
TV Show review
January 1, 2024 · TV-MA · Ended
Woke Score
Lower is better
Breakdown
These are the editorial factors and ratings behind our score for Fool Me Once.
Woke representation / casting
Typical UK ensemble diversity with South Asian detective in competent role and one incidental gay supporting officer; no quotas, identity signaling, prominent “brilliant minority” framing, or marketing emphasis; fits natural demographics without story mismatch.
Woke political dialogue
No activist, identity, gender, race, or social-justice lectures; dialogue stays within thriller conventions of investigation, betrayal, and conspiracy.
Identity-driven story themes
Core narrative revolves around personal murder mystery and family/pharma secrets with zero race, gender, or sexuality-driven arcs; incidental gay character adds negligible thematic weight.
Western institutional / cultural critique
Wealthy family and pharmaceutical company portrayed as corrupt and cover-up prone (standard anti-corporate thriller device); no reframing as systemic Western capitalism critique, patriarchy, or modern activist institutional attack.
Review
Fool Me Once is an eight-episode British Netflix thriller miniseries adapted from Harlan Coben's 2016 novel. Ex-soldier Maya Stern installs a nanny cam after her husband’s murder and spots him alive on the footage, triggering an investigation into family secrets, a pharmaceutical company cover-up, and linked deaths. The story delivers standard twisty mystery plotting with corporate villainy and personal betrayal but contains no audience-visible woke elements, identity politics, activist dialogue, or representation-first messaging.
Woke character or canon changes
Not relevant. Adaptation follows 2016 novel closely with no identity-driven swaps, reinterpretations, or canon alterations reported.
Anti-woke backlash and complaints
No documented viewer, social media, or media complaints accusing the series of pushing woke, DEI, identity politics, or left-wing messaging; backlash limited to entertainment quality issues.
Creator track record context
Harlan Coben maintains centrist public stance and avoids politics in work; some co-writers show left-leaning or identity-focused credits (class/diversity concerns or Black British stories), but these do not shape the final apolitical thriller content or marketing.
Production