‘Hacks' EP and star Paul W. Downs on Deborah's shocking choice: ‘It is the most pivotal episode of the series so far'
Hacks, "A Slippery Slope."
Not to be hyperbolic, but Thursday's episode of Hacks might be its most important one yet. "It is the most pivotal episode of the series so far," co-creator, co-showrunner, director, and star Paul W. Downs says on the latest episode of Awards Magnet.
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In "A Slippery Slope," written by Downs and fellow creators and showrunners Lucia Aniello and Jen Statsky, the repercussions of network head Bob Lipka (Tony Goldwyn) doing Deborah (Jean Smart) a "favor" the previous episode by firing Winnie (Helen Hunt) start to build when Bob asks Deborah to have scandal-ridden movie star Ethan Sommers (Eric Balfour) on her show. After Deborah acquiesces when she's asked to cut her joke about his secret Snapchat, a peeved Ava (Hannah Einbinder) spills all to her old On the Contrary boss Lewis (Aristotle Athari), who decides to do an exposé on the coverup and refuses to kill it despite Ava's pleas.
Bob tells Deborah to fire Ava because he needs give a head on a platter to the board. Just when it seems like Deborah will do just that and let Ava down again — she sends Ava on a fake assignment at the Oscars, Ava's badge is deactivated when she returns to the studio — she instead pulls a first: by putting someone else first for once. During her monologue on her post-Oscars show, Deborah announces that she won't fire her head writer and "creative partner" and "someone I love" as asked, and that this will be her final Late Night show, because she won't cave to corporate pressure. It is a slippery slope, and she says she's drawing the line — a nod to the title of the pilot, "There Is No Line."
"It's really the first time Deborah chooses a relationship over her career, chooses it puts Ava first," Downs says. "And also it allowed us in this episode to really address a lot of the stuff that we meditate on in the season, around the changes in the television industry."
SEE Hacks stars and EPs break down Deborah's promise: 'That's the thing that Ava is constantly dealing with'
One of the themes of Season 4 has been art versus commerce. By dropping Deborah and Ava, independent creatives, into the corporate world, they not only have a boss to answer to now, but shareholders, advertisers, and disruptive tech that constantly shift the goalposts.
"This is a business, and I get that," Deborah says in her monologue. "And there are good people on the business side who are trying to navigate the difficult intersection of art and commerce. But thanks to Wall Street and big tech disrupting our industry, it's gone too far. It's not enough to be No. 1 anymore or to make a profit or to even make you laugh. I might be a capitalist pig myself, but first and foremost, I'm a comedian. And I care more about making this show the right way than I do about making shareholders happy."
"As she says at the end of the day, 'I'm a comedian and I'm here to make people laugh,' and that is the thing that she loves to do and wants to do," Down says. "She says the dream changed because as much as this has been the dream, to do the dream today when our industry has been so disrupted by tech and just being a part of publicly traded conglomerates that have shareholders to answer to. ... This industry has been a profitable industry for a century. This was not a broken industry because people want entertainment, they want stories. Since the dawn of language, we've wanted stories, and for it to be disrupted in the way that it's been disrupted is really a shame because it's not just enough to make a profit."
And it's "impossible" to make a profit, Downs continues, "if you don't push down on all of the people, all the crews, all of the creatives, all the people that make those stories." While Hacks and Deborah's speech is about the entertainment industry, Downs believes it's a mutual feeling across any industry "where corporate greed has impacted the way in which people make things."
Downs, Aniello, and Statsky spent a great deal of time on the monologue as they also wanted to explore what it means to get your dream in 70s and the glass cliff, the phenomenon whereby underrepresented groups are put in leadership positions during crises. "What it's like to finally give a woman an opportunity to do something at a time when things have really changed or it's higher risk because the the potential for failure is even greater?" he says. "We were able to, I think, put in Deborah's mouth a lot of the stuff that we think about in this industry, that it's not just enough sometimes to make people laugh."
Jake Giles Netter/Max
The episode is also a big one for Jimmy (Downs), as the pressures of his new job — starting his own company with Kayla (Megan Stalter), who's being poached by her dad — begin compounding.
"We really think of Jimmy and Kayla as sort of this bizarro version of Deborah and Ava. They are their own duo, but we always try and dovetail their stories and have them reflect the larger themes that we're dealing with in the season," Downs says. "And so this season, it's one thing if you work at a management company and have deal with the culture there or deal with the downward pressure if it is again a publicly traded company, but now they're starting their own. So there's all the pressures of being a startup, being a sort of this fledgling management company, but also he's dealing with the stress of Deborah and Ava having the grist they have in the beginning of the season."
