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'Jack Ryan' co-creator surprised by parallels with Venezuela strikes
Summary
Carlton Cruse said clips from season two of Jack Ryan trended after U.S. strikes on Venezuela, and he described the 2019 storyline as plausible fiction grounded in real geopolitical dynamics.
Content
Carlton Cruse, co-creator of Amazon's Jack Ryan series, commented on similarities between a 2019 season and recent U.S. strikes against Venezuela. Clips from season two, featuring protagonist Jack Ryan discussing Venezuela's political and economic troubles, trended on social media over the weekend. Cruse told Deadline that the season's aim was plausibility rather than prophecy and that the writers based scenarios on existing geopolitical tensions. On Saturday, President Donald Trump confirmed U.S. military strikes against Venezuela and said Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife had been taken into custody.
What is reported:
- Carlton Cruse remarked that real-world events can catch up to fiction and said the season was intended to be plausible, not prophetic.
- Clips from season two (first aired in 2019) circulated online, including Jack Ryan's lines about Venezuela's resources and humanitarian crisis.
- The show's fictional leader, Nicholas Reyes, was portrayed as having severely damaged the national economy and sharply increased poverty.
- The article reports that President Trump confirmed U.S. strikes and the capture of Nicolás Maduro and his wife.
Summary:
The 2019 season of Jack Ryan has drawn renewed attention because viewers saw parallels between its plot and recent actions in Venezuela. Cruse emphasized that the writers sought credible, character-driven scenarios grounded in long-standing tensions. Undetermined at this time.
