CBC Arts50%
Why audiences are divided on Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed 18%
By Amelia Eqbal0%
5/27/2026, 8:22:30 PM
BS Summary: This article contains 19 faulty reasoning types, including Appeal to Emotion, Availability Heuristic, and Attempt to Sell a Product or Service, with Anecdotal as the most egregious example at 26% saturation with 241 hits. Analysis detected 1,424 faulty-reasoning hits from 927 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 33.5% and a BS Rank of 18% (13,788 of 16,813 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 82.00% of the article peer group.
Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed is a new Apple TV comedy-thriller starring Canadian actor Tatiana Maslany.
The show follows a newly divorced mom named Paula, played by Maslany, as she struggles to handle the pressures of motherhood and divorce — while also getting blackmailed by a cam boy.
Her struggle reaches a boiling point when she begins to investigate a crime, and stumbles upon an even greater conspiracy in her community.
Today on Commotion, guest host Amil Niazi talks to film critic Radheyan Simonpillai and culture critic CT Jones about the new series, and why it's so polarizing for some audiences.
We've included some highlights below, edited for length and clarity.
For the full discussion, listen and follow Commotion with Elamin Abdelmahmoud on your favourite podcast player.
WATCH | Today's episode on YouTube:
Amil: As a mom I was like, this is such a refreshing — even though it's obviously very exaggerated — but just nice to see a subversive take on mothers that brings up a lot of emotions all of us feel.
… Rad, you spoke with [Canadian actor Tatiana Maslany] recently.
So tell us, how does she play as the lead here?
Radheyan: I think the reason that this show works so well is because of Tatiana Maslany and because of her performance.
This show has some ridiculous twists, especially when you get further down the season….
Tatiana Maslany makes it work because her performance is always hanging on to some emotional honesty.
Like, the chaos of the plot just works because of the chaos of her emotions that wrap you in.
That's the kind of thing you expect from Tatiana Maslany.
If you know her work, if you've seen her throughout all of these ages, you know she is a big performer….
She's not trying to play it cool, not trying to do nuanced, simmering emotions.
She goes big.
She goes Gena Rowlands-big.
So, she has these big enveloping performances that feel like [they’re] a bear hug, bringing you in.
So, that's part of what makes this work.
Also, when you think of the chaos, the tempo of the show, that is Maslany energy….
You’ve got horror, and comedy and drama all playing out in the same scene, sometimes at the same time.
There's very few actors that could play all those notes, one after the other or at the time as she does.
So that's a big part of the appeal of the show.
It's interesting to me that this show has a lot of people thinking back to Orphan Black, you know?...
I think it's because she's only playing one character, but as a mother who is pulled in all sorts of directions, who has to play all these different roles, who has to be all these different things to different people.
Like, she's capturing that energy once again.
Amil: Yes, that's so true.
And yet, it always felt grounded in this emotion and reality….
As absurd as some of these things that happened to her are, you always feel like this is a real woman.
And I'm glad you brought up Gena Rowlands, because I always felt like I was watching a woman on the verge of a breakdown.
CT, there is chaos embedded in this character.
Her ex-husband calls her erratic many times.
And it has some people rooting for this character, really hoping that she gets everything that she wants at the end, but it also has a lot of people frustrated with her decision-making skills.
Where do you land on this debate that people are having about this Paula character so far?
CT: I totally get the frustration.
It's something that I experienced myself, but it's also why I love her character.
For people who are kind of on the fence of watching it, one of the things that I loved so much about the show is that it is a physical, but also auditory pressure cooker, right?
She's not just trying to handle her kid.
She has the physical sounds of her phone ringing, this scam happening, cops trying to talk to her.
Her child's like, “Where are my cleats, mom?”
Her ex-husband won't stop yapping.
And so when you add all of that together, you see a character who is trying to push the chaos down, inevitably fail in some way, and I feel like it's a really realistic take on the idea of fight or flight.
Like, her character does not necessarily want to make the wrong decision, but when all of these external forces are pushing in on her, something breaks.
And sometimes it's a break in the personal sphere.
Sometimes, it's a break in the professional sphere.
Sometimes she's like, “I don't know what to do,” and she just ends up yelling.
And I think it's really true to what you would do when you're under that level of stress, and I imagine moms feel that all of the time.
I assume it's the equivalent of a child coming downstairs at 10 p.m. and being like, “Do you have poster board for my project that's due tomorrow?”
And you’re like, “What project?
I've never heard of that.”
But also, you're being scammed by a cam boy while the child's asking you for paper, and pencil, and Sharpies and you're like, I can't handle this.
You can listen to the full discussion from today's show on CBC Listen or on our podcast, Commotion with Elamin Abdelmahmoud, available wherever you get your podcasts.
Panel produced by Ty Callender.
Analysis
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