that particular premise. However, the cast really is stellar, and I think that I almost wish that I could transport them to a slightly different show and see what it looked. I think I came on the show when Grace and Frankie ended, and a lot of what I talked about then was about how much I like that the show directly deals with the fact that they're older. Right. There's a scene in this where they're all around a bonfire and they're basically showing off their battle scars from all the surgeries they've had to have because their bodies are failing them. That ain't nothing. Sorry, what do you mean?
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I had a whole new hippie stall.
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And that was the stuff that really compelled me because I feel like we don't get enough stories about older people. And I did like that this was where they are forced to use the skills that they've now had to abandon because they're retired or they have to investigate things and follow their curiosities. And that stuff I found really compelling. I just felt that the mystery itself was kind of a big nothing.
C
Hmm.
B
Okay. I'm kind of. I guess I'm somewhere between you two. When I was a kid, my parents loved the 1985 film Cocoon. And I didn't see it. I didn't get what. We watched it as often as we did. And of course, what they saw in it was that, you know, here were these actors that they'd grown up with doing wacky sci fi hijinks. That's what they liked. And that was, you know, Don Ameche and Jessica Tandy and Hume Cronin and Maureen Stapleton. And those names didn't mean anything to me, but they meant everything to them. Mom and dad, where we are now. I just want to say I get it. I get it now because seeing Geena Davis on my screen, looking great, kicking butt, having sex. Clark Peters, like listeners, if you don't know the name, you know, Lester from the Wire, maybe the greatest TV character of all time. He's here. He's waking and bacon. He's having a good time. Good for him. I know that I would follow Denis o' Hare anywhere because I have followed that man through some really lousy American Horror Story seasons. But, you know, I'm a sucker for them. I'm a sucker for this setting, for this architecture. I kept saying to myself, I would live here 100%.
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It looks gorgeous.
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100%. It's gorgeous. Also, I do think it's a smart premise because. And this gets to what you're saying, Kate. But one of the main aspects of the Duffer Brothers, Spielberg, you know, kids, sci fi is the story engine. The reason those things kick into motion at all is cause nobody listens to kids, nobody believes kids. And that's the reason they gotta go investigate stuff themselves. And what this show understands is that in life there is a bell curve. And as humans age, they start getting ignored again and start getting disbelieved again. So it's a great setting.
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Yes, I had that same thought.
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I was concerned going into this, and I think some listeners might actually have a concern that are things like dementia gonna be treated on this show in a kind of a glib way as a plot dev? And you know, your mileage may vary. That's always gonna happen. But I do think, to Linda's point, I think they really respect these characters enough that the very first scene in this show features Dee Wallace And Ed Begley Jr. Going through something, some complications in their relationship. And that scene works on two levels. I think it really gives the sadness room to register and breathe and exist alongside of. Or maybe on top of all the wacky sci fi hijinks or whatever. I think the show has a certain.
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Yeah, there is a particular development that happens fairly late in the show that has to do with Sam, his relationship with his daughter and her trying to care for him and how she's responding to kind of changes in him that we know are motivated by things that are actually happening, but she doesn't. I found all of that very moving. And I think also, you know, you mentioned Geena Davis having sex. And one of the things that I did really like about this, you know, you have Ella of the emotional stuff and sort of plot devices that are about the fact that they're older, as Kate referred to. But you also have a lot in here that could happen anyway. You have a lot in here where these could just be a bunch of 30, 40 year olds in a town running into some of the same problems. I think this is one of the few times I've seen a completely like, not played in any way as a joke relationship between a woman who is 70 and a significant, significantly younger man who the story never remotely wonders whether he's really hot for her or not. And in fact, she never really wonders whether he's hot for her or not. For the two of them, this is a relationship that they're gonna get into. I really appreciated that. And I appreciated the fact that these are actual. You know, one of the things when you look into, like, when people pass around the memes about, like, you're older now than Rue McClanahan was at the beginning of the Golden Girls or whatever. Yes. Part of that is, you know, you're older than you, which is always what that joke is supposed to be. But it's also that, like, they used to make shows that were about old people, and they used actors who really weren't very old. And they're using people here who are mostly 70 and above. I think Dennis O' Hare is in his 60s, but the rest of them. So they are using people who are old enough that you might encounter them in a retirement community as opposed to people who are significantly younger than that.
