Nick Offerman Is About to Show a New Side of Himself. He’s Scared of What You’ll Think
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Offerman’s soulful turn in ‘Margo’s Got Money Troubles’ is about as far from Ron Swanson as you can get. The Emmy winner digs deep into his career shift — and why it’s both exciting and terrifying him.
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Nick Offerman Is About to Show a New Side of Himself. He’s Scared of What You’ll Think Offerman’s soulful turn in ‘Margo’s Got Money Troubles’ is about as far from Ron Swanson as you can get. The Emmy winner digs deep into his career shift — and why it’s both exciting and terrifying him. By David Canfield Plus Icon David Canfield Senior Entertainment Writer View All April 3, 2026 Share on Facebook Share on X Google Preferred Share to Flipboard Show additional share options Share on LinkedIn Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share on Tumblr Share on Whats App Send an Email Print the Article Post a Comment Logo text Nick Offerman knows he has a type. Since his mid-career breakout as Ron Swanson in Parks and Recreation , the Illinois native has cornered the market on a certain brand of deadpan, handy, emotionally removed yet gruffly lovable steak eater. Offerman has happily leaned into that persona himself, but as often happens with iconic roles, any type tends to belie greater depth — and it’s certainly the case with Offerman, given his origins in Chicago theater and his range of work in indie films, that there’s long been more than meets the mustache. The Last of Us changed things. In one 2023 episode of HBO’s apocalyptic drama, Offerman beautifully charted a standalone queer romance over decades opposite Murray Bartlett, going on to win a guest-acting Emmy for his wrenching turn. The industry started seeing him differently; peers and colleagues would commend his work there. This dynamic started changing the shape of the offers coming his way — arguably culminating in Margo’s Got Money Troubles , premiering April 15 on AppleTV+. Related Stories Exclusive On Set for That Bloody, Teary 'Survivor' Merge: A Deep Dive Into What the Cameras Didn't Catch TV 'The Madison' Cast, Director on How That Ending Sets Up Season 2 for the Clyburn Family The pedigreed new dramedy from Emmy winner David E. Kelley stars Oscar nominees Michelle Pfeiffer and Elle Fanning as dysfunctional...
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