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Will there be “Nobody Wants” in this second season? Series creator speaks out

Will there be “Nobody Wants” in this second season? Series creator speaks out

GettyImages-2173272973-Erin Foster

Erin Foster Charley Gallay/Getty Images for Netflix

The series creator of Netflix's hit romantic comedy Nobody wants that, Erin FosterHe has spoken out about the possibility of a second season.

This post contains spoilers for Nobody wants that First season finale.

After a surprising twist at the end of the first season that… Adam BrodyNoah has apparently decided to get into a relationship with him Kristen BellFoster, 42, revealed there is more to her story to tell.

In conversation with IndieWire In an interview published on Friday, September 27, Foster said: “Talks have definitely started about a possible second season. The story in Season 1 develops very slowly.”

What Kristen Bell and Adam Brody said about playing younger ages on Nobody Wants This 846

Related: Kristen Bell and Adam Brody's Quotes About Their Age in 'Nobody Wants This'

Hopper Stone/Netflix Yes, Kristen Bell and Adam Brody know they're portraying characters closer to their 30s in Nobody Wants This. The 10-episode series follows the romance of agnostic podcaster Joanne (Bell) and Rabbi Noah (Brody) as they navigate their contrasting personal lives and the role of religion in their lives. At the time (…)

Foster, who is also an actress and played the lead role The OK from 2005 to 2006 as bad girl Heather alongside Brody's Seth Cohen, adding that she had already mapped out the direction of a possible second season. (Netflix has not yet greenlit a second season.) Nobody wants that.)

“If there is a second season, I would just want to pick up where we left off and take it slow because I don't want us to get too far ahead,” Foster told the outlet. “I mean, I want my show to be on the air for as long as possible.”

GettyImages-2174053933-Adam-Kristen

Adam Brody and Kristen Bell Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images for Netflix

Season 1 of Nobody wants that follows Joanne, an agnostic sex podcaster who meets Noah, a newly minted Jewish rabbi, and immediately forms a connection with him. For Joanne to be accepted romantically into Noah's world as a long-term partner, it's best if she converts to Judaism, which provides plenty of highly entertaining stumbling blocks to explore over ten hour-long episodes.

The series, which hit theaters on Thursday, September 26, was warmly embraced by TV fans, achieving a 94% certification rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

Foster, who based the show's plot on her converting to Judaism for her own husband, a music executive Simon Tikhmanin real life, added that Joanne's decision to shun the option of becoming a rabbi's wife was worth examining in depth.

“It’s a big responsibility,” Foster said. “And you also have to remember that Joanne is someone who doesn’t fake it. So if she doesn’t believe it, she won’t live it.”

Foster's authentic writing style clearly won over fans, as did the on-screen chemistry between Brody and Bell, both 44 years old. The couple's first on-screen kiss was the talk of the town on social media, and Bell was even involved in the casting of Brody. (Bell is married to Dax Shepard and has two daughters, Lincoln (11) and Delta (9), while Brody is married to her Leighton Meester and has a daughter, Arlo, and a son who is not publicly named, 4.)

Adam told The Hollywood Reporter In an interview on Tuesday, October 1, he said he really enjoyed working with Bell. “I should be so lucky to work with Kristen too,” he told the outlet. “She is a phenomenal actress with an amazing track record.”

Nobody wants that is now streaming on Netflix.

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