Atlanta (season 1)

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Atlanta
Season 1
Promotional poster
Starring
No. of episodes10
Release
Original networkFX
Original releaseSeptember 6 (2016-09-06) –
November 1, 2016 (2016-11-01)
Season chronology
Next →
Season 2
List of episodes

The first season of the American television series Atlanta premiered on September 6, 2016. The season is produced by RBA, 343 Incorporated, MGMT. Entertainment, and FXP, with Donald Glover, Paul Simms, and Dianne McGunigle, serving as executive producers. Glover serves as creator and wrote four episodes for the season.

The series was given a 10-season order in October 2015 and stars Donald Glover, Brian Tyree Henry, LaKeith Stanfield, and Zazie Beetz. The series follows Earn during his daily life in Atlanta, Georgia, as he tries to redeem himself in the eyes of his ex-girlfriend Van, who is also the mother of his daughter Lottie; as well as his parents and his cousin Alfred, who raps under the stage name "Paper Boi"; and Darius, Alfred's eccentric right-hand man.

The season premiered on September 6, 2016, with a two-episode premiere on FX. The series premiere received 1.08 million viewers with a 0.5 ratings share in the 18–49 demographics. The season ended on November 1, 2016, with an average of 0.88 million viewers.[1] The season received critical acclaim, with critics praising its cast, writing, originality, and social commentary. At the 74th Golden Globe Awards, the season won Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy while Glover won Best Actor in a Television Series - Musical or Comedy. At the 69th Primetime Emmy Awards, the season was nominated for Outstanding Comedy Series, with Glover winning two awards for Lead Actor in a Comedy Series and Directing for a Comedy Series. The latter made Glover the first African-American to win the award.[2] In September 2016, FX renewed the series for a second season.[3]

Cast and characters

Main

Recurring

  • Harold House Moore as Swiff

Guest

Episodes

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateProd.
code
U.S. viewers
(millions)
11"The Big Bang"Hiro MuraiDonald GloverSeptember 6, 2016 (2016-09-06)XAA010011.08[5]

Earnest "Earn" Marks, a man experiencing homelessness, learns that his cousin, Alfred "Paper Boi" Miles, has become a semi-successful rapper. Earn asks Al if he can manage him, but Al turns him down, pointing out that Earn has not spoken to him since his mother's funeral. Earn proves his value as a manager by using subterfuge to get Al's song on a popular radio station, and goes to meet Al to discuss the possibility of employment. While talking, Al admits that he hates his music and is interrupted by a man smashing the side-view mirror on his car, leading to an altercation where he shoots the man in the chest.


Title card: The city of Atlanta


Opening song: "No Hook" by OJ Da Juiceman[4]

Closing song: "Paper Boi" by Stephen Glover
22"Streets on Lock"Hiro MuraiStephen GloverSeptember 6, 2016 (2016-09-06)XAA010020.955[5]

Earn and Al are arrested for their involvement in the shooting. Al is bailed out, while Earn waits all day to be processed, watching as a man in a relationship with a transgender woman argues with other detainees that he is straight, as well as officers beating a mentally ill man when he spits at them. The mother of his daughter Lottie, Vanessa "Van" Keefer, comes to pick him up when he is processed and bailed. Al finds that the shooting has made him even more popular, but notices a young child glamorizing the act of shooting someone because of him as well as a man in a Batman mask knocking on his door, both of which unnerve him.


Title card: Wall of the prison


Opening song: "Law" by Yo Gotti[4]

Closing song: "Grandma's Hands" by Bill Withers
33"Go for Broke"Hiro MuraiStephen GloverSeptember 13, 2016 (2016-09-13)XAA010031.07[6]

Al and his best friend Darius meet the Migos in the woods to do a drug deal, where they watch them kill a man. Earn offers to take Van out to dinner, but finds that he has an extremely meager budget to do so. As the night progresses, the restaurant they go to continually tries to upsell him, forcing him to call Al during the deal to ask for money. Earn and Van argue over his presence in Lottie's life as he drops her off, and he reports his debit card stolen in hopes of getting the money he spent refunded.


Title card: Floor of a Zesto


Opening song: "Skrt" by Kodak Black[4]

Closing song: "Spray the Champagne" by Migos
44"The Streisand Effect"Hiro MuraiDonald GloverSeptember 20, 2016 (2016-09-20)XAA010040.920[7]

Al is shadowed by an obnoxious social media influencer named Zan, who acts friendly but trashes his music on social media. He hunts down and confronts Zan, but ends up getting strung along in his attempt to create a viral video involving a foul-mouthed child, eventually leaving after getting fed up. Low on money, Earn tries to sell his phone at a pawn shop, but Darius convinces him to instead buy a sword that he plans to flip for even more money. He eventually ends up purchasing and selling an in-demand Cane Corso dog for money months down the line, infuriating Earn because of his need for the money as soon as possible. Feeling guilty, Darius gives Earn his phone to sell, solidifying them as friends.