Like Deborah and Ava, Jimmy and Kayla also have completely different management styles. "She goes guerrilla mode, he leads with love, but this was such a fun episode because Jimmy was on a real emotional roller coaster."
Jimmy and Kayla frantically search for Dance Mom (Julianne Nicholson), whom they find passed out from a bender on the streets of Wisteria Lane. Dance Mom insists on doing cocaine to straighten out before her Late Night performance and demands that Jimmy "boof it." A hilarious tug-of-war ensues over Dance Mom's eight ball-loaded purse.
"We do a lot of alts, so there's not a lot of time to sit and rehearse, but that was one scene that, because there was so much physical comedy in it, it was so choreographed between, like, running to the door, cutting the coke, getting her out of the ice bucket," Downs says. "And obviously resets are so tricky with cocaine and ice water and all that stuff that we did rehearse that scene the night before. And so there was not really a lot of room for improvisation because it was very, very choreographed. "People had to knock on the door at the right time. We had to get her into the couch at the right time. She had to knock into a cart."
One thing Downs did improvise was Jimmy angrily putting the purse on his shoulder as he walked out the room. "You know, I had to take the purse and then why not wear it out?" he says. "There was a little bit of discovery on the day, and that was one of those moments."
SEE 'No one ever asks me to do comedy': Julianne Nicholson explains how she became Dance Mom on Hacks
After Dance Mom manages to perform, Jimmy reaches his breaking point, and just like Ava in the sixth episode, he drives off the studio lot (in a golf cart). But the nice guy that he is, he doesn't break the studio gate. After the ultimatum from Bob, Deborah goes to Jimmy's house to apologize for not showing enough appreciation for all he does, and to clue him in something. Before Deborah goes on for her monologue, she has a brief chat with Jimmy, and it's still murky what her big plan is.
"It was really tricky because you don't want to tip it one way or the other. You don't wanna like overly be mustache-twirly and make it seem like she's definitely done something sinister and you don't want it to seem like, 'OK, we're about to blow up the show, we're in cahoots in some way.' So it was very, very tricky cause we didn't want to push the misdirect. We wanted to make it a little bit neutral, and so there were a bunch of different versions of it," Downs says. "We did try a bunch because I was very aware. I think the way that I played it when I was thinking about it was I was playing it as if [Ava] was fired because I, knowing the truth of the scenario and what she was about to do, it was very hard not to be like, 'Poof, OK, you're about to go on television [and quit].'"
At the end of the episode, Bob tells Deborah that she can't do anything because that the network has an 18-month non-compete on her. The reveal after that doozy of an episode could've served as the season finale — and it nearly was. "It was the finale initially," Downs shares. "We considered it going out on the static [when the feed is cut] that it's like, 'Well, what happened there?' We also considered going out on, 'We own you, we have a non-compete.' ... But then we thought, why are we delaying that?" "That" being what transpires in the season finale.
The Season 4 finale of Hacks premieres Thursday, May 29 at 9 p.m. ET/PT on Max.