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I really do kind of keep coming back to the premise because I feel like the characters are so rich and the relationships are so fun. Like, I think the dynamic that Art and Judy have in their marriage and the kind of betrayal. Ish thing that happens between them is so beautifully explored. And it felt.
C
I agree.
E
It was such a lovely thing to see that, like, those kinds of foibles don't stop happening just because you're 72. You know, they're in this retirement community. It's a town. It's a real town. They're living in the real world. It just so happens that all of the residents are older. The way that those dynamics play out is so fascinating to me, and I desperately want more of that. And I just felt like there wasn't enough room for it because they were busy doing hijinks. And I kind of wish that it was more of, like, a simple maybe murder mystery so that it felt a little bit more grounded to match what I felt was coming from the interpersonal stuff, because I really. I can't say enough good stuff about the way that these characters interact and the performances and how good they are. But I just feel like by the time we get to the last few episodes, it just feels like we're, like, on a cartoon chase. I don't care about the details of which monster did what when, and especially since we've just gotten stranger things and they kind of bumped it. I didn't see the need to retread this. I think that if we had gotten it first, I might have been more open to it because then it would have felt certainly more novel to have older characters in that kind of position. But we've already done it, and I don't think that it brings enough new to the situation for me to be really invested. I think in the early episodes, I was kind of intrigued because I didn't really know where it was gonna go. And I thought that given what we had learned about their interpersonal relationships, that it would tie more directly into that. And that was kind of interesting to me. But once we get those answers, I was honestly kind of like, that's it. I don't know that this was worth all of that.
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No, I'm glad you unpacked that for us because I wanted to come back to you and ask, like, is it just the sci fi shenanigans that feels like it's taking away from these characters or. But you said you'd be happy with something like a murder mystery or something, a smaller, grounded story, as opposed to the particulars of this particular sci fi story. That's kind of what I'm getting from you.
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The problem isn't that it's sci fi. The problem is that it feels to me like we are doing the same story again with different characters. Even the design of the monsters looks fairly familiar. And I wish that it had been something that felt completely novel and fresh. Because as I'm doing right now, all I'm left with is kind of comparisons to something that I think does it better and longer. And while that, you know, lore did get to convolute in the end, it was something that was interesting and engaging and new at the time, at least to me as an audience member. And I feel like this wasn't different enough to distinguish it because I think that the sci fi is fine. There's some early developments when Sam is kind of figuring out, like, what the feedback in his house is about and fiddling with electronics. He's an engineer, and that stuff was actually compelling. I thought that was going somewhere really interesting. There's. I don't even know how to describe it. That happens in his apartment when they're experimenting. That was really beautiful and lovely. And I thought, okay, so we're getting something a little bit more existential, which makes sense with characters these age and like. It. It's not any of that. Yeah, it's just monsters again.
C
I think my only kind of. The main reason I feel differently than you do about the sci fi story is that I do think particularly by the end, they do a good job of tying this particular sci fi story and its specifics to some of the things that these characters in particular, especially the Denis o' Hare character, you know, his situation in life and his story and what he's been through in his history, which you don't kind of find out until fairly late in the game, is related to how he processes the sci fi elements of this story. And I do think that by the end these people are looking at it's people who are much more familiar on a day to day basis with dying than you know, they probably were earlier in their lives. They probably are starting to think about dying more than they did when they were younger. And so I do think that there is some stuff about mortality and wellness and illness and the well being of your body and mind that I do think is specifically coming out of this particular science fiction story. I did reach a point somewhere around the middle where I sort of looked at one of the characters, not one of the main Scooby gang characters, but one of the other characters. And I thought, I think I know where they might be going with this. But it wasn't because of anything that struck me as particularly heavy handed. It was the actor performance. And I thought, I like the fact that I feel like the actor's performance without more is making me feel like I understand enough about this character to feel like I'm starting to get where they're going with this. And I appreciated that. I don't mind figuring out the story. I just don't want to figure out the story and feel like you're making it super, super obvious to me. But I do like when I feel like I'm getting clues, I don't have a problem with that. So I think eventually they justify the use of this specific science fiction story in the context of these particular characters. And so because I found the character so compelling, it did ultimately kind of hang together for me in that way.