Title card: Parking lot of the club Al meets Zan in


Opening song: "Philosophers Throne" by Xavier Wulf[4]

Closing song: "Home Again" by Michael Kiwanuka
55"Nobody Beats the Biebs"Hiro MuraiStephen GloverSeptember 27, 2016 (2016-09-27)XAA010050.860[8]

Al plays basketball against Justin Bieber (depicted as a black man) at a charity event and gets into a fight with him because of his obnoxious nature. As he watches Bieber give a corny, manufactured apology, a reporter who refused to interview him earlier tells him that he needs to play his part as "the asshole" because of his status as a rapper. Earn networks at a VIP event at the venue after a woman mistakes him for a different black agent, but learns from her that the man she thinks he is betrayed her, and she promises to ruin him. Darius goes to a shooting range and fires at a target of a dog, starting an argument between the white and non-white customers and getting him thrown out.


Title card: Basketball court floor


Opening song: "Am I Black Enough For You?" by Billy Paul[4]

Closing song: "Forget About It" by Donald Glover
66"Value"Donald GloverDonald Glover & Stefani RobinsonOctober 4, 2016 (2016-10-04)XAA010060.827[9]

Van has dinner with a friend, where they debate over their lifestyles and the role of black women in society. They get high after Van forgets she has a drug test at her teaching job scheduled for the next day. She asks for Al for help, and he suggests storing someone else's clear urine in a condom and smuggling it in. She uses Lottie's, but the condom explodes when she takes it out, forcing her to tell her boss. Her boss reveals that the test was technically unnecessary, but because of her admission, she has to fire her.


Title card: Tablecloth


Opening song: "It's Forever" by The Ebonys

Closing song: "Hit it and Quit It" by Funkadelic
77"B.A.N."Donald GloverDonald GloverOctober 11, 2016 (2016-10-11)XAA010070.770[10]

The episode is presented as an episode of the fictional talk show Montague, hosted on the B.A.N., (Black American Network) also fictional. Al and a white woman well versed in LGBT issues are the guests because of Al's transphobic comments towards Caitlyn Jenner, which the two argue about until they reach an understanding, despite Montague trying to push them back into an argument. Montague brings on a man who claims to be "transracial" and is a white man in a black man's body, who Al mocks despite the woman insisting he be tolerant. The guest begins to spout homophobic and transphobic rhetoric, causing Al to laugh harder. Throughout the episode, fake commercials for both real and fictional products play.


Closing song: "Oregon Spirt" by Rolf A. Krueger
88"The Club"Hiro MuraiJamal OloriOctober 18, 2016 (2016-10-18)XAA010080.948[11]

At a nightclub, Al sends Earn to track down the owner and get his payment for being there. He continually ducks Earn until Earn corners him, where he explains that he will be vastly reducing Al's pay for his difficulty and poor attitude. Al sulks in his corner when an NBA star upstages him, meeting a woman he seems to get on with until she reveals that she has a boyfriend. Earn explains the situation with the owner, and Al intimidates him into giving up his full payment. A shooting happens outside the club, and Al is named as a suspect because of his robbery.


Title card: Stains from drinks on Al's table


Opening song: "Real Sisters" by Future

Closing song: "I Can Dig It, Baby" by Little Beaver
99"Juneteenth"Janicza BravoStefani RobinsonOctober 25, 2016 (2016-10-25)XAA010090.651[12]

Earn agrees to go to a Juneteenth party hosted by a wealthy mixed race couple posing as Van's husband. Earn finds that the white husband is obsessed with African culture and black history in America, while the black wife is racist towards lower class black people. Van becomes upset when Earn goes overboard with praises he would never give her if he was not trying to make her look good. Earn loses his cool when the wife insults Al, deriding the party and the husband's obsessions as "dumb." As they drive away, he tries to apologize to Van, but she has him pull over and they have sex in the car.