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Elle
an hour ago
- Elle
Ava and Deborah Take Singapore in the 'Hacks' Season 4 Finale
Spoilers below. This season of Hacks has revolved around repairing Ava and Deborah's relationship after Ava blackmailed Deborah to become the head writer on Deborah's show last season. The season finale opens after the shocking ninth episode saw Deborah quit her job on air, walking away from her decades-long dream of hosting a late night show. When studio head Bob (Tony Goldwyn) tells Deborah that she must fire Ava because she revealed that the studio appeased a violent guest, she's willing to leave the show. She's finally showing her appreciation for Ava in a way Ava always wanted, but what she didn't realize was that her noncompete means that she'll be unable to perform in any capacity for the next 18 months. It's incredibly difficult to believe that a Hollywood veteran wouldn't realize that studio contracts are typically pretty ironclad, but somehow it seems that Deborah has. She meets with a small-time lawyer (Teddy Margas) who seems shocked that she'd be willing to hire him. He wasn't her first choice, we learn. She's fired her lawyers and gone through several more firms hoping someone could find a way for her to legally perform. Alas, the lawyer agrees with everyone else. There's no way for Deborah to perform without breaching her contract. Realizing that it was her impulsive mistake that created Deborah's situation, Ava takes her own approach to getting Deborah's career back. She suggests to Jimmy (Paul W. Downs) that perhaps offering sexual favors to the head of the network might entice him to give Deborah a break. Jimmy tells her that that's unlikely and he suggests that a better route would be to help Deborah write new material. Alternately, she could work with Greta Gerwig to pitch ideas for her upcoming adaptation of Catcher in the Rye. (The twist is going to be a gender flip.) Deborah and Ava have a discouraging meeting at her house where Deborah turns down her suggestion that they spend 18 months writing intensely so that the minute that Deborah's allowed to perform again, she'll have amazing material ready to go. Deborah needs an audience, she explains. There's no way for her to understand what material works without the feedback that a crowd can provide. 'If I'm not on that stage, I have nothing,' she says. Dejected, Deborah returns to Las Vegas where she spends time with her new grandson. She speaks with him as if he were a talk show guest, making it clear how much she misses her job. She later visits Marcus (Carl Clemons-Hopkins) at his new job and tells him that she wants her old company, DV Industries, back. That's a no go, Marcus tells her. QVC owns it now. Deborah takes to her bed. For days on end, she doesn't leave. We see her eating cookies, playing cards, and doing the New York Times crossword puzzle. Josefina (Rose Abdoo) checks to see if she's still breathing. Late one night, Deborah goes to a Las Vegas convenience store where she buys spangly baseball cap and then drinks in the parking lot. Finally, Marty (Christopher McDonald) calls her with an emergency, which finally makes her emerge from her room. When she finds him, he's trying on suit jackets and asks for her input. It's hardly an emergency, but she's looked brighter than she has in weeks. Marty urges her to go spend some time at his hotel in Hawaii, but Deborah hates vacations. She always just wishes she was working. 'Remember in Santorini?' she reminds him. 'I turned that taverna into an open mic.' Somehow, though, Deborah is swayed. Ava, for her part, seems thrilled to be playing the plus one on a three-week tropical getaway. (Though maybe she should be wondering why her boss would be bringing her along if the trip was going to truly be a break from work.) She's excited about her outfit which could either read as 'fun and flirty vacation girl' or Ace Ventura, pet detective. ('Both are sexually viable!' she decides.) But when Ava and Deborah get off their plane and make their way through the airport, Ava becomes confused. Are they actually in Hawaii? Nope! Deborah has taken them to Singapore. She realized that by using a translator on stage, she can get around the rules about performing. In the United States and Europe, venues would be too wary of the legal risk but in Singapore ('the greatest municipal city-state in the world') things are much more relaxed. Deborah's been booked for a run of shows at the Sentosa casino. Yes, that means that Ava is living in a casino once again. But at least she's finally seeing Deborah writing again. When they're not working, Ava and Deborah spend days drinking by the pool, nights on rooftop bars, and hours on the casino floor. The residency keeps getting extended and Ava and Deborah seem happy to stay, keeping busy doing karaoke and getting massages. But then we see Deborah repeat a joke from all the way back in the first season. The weeks keep going by and Ava becomes frustrated that they haven't actually done any writing and that Deborah is relying heavily on old material. She's also been falling asleep on stage. Deborah's found a group of friends and is happy eating caviar and calling bingo at brunch. Out drinking, Ava tells Deborah that she's worried they haven't been getting anything done and that she thinks they should return home. But Deborah loves her Singapore lifestyle and certainly doesn't appreciate Ava saying she think she's drinking too much. She's hosted a successful late night show and she performs every night. What is Ava doing and why doesn't she leave? What has she ever accomplished? We're at the moment in each season when Deborah turns mean. She took a late night show to No. 1 while all Ava's done is 'follow her around with an 'empty little notebook' and her 'big shorts.' Why is she still here anyway, Deborah asks. Ava's 29, Deborah reminds her, and Deborah is her only friend. 