Creators Reveal: Is ‘The Madness’ Based on a True Story or Inspired by Real Events?

Colman Domingo’s Netflix conspiracy thriller series The Madness features many realistic hot-button topics and close-to-home characters. Created by playwright Stephen Belber of The Laramie Project and Tape acclaim, The Madness follows Muncie Daniels’ rapidly unraveling life after discovering a dead body in a remote cabin neighboring his wooded rental home. Muncie believes he’s being set up for the murder of a man named Mark Simon, a prominent online figure and spearhead of a rogue white supremacy group called The Forge.

The Madness arrives months after Domingo’s Oscar-buzzy prison drama Sing Sing amidst a swell of new A-lister-led thriller series like Michael Fassbender’s The Agency and Eddie Redmayne’s The Day of the Jackal. Domingo is best known for his inspired work in films like Rustin and his Emmy-winning performance in Euphoria. His lead role as Victor Strand in the dystopian sci-fi series Fear the Walking Dead offered an initial glimpse of his less-utilized skills as a physical actor, which are also put on display in The Madness.

The Madness Is Not Based On A True Story, But It Represents Real Injustice

The Madness is a fictional series with messages for the real world

Although The Madness pulls a lot of inspiration from reality, or at least reality-based people and ideologies found in the modern American social and political climates, the Netflix limited series is not based on a true story. While Muncie is a CNN contributor in the series, he is not based on any particular person and his story is completely fictional. The same goes for the various supporting characters who come to Muncie’s aide to help him prove his innocence and the various powerful and dangerous forces aiming to frame him.

Mark Simon, otherwise known as Brother14 in The Madness, is not directly inspired by a particular person but his character is certainly informed by real-life extreme ideological groups. By rooting the series in an all-too-familiar reality, The Madness offers social commentary and cultural criticism through the exposition and dialogue of the series. In this way, Muncie’s story acts as a cautionary and nearly hypothetical scenario about power, control, and media politics in the current American landscape. Ultimately, however, The Madness is purely a work of fiction.

The Madness Is A Commentary On Social Politics & Health Of The World

The Madness offers a portrait of extreme American ideologies and power dynamics

The Madness presents common hot-button issues that divide Americans today, some mainstream and others quite out there, and characterizes some extreme pockets of topical radical thought in a dramatized format. There is a great deal of commentary to chew on in The Madness about the heated and fragile state of the United States’ current social and political landscape. In the end, The Madness strives to promote a safer and healthier world through Muncie’s fight for innocence and redemption as a family man. The series succeeds in avoiding taking sides on these issues and offers a portrait of the extreme differences in power and class dynamics in today’s world.