The conversation around Pluribus feels a little louder than you would expect for a show that only just finished its first season. Viewers barely had time to sit with that finale before the question started circling again and again. When are we getting more. The impatience is not limited to fans binge watching at home either. Stephen King is right there with them, openly wishing the wait would not stretch too far.
Part of the urgency comes from how season one chose to bow out. The final episode did not offer comfort or closure. Instead, it pushed everything further into uncertainty. The Others uncovering a loophole that could force Carol, played by Rhea Seehorn, into their ranks changed the entire game. At the same time, Carol aligning herself with Manousos felt like one of those choices that might seem necessary in the moment but could spiral into something dangerous. It was the kind of ending designed to linger and it did exactly that.
That lingering tension only made recent comments from Vince Gilligan harder for some fans to swallow. The creator admitted he is not racing toward season two. He has said the team knows where the story is headed and has a clear sense of the bigger picture, but that does not mean cameras will start rolling anytime soon. Gilligan has been candid about slowing down with age, even acknowledging that this is not the news viewers want to hear.
Gordon Smith, who writes and executive produces the series, echoed that sentiment without trying to soften it too much. According to him, the show will return when it is ready. He has spoken about understanding the frustration that comes with long gaps between seasons, but also about the shared belief that rushing would only hurt the story. The priority, in his words, is getting it right rather than pushing something out before it is fully formed. Coming from the creative mind behind Breaking Bad, that insistence on patience feels familiar.
Vince Gilligan says he's in no hurry to get going on Season 2 of PLURIBUS. Understood, but hey, Vince, if you're listening: I'm not getting any younger.
— Stephen King (@StephenKing) December 26, 2025
Even so, patience is not easy when the story leaves you hanging. Many fans have accepted the explanation but still feel annoyed by it, especially after such a loaded finale. Stephen King summed up that mix of understanding and disappointment in a post on X. He admitted he could see where Gilligan was coming from, but he also pointed out that time moves quickly. King joked that he is not getting any younger and would love to see season two sooner rather than later.
That comment struck a chord because it mirrors how much of the audience feels. Pluribus has earned its following by trusting viewers with big ideas and unresolved tension. Now those same viewers are being asked to trust the process and wait. Whether that wait ends up being worth it is a question only time can answer, but for now, the demand for more is not fading anytime soon.