Title card: Tattoo on the back of a woman Earn sleeps with


Opening song: "Change of the Guard" by Kamasi Washington

Closing song: "Chain Gang" by Sam Cooke
1010"The Jacket"Hiro MuraiStephen GloverNovember 1, 2016 (2016-11-01)XAA010100.786[13]

After a night of partying, Earn loses his blue bomber jacket and tracks it to the house of his Uber driver, just as the driver, a drug dealer, is killed by the police while wearing the jacket. Earn searches its pockets for something he needs, but finds nothing. Al gives him a generous percent of his pay cut, and he gives it to Van after spending a peaceful night with her and Lottie. Earn's coworker gives him the item he needed from the jacket, having left it with him the night before: a key that unlocks his new home, a storage locker.


Title card: The side of a wooden structure


Opening song: "Broccoli" by DRAM

Closing song: "Elevators (Me & You)" by Outkast

Production

Development

Donald Glover serves as creator, executive producer, director, writer and lead actor of the series.

The series was announced in August 2013, with Donald Glover set as lead actor, creator, writer and executive producer. The series was offered to many networks but Glover chose FX for its willingness to accommodate his music touring schedule with the development of the series.[14] In December 2014, FX made a pilot order and Paul Simms and Dianne McGunigle joined as executive producers.[15] In October 2015, FX made a 10-episode series order, with plans to release it in 2016.[16] Nick Grad, President of Original Programming for FX Entertainment, commented "Donald Glover is a uniquely talented actor and performer who brings real-life experience to this subject matter. He, along with Paul Simms, has a very honest, sometimes serious, and funny perspective on life, the world of rap music and the city of Atlanta."[17]

Writing

The series is also notable for having an all-black writing staff, which is virtually unheard of in American television. The writer's room consists of Glover himself, his brother Stephen Glover, and members of his rap collective 'Royalty' including Fam Udeorji (Glover's manager), Ibra Ake (Glover's longtime photographer), and Jamal Olori. Stefani Robinson, a writer for Man Seeking Woman, and Taofik Kolade round out the writer's room.[18][19]

Glover jokingly referred to the series as "Twin Peaks with rappers".[20] Glover, who grew up in Atlanta and also works as a musician, stated that "the city influenced the tone of the show".[21] He also chose the city as "there's an active dialogue of how things should be. The dynamics of the economy play out really well. It informs for a cool environment."[22] He commented on the development of the series, "There's so many screens that have to be filled now, between your television, your computer and your phone, that I think it's the perfect time to make something that I see, a perfect opportunity to combine everything that media is right now."[21] The series makes constant use of the N-word, which Glover defended as "that's how people talk. It's just the way it is. Trying to pretend that people don't talk like that, like I don't, it's kind of silly. I feel like if we ignore that, people would immediately turn on the television and not know what world they're on."[21]

Regarding the series' surrealism, Glover explained "There really isn't a limit to how abstract you can get, as long as you believe it. There has to be a grounded nature to something — if you have something that is grounded on some level, you can go anywhere. You just have to have it so that they’re abiding by their own rules every step of the way."[23]

Casting

When the pilot was ordered, Glover was reported to play Earnest "Earn" Marks, "a college drop-out who taps into his own musical aspirations when his estranged family member finds sudden fame."[24]

In July 2015, Brian Tyree Henry, LaKeith Stanfield and Zazie Beetz joined the series as the remaining cast members. Henry would play Alfred Miles, "Atlanta's hot of the moment rapper who plans to capitalize on the sudden fame as quickly as possible". Stanfield would play Darius, "Alfred's oddly talented right-hand man and musical collaborator". And Beetz would play Van, "a pragmatist caught up in a complicated relationship with Earn (Glover) due to their daughter".[25]

Filming

Filming on the pilot began in July 2015 in Atlanta, with Hiro Murai directing the episode.[26] Murai previously collaborated with Glover on music videos, commenting "It's obviously a different format. Even in the narrative format I've done, we've never had extensive scripted dialogue scenes and whatnot. But it felt like a natural extension of what Donald and I have done in the past. So in that sense it was a really nice, seamless transition."[27]

In August 2016, it was reported that Glover would make his directorial debut, directing the sixth and seventh episode.[28]

Release

Broadcast

In July 2016, FX announced that the season would premiere on September 6, 2016.[29]

Marketing

The first teaser debuted in June 2016, which was heavily inspired by the music video for "Drop" by The Pharcyde.[30] A new second debuted the next month, with music from "Sleepless" by Flume.[31] A full-length trailer was released in August 2016.[32]

Home media release

The season was released on DVD in Region 1 on March 6, 2018.[33]