'Isn't that weird?' Deborah says. 'It's weird.' Ava decides to head straight home in the morning and leaves Deborah drinking on a rooftop. But when Ava wakes up the next day, she has dozens of texts. TMZ has reported that Debroah is dead, Jimmy tells her. Unable to reach her on the phone, Ava runs frantically runs across the hotel and through the casino floor to get to Deborah. She pounds on her door, in tears, until Deborah opens the door, very much alive. She's fine, the TMZ obituary was a mistake. But then Deborah actually reads the story. It says she's killed late night. But what really throws her off the edge is seeing that they've referred to her as retired. She's enraged that Deborah is enraged that the obituary refers to her as retired. She starts packing. 'That will not be my legacy,' she says. 'I'm no quitter!' They're heading home. It's time to write.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘Hacks' Season 4 Finale: Creators Talk Series Endgame, Potential For Jimmy-Kayla Spin-Off, & HBO Series ‘Kansas City Star' In Development
Hacks Deborah Vance (Jean Smart) goes to hell and back in the Season 4 finale of Hacks, which aired on HBO Max tonight. More from Deadline 'Hacks' Renewed For Season 5 By Max 'Hacks' Season 4 Release Schedule: When Do New Episodes Come Out? Everything We Know About 'Hacks' Season 4 So Far After blowing up her late-night dreams, she finds herself under a network non-compete in Episode 10, 'Heaven,' which states that she can't perform as a comedian for 18 months. Ava (Hannah Einbinder) encourages her to make the most of her mandated time away from the spotlight, in the writing of a new act, but Deborah instead sets out to find a legal loophole that will allow her to skirt the agreement. At loose ends for perhaps the first time in her life, Deborah pays a visit to former manager Marcus (Carl Clemons-Hopkins), trying to convince him to come back to work alongside her — though he's now content to oversee a warehouse producing solar panel materials. Marty (Christopher McDonald) offers Deborah an extended stay at a Hawaiian hotel where he's a part owner, and while it looks for a moment that she's resigned herself to jet off for a vacation with Ava and set work aside for a beat, Ava is surprised to wake from the trip in Singapore instead. Deborah has found her loophole: She's negotiated a limited run in a casino, where she'll perform through a translator, circumventing the terms of her late show contract. Over time, the run extends into a residency, and Deborah lives the high life, partying too much as Ava becomes increasingly disillusioned. Ava accuses Deb of having given up — after all, she hasn't written new material in months — and is sent packing following yet another big argument with her boss. But when Ava wakes on the morning of her flight, it's to frantic texts and calls, letting her know that TMZ has reported Deborah dead. Fear not, though, as she's very much alive. This was just a case of an obit being prepped in advance and accidentally published. In any case, the moment serves its purpose for Deborah, lighting a fire under her to get back to the U.S. and have the final say in the writing of her story. Hours before Hacks' Season 5 renewal was formally announced, creator-showrunners Lucia Aniello, Paul W. Downs, and Jen Statsky hopped on Zoom with Deadline to break down the finale and preview their endgame for the series. Here, they discuss signs of 'character growth' for Deborah, a big evolution in her dynamic with Ava, whether they'll stick to a five-season plan for the series, the potential for a Jimmy-Kayla spin-off, their Kaley Cuoco comedy Kansas City Star in development at HBO, and more. Hacks JEN STATSKY: Good! We feel privileged and honored to get to do another season of this show. LUCIA ANIELLO: Yeah. In a world where five seasons of a comedy is extremely rare, we count our blessings. PAUL W. DOWNS: And it shouldn't be, but it I think the fall. We have been writing, so behind the Zoom tab is another tab. We're in process. DOWNS: It just felt right. I mean, in [Episode 9] 'A Slippery Slope,' Deborah gives up her white whale, and it was something we always knew we would do, and it really took four seasons to get there. All of the ups and downs of their relationship, and all of the twists and turns of Deborah's career have led to this moment where she says, 'I'm going to actually put someone before my career, and I'm going to do right by my career as a comedian and not make a show the wrong way.' So obviously it's a huge character growth for Deborah. And I think that it's just something that we've always planned to do. We always knew we wanted her to get the late-night show; we always knew we wanted her to give it up. And I think at the end of four seasons felt Yeah, although we didn't know it was Season 4. Initially we were like, 'Oh, maybe she gets the late night show in Season 3. Maybe it's half of a season.' So all of the tentpoles are there. It's just, when we roll them out and how long we stay with certain stories kind of depends on how we break each season with our Going to Singapore, I think what we were searching for there was basically Deborah, since she's kind of banished from performing in English, she always finds a loophole. For us, the way that she in her career ended up going to Vegas, when she was tossed out of the entertainment industry, she kind of likes