January 1 (2023-01-01) – January 22, 2023 (2023-01-22)
Paul T. Goldman is an American true crimedocumentary television miniseries directed by Jason Woliner. The show revolves around Paul Finkelman, a man who uncovers fraud and deception caused by his ex-wife. According to Vulture, the show is "an inscrutable blend of true crime and true-crime satire, documentary storytelling, and dramatized reenactments" of Finkelman's life."[1] It premiered on January 1, 2023 on Peacock.[2]
Plot
Paul T. Goldman is loosely based on Paul Finkelman's semi-autobiographical self-published book, self-published screenplay, and self-published spinoff series.[3] In a series of interviews, reenactments, and behind-the-scenes shots at the film set, the series describes Paul's relationship with his second wife, whom he refers to as Audrey Munson (an alias named after Audrey Munson). He believes that she was living a double life as a prostitute, dating her pimp Royce Rocco and running an international sex trafficking ring.[4] Paul's unreliability becomes more and more apparent. According to Variety, the story of Paul's life matters less than "his aggressive self-belief and his unusual personal qualities."[5]
Cast and characters
Main
Paul Finkelman as Paul T. Goldman, both in reenactments from an intended film adaptation of his story and the pseudonym he uses as an author
Recurring
Melinda McGraw as Audrey Munson, Finkelman's second wife
In 2009, Paul Finkelman, an insurance quoter,[6][7] as Paul T. Goldman, published Duplicity: A True Story of Crime and Deceit[8][9][10]
In 2012, Finkelman/Goldman contacted Woliner.[11][1][6]
In May 2022 Peacock had given a straight-to-series order to an untitled series, with Seth Rogen set to executive produce under his Point Grey Pictures banner.[12] Director Jason Woliner had been working on the show, in some capacity, for more than a decade.[3]
The show received mixed but mostly positive reviews.[15] Hershal Pandya of Vulture described the show as "formally inventive and tonally adventurous" as Paul T. Goldman[1] Nick of Collider called it "arguably the first can’t-miss TV show of 2023."[16] Daniel Fienberg of Hollywood Reporter described it as "an undeniably fascinating, invariably uncomfortable piece of television."[17]The New Yorker writes that the show is "experimental—and disturbing." They further added that "the series is an astute portrait of a man who has mastered the art of concealing his misogyny behind a bumbling benignity."[3]The Daily Beast writes that the series blurs fiction and reality in a way that's nearly as bizarre as The Rehearsal but that Woliner's portrayal of Paul as "a colorful loon" felt "a bit mean."[4]Variety called the series "more cruel than dazzling."[5]
On Rotten Tomatoes, the series holds an approval rating of 76% based on 16 reviews, with an average rating of 7.00/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "This comedic docuseries-with-an-asterisk may strike some as ethically questionable and others as too opaque to fuss over, but there's no denying that Paul T. Goldman makes an unforgettable impression."[18] On Metacritic, the series holds a rating of 63 out of 100, based on 11 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[19]