Reception

Ratings

Viewership and ratings per episode of Atlanta
No. Title Air date Rating
(18–49)
Viewers
(millions)
DVR
(18–49)
DVR viewers
(millions)
Total
(18–49)
Total viewers
(millions)
1 "The Big Bang" September 6, 2016 0.5 1.08[5] 0.4 0.9[34]1
2 "Streets on Lock" September 6, 2016 0.5 0.955[5]
3 "Go for Broke" September 13, 2016 0.6 1.07[6]
4 "The Streisand Effect" September 20, 2016 0.5 0.920[7]
5 "Nobody Beats the Biebs" September 27, 2016 0.4 0.860[8]
6 "Value" October 4, 2016 0.4 0.827[9] 0.4 0.8[35]
7 "B.A.N." October 11, 2016 0.4 0.770[10] 0.6 1.05 1.0 1.82[36]
8 "The Club" October 18, 2016 0.4 0.948[11] 0.6 0.97 1.0 1.92[37]
9 "Juneteenth" October 25, 2016 0.3 0.651[12] 0.6 0.97 0.9 1.62[38]
10 "The Jacket" November 1, 2016 0.4 0.786[13] 0.6 0.87 1.0 1.66[39]

^1 Live +7 ratings were not available, so Live +3 ratings have been used instead.

Critical reception

The first season received widespread acclaim from television critics. The review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes gives the first season an approval rating of 97% based on 74 reviews, with an average rating of 8.60/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "Ambitious and refreshing, Atlanta offers a unique vehicle for star and series creator Donald Glover's eccentric brand of humor — as well as a number of timely, trenchant observations."[40] On Metacritic, the first season has a score of 90 out of 100, based on reviews from 36 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[41]

David Wiegand of the San Francisco Chronicle gave it a highly positive review, writing: "The scripts for the four episodes made available to critics are as richly nuanced as anything you'll see on TV or, to be sure, in a movie theater. You will not only know these characters after only one episode, you'll be hooked on them, as well. In so many areas, Atlanta sets the bar exceptionally high."[42] Sonia Saraiya of Variety also praised the series, declaring it a "finished, cinematic, and beautiful production that may be one of the best new shows of the fall."[43] Alan Sepinwall praised Glover's creativity, writing, "he wanted a chance to fail, and while not all of Atlanta works yet, it absolutely has that immersive quality Glover was hoping for."[44]

Critics' top ten lists

The season topped many "Best of 2016" lists and was the second most mentioned series of the year.[45]

Awards and nominations

Award Category Nominees Result Ref.
American Film Institute Awards Top 10 Television Programs Atlanta Won [46]
Critics' Choice Television Awards Best Comedy Series Nominated [47]
Best Actor in a Comedy Series Donald Glover Won
Directors Guild of America Awards Outstanding Directorial Achievement for a Comedy Series Donald Glover (for "B.A.N.") Nominated [48]
Golden Globe Awards Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy Atlanta Won [49]
Best Actor in a Television Series - Musical or Comedy Donald Glover Won
Gotham Independent Film Awards Breakthrough Series – Long Form Atlanta Won [50]
MTV Movie & TV Awards Show of the Year Atlanta Nominated [51]
Best Actor in a Show Donald Glover Nominated
Best Duo Brian Tyree Henry and Keith Stanfield Nominated
NAACP Image Awards Outstanding Comedy Series Atlanta Nominated [52]
Outstanding Actor in a Comedy Series Donald Glover Nominated
Outstanding Directing in a Comedy Series Won
Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series Nominated
Peabody Awards Area of Excellence Atlanta Won [53]
People's Choice Awards Favorite Cable TV Comedy Nominated [54]
Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Comedy Series Atlanta Nominated [55]
Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series Donald Glover Won
Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series Donald Glover (for "B.A.N.") Won
Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series Donald Glover (for "B.A.N.") Nominated
Stephen Glover (for "Streets on Lock") Nominated
Outstanding Casting for a Comedy Series Alexa L. Fogel, Tara Feldstein Bennett, Chase Paris Nominated
Producers Guild of America Awards Episodic Television, Comedy Donald Glover, Dianne McGunigle, Paul Simms, Hiro Murai, Alex Orr Won [56]
Writers Guild of America Awards Comedy Series Donald Glover, Stephen Glover, Stefani Robinson, Paul Simms Won [57]
New Series Won
Episodic Comedy Stephen Glover (for "Streets on Lock") Nominated
TCA Awards Program of the Year Atlanta Nominated [58]
Outstanding Achievement in Comedy Won
Outstanding New Program Nominated
Individual Achievement in Comedy Donald Glover Won

Notes

  1. ^ Henry is only credited for the episodes he appears in.
  2. ^ Stanfield is only credited for the episodes he appears in.
  3. ^ Beetz is only credited for the episodes she appears in.

References

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