to find these places where she can build her own reality, her own fortress. And for us in Singapore, that was her doing the same thing. She was creating a world where she could live in the lap of luxury and do what she wanted to do, which is perform, so she figured out her own kind of loophole. In terms of the Bob Lipka of it all, I think we actually thought it was more interesting for her not to be able to get out of the non-compete…Obviously, that's not necessarily set in stone. We haven't written the rest of the series. But that did feel like to give him a checkmate would be really putting her in an interesting position and a lack of power, which isn't really something we've seen before. So for us, we're really trying to put our characters in new situations you haven't seen them in. That is what led us to the spirit of the finale, which is to see Deborah in an extremely, extremely low place, and a place which is very different than we've ever seen, which we thought was particularly interesting after she has kind of an emotional climax of just making the right choice in our minds. So for us, in terms of where we left it, I think that's the thing that we've found to be the most interesting, is when Deborah Vance has something she wants, she's reinvigorated and she's excited for life. So we wanted to end the season with her excited about her new goal, instead of just ending in a, 'Well, that was that. I finished my late-night show, and that's the end, and I chose Ava.' Just because that could feel like a series finale, and we just don't feel like that's where we wanted to end the season. So that is why we kind of had this epilogue episode that got to explore different things and put them in a new scenario. For us, in terms of the form of the episode, it feels different than the rest of the series. And for us, we like to challenge ourselves and try to make episodes of the show that you don't see coming. So for us, it's a really special episode. DOWNS: Although we did always talk about those things. Like, could she get out of [the contractual agreement]? Could she do this? Could she talk about the affair? But obviously, the affair could tarnish the way in which she earned the show. So we were like, can't really do that. And also, knowing that we wanted to get to this place where Ava in Season 3 says, 'You'll never put someone before your career,' we needed to give Deborah the opportunity to put someone before her career. And there's not going to be a greater moment, or a more heightened moment than giving up her white whale, this dream that she's had. STATSKY: Yeah. She does this amazing thing in 9, which is both an emotional and moral victory for her. But we always, after being a comedy first, want to treat our characters as real people and in a grounded way. And we wanted to honor the fact that this was Deborah's dream for her entire life. And even though she knows it was the right choice to walk away, that doesn't mean it's easy. If you've been muzzled and she's not going to be able to do the thing she loves more than anything — the thing she's addicted to, as we've shown — that's going to really put her in a low place, and really put her in a place of grieving and feeling adrift, and everything that you see happen in Episode 10. So, then we've always talked about this story of an obituary being leaked of a famous person because we find it so fascinating. The idea of doing this story with Deborah has been around since Season 1 because all of us were taken very much with the story of Alfred Noble, who had invented dynamite, and then his obituary was accidentally printed and it said, 'The merchant of death is dead.' The obituary was about all the people his invention had killed, and it made him realize what his legacy was, and his legacy was someone who had hurt others and taken lives from people. And so it made him reevaluate and want to establish the Nobel Peace Prize in his will, which he did. So we always have really thought it was so interesting to have a famous main character who this could happen to, who could see their life the way it would be remembered, and perhaps not like what they see, and still have the chance to change that. To get a second chance at writing your legacy is such a rare, incredible thing, and we really wanted that to be the fire that would be lit under Deborah going into Season 5. DOWNS: I think after what happens in 'A Slippery Slope,' they're so ride or die for each other. They really have, I think, sealed the deal. They're creatively bound, and I think Ava has said this in the past, that as much success as she's had on On the Contrary — which was that weekly news show that she worked on and was offered the head writer job of — or the success she's had in her past, she gets so much satisfaction from working with Deborah, I think because writing can be a very solitary thing. I think their creative collaboration is the most satisfying thing for her. So I do think they are in the best place they've ever been. Of course, they're still going to have philosophical differences because they're two women of very different generations, and the way they see the world is different. They are always going to have grist, and that's sort of the secret sauce of the show. But I don't think they're going to be at odds in the same way We are digging into that right now because their relationship has certainly evolved, as well. They're like a bizarro version of Deborah and Ava, and things have changed for them, but also we have to remember that two of their highest-earning clients now are out of a job and are in Singapore. So what's happening with their fledgling management firm