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I'm coming at this from a sci fi bias, which is why I'm going to say a thing that no listener wants to hear about a streaming series or any series, which is for me, you gotta stick with it, which is for me, I wasn't really on board until episode three, which is where the rubber meets the road. The momentum increases and to your point, Kate, a lot of the science fiction wackiness starts getting wackier. That's when I connected with this. It's not that I was bored in the early going, when it was really, really character focused and character driven, I just needed more. And I get that by episode three,
E
I mean, it might be just like, you know, the narcissism of getting older, but, like, the characters ages was to me, the most compelling part of this, specifically because it gives them life experience that a lot of the characters we're more accustomed to seeing on screen don't have because they're not that old. And so we essentially kind of, by virtue of them being older, we have more stuff to play with, more information to play with. Like, you mentioned the Denis o' Hare character and kind of how his situation shapes the way that he responds to these elements. And, like, I really liked those elements. There's this particular speech that he gives where he kind of mentions the kind of work that he had been doing, and immediately that character made sense. Right? And it was such a lovely moment because he plays it so well and it was so. It was so moving. However, we can do that without monsters. I felt like there was so much good stuff in it that just, like, it felt like a distraction from all of the great character work because, like, each and every one of the main cast is going through this, like, wonderful, beautiful transformation as people as they're figuring out what their lives look like at this stage, what kinds of things they want to be doing at this age, because they're all retired, you know, they can all be playing bocce ball or whatever it is. They're able to kind of reconfigure their relationships now that they essentially don't have to do anything else. They have all of this room to play and to kind of show us what kinds of foibles come up when you've been alive that long. And not just the physical maladies, but the way that relationships grow and change, the way that they become malleable in ways that you maybe didn't predict. Honestly, if this is just like a straight drama, I'm like, in, because I really do feel like. I feel like the characters are so, so, so rich and, like, more of that gets pushed aside as we go into the sci fi stuff. And it really isn't even just the sci fi stuff specifically. I do think that if I felt like that part of the story was more satisfying, it would be fine. Because all of the investigating, all of the hijinks that they do to get there is interesting. I just wasn't satisfied with the answers, but that could just be me. I mostly really liked this. I think that it has a really good foundation for great characters, I don't know that I need to see more of them doing this particular thing. I don't know what it would be given where it ends. But I do want to see more of these characters.
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Okay.
C
And I do want to say a kind word about the design. We briefly talked about the mid century modern nature of this cul de sac. I love that. I love the lusciousness of that. There is a kind of a more of a nursing unit and it has a very infantilized design that I think really is well done to emphasize how they want you to feel about this particular place for these particular people. Right. Kate alluded to the fact that Sam was an engineer. And partly because of that, the show also has a real fondness for analog technology. And I liked the fact that this combination of mid century modern, it's like retro, but also has a certain amount of super modern technology. There's sort of super modern surveillance technology that these people are subjected to. I really liked that mix of retro and kind of super contemporary because some of like the TVs and stuff that Sam moves in look like they would belong in these mid century modern homes. And I really liked that. I thought that was very clever. And so that kind of echo of time I found more appealing than a straight up period piece like Stranger Things is right then kind of the constant like, remember this song? Remember these clothes? Remember this kind of backpack? Like this to me is a little richer in how that kind of out of time quality, which of course is relevant to the fact that these are people who, you know, were born in perhaps the 1950s or whatever. So it makes sense, but it's without straight up trying to emulate. I just thought that the design was very clever and I enjoyed looking at it.
B
Yeah. And the quality of light in these houses is not the kind of washed out Netflix vibe, blanched Netflix vibe that we get so often. It's allowed to be quirky, it's allowed to be interesting. So look, I think we've done a service here because I think listeners, you know, if you're team Kate or team Linda or team me, so you know what you're gonna think of this show. That brings us to the end of our show. Kate Young, Linda Holmes. This was great. Thank you so much.
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Thank you.
C
Thank you.
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This episode was produced by Hafsa Fathoma and Mike Katsif and edited by our showrunner, Jessica Reedy. And hello. Kim in provides our theme music. Thank you for listening to Pop Culture Happy Hour from npr. I'm Glenn Weldon and we'll see you all next time.
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Hosts: Linda Holmes, Glen Weldon
Guest: Kate Young
Theme: Reviewing Netflix’s "The Boroughs" – a retirement-community-set supernatural mystery featuring an all-star cast of veteran actors.
In this episode, the Pop Culture Happy Hour team dives into Netflix's new series "The Boroughs," a sci-fi mystery set in a mid-century modern desert retirement community. The panel discusses how the show riffs on the legacy of "Stranger Things" (with the Duffer Brothers as executive producers), but centers the spotlight on older protagonists. Through lively debate, the hosts unpack the show’s core strengths—its cast of veteran actors, nuanced portrayal of aging, and retro design aesthetic—as well as its shortcomings, particularly in its monster mystery elements.
“It is fun to watch them get drawn into investigating these creepy goings-on like a kind of septuagenarian Scooby Gang.” – Linda Holmes (00:32)
“This is not a show that believes that when you are 70… the only things going on in your life are activities at the senior center. These people still have a marriage that still has its own complications.” – Linda Holmes (04:26)
“They’re all around a bonfire and they’re basically showing off their battle scars from all the surgeries they’ve had ... That ain’t nothing.” – Kate Young (06:06)
“As humans age, they start getting ignored again and start getting disbelieved again. So it’s a great setting.” – Glen Weldon (07:49)
“One of the few times I’ve seen a completely, not played-in-any-way-as-a-joke relationship between a woman who is 70 and a significantly younger man ... I really appreciated that.” – Linda Holmes (10:30)
“There’s this particular speech that he gives where he kind of mentions the kind of work that he had been doing, and immediately that character made sense … it was so moving.” – Kate Young (17:38)
“By the time we get to the last few episodes, it just feels like we’re on a cartoon chase. I don’t care about the details of which monster did what when…” – Kate Young (12:36)
“There is a kind of a more of a nursing unit and it has a very infantilized design that I think really is well done to emphasize how they want you to feel about this particular place for these particular people.” – Linda Holmes (19:41)
On the cast:
“Geena Davis on my screen, looking great, kicking butt, having sex ... Clark Peters… waking and baking. He’s having a good time.” – Glen Weldon (07:09)
On age as narrative engine:
“As humans age, they start getting ignored again and start getting disbelieved again. So it’s a great setting.” – Glen Weldon (07:49)
On representation:
“They are using people who are old enough that you might encounter them in a retirement community as opposed to people who are significantly younger than that.” – Linda Holmes (10:33)
On the show’s aesthetic:
“The lusciousness ... combination of mid-century modern, it’s like retro, but also has a certain amount of super modern technology.” – Linda Holmes (19:54)
Highlights:
Drawbacks:
Who It’s For:
Bottom Line:
"The Boroughs" delivers a fresh perspective in a familiar genre, with its main appeal rooted in character over plot. Whether or not the sci-fi mystery resonates may depend on your appetite for genre conventions versus interpersonal drama.
Panel verdict in brief:
If you’re charmed by the idea of a retiree "Scooby Gang" with real emotional depth and stellar casting, you’ll find much to love. If you’re weary of yet another “Stranger Things”-style monster mystery, you might wish the show was even more original or more grounded.