is yet to be seen. We have a lot to explore with them. I don't even actually know all the answers. STATSKY: But they're ride or die, too. Just like Deborah and Ava, at the end of the season, are ride or die. DOWNS: You know what it is? They're all family — and you can't choose your family. Hacks ANIELLO: We very much know where we want to end the series; it's how we pitched the show originally. Right now, we're still writing towards it ending in the fifth season. But that being said, we have a lot of things we want to do this season. A lot of stories we want to pay homage to and a lot of characters we want to do right by. So that being said, there's always a world where it's more than the amount that we can turn out in a year. Because we really like having the show out every year. But we are really in the middle of figuring it out. If it's not done in five, it's close to it. But we shall see. Hacks DOWNS: We're asked that a lot, and the truth is that we have so many funny scenes for Jimmy and Kayla that don't end up in the show, and we're like, 'Well, that's going to be for a different show.' Because there's oftentimes stories that we want to tell with them that there just isn't room for in an ensemble show, especially one that's a character study of this woman, and they really are best served when they dovetail with Deborah and Ava's stories. So you're right. There's certainly a lot of material there, and it would be a lot of fun. I think we would absolutely be open to it, but we haven't been asked to do it. So, you know. ANIELLO: Start the petition. DOWNS: We need the Deadline blast. We need the groundswell. ANIELLO: And that's up to We're very much just concentrating right now on finishing Hacks. It's not something we're juggling really at the same time. STATSKY: HBO and HBO Max have been such incredible creative partners. Everyone there is just so wonderful and listens to creatives first. Hacks is this thing that exists and it's so important to us, and we're able to focus on that and dedicate ourselves to that. And so while we have things that we're super excited about, including this Kaley show, it's not taking up the majority of our time right now. The majority of our time is Hacks, Hacks, Hacks….and maybe, the Jimmy-Kayla spin-off. Best of Deadline Everything We Know About Netflix's 'The Thursday Murder Club' So Far 2025 TV Series Renewals: Photo Gallery 2025 TV Cancellations: Photo Gallery


Tom's Guide
2 hours ago
- Tom's Guide
'Hacks' shocking season 4 finale has me hopeful season 5 could be the show's best yet — here's why
"Hacks" season 4 finale just wrapped up on Max, bringing to a close a chapter of the hit comedy drama that has, frankly, been treading water at times. Don't get me wrong, the show remains excellent. A relatively stale season of Hacks is still one of the funniest things on TV or the best streaming services. But now I'm more excited for the future of the show than ever, because the end of season 4 — including its shocking climax — has me hopeful that this show is ready, like its main character Deborah, to finally get back to its peak. Let me reiterate: At no point has this show been bad. But the first two seasons of "Hacks" are some of the best from a comedy series ever. They were brilliant, fresh and constantly had you on alert for what was coming next. The past two seasons, though? Well, as Deborah made the transition from the queen of standup to the queen of late-night TV, the show entered a bit of a holding pattern. In retrospect, this holding pattern may have occurred because the show knew it didn't want Deborah's story to end there. But it still felt like the show's writers were finding excuses to keep the late-night show storyline going. That storyline ended with a bang in last week's penultimate season 4 episode, and now Deborah can't work at all, let alone on a late-night talk show. That penultimate episode marked the end of one era of "Hacks," and this season finale is all about transitioning to the next era of the show. We see Deborah and Ava leave Hollywood and Vegas behind to recreate their Vegas years in Singapore. We get the not-so-subtle metaphor of the Tropicana imploding while everyone watches. But with the episode about to end, Ava and Deborah seem ready to split again, continuing the push-pull, will-they-won't-they of their mother-daughter/mentor-mentee relationship that we've seen all season long. The cycle seemed set to repeat, with Ava headed back to Los Angeles with her tail between her legs and Deborah once again a "hack," but this time in Singapore instead of Vegas. However, "Hacks" chose that moment to remind us why this show is so good. Ava wakes up to Jimmy calling to say that TMZ is reporting that Deborah is dead. That's the kind of twist "Hacks" used to hit us with. I was immediately brought back to season 1, when Ava spends a whirlwind, possibly perspective-changing night with a guy in Vegas, only to find that he'd jumped to his death while she was getting coffee. Of course, Deborah isn't dead, something we knew given that the show was renewed for season 5. But she's is pissed about the TMZ obituary saying she killed late-night TV and then retired to Singapore, and she's ready to get back to the top of the comedy world — consequences be damned. That's a show I'm looking forward to watching, and it's why I can't wait for "Hacks" season 5. Stream "Hacks" now on Max Malcolm has been with Tom's Guide since 2022, and has been covering the latest in streaming shows and movies since 2023. He's not one to shy away from a hot take, including that "John Wick" is one of the four greatest films ever made. Here's what he's been watching lately: