Skip to main content

Crackle original series 'StartUp' delves into the high-stakes world of fintech

Crackle’s new original series StartUp, which stars Adam Brody (The OC, CHiPS) and Martin Freeman (Fargo, Captain America: Civil War), has gotten an official premiere date. The 10-episode first season will premiere on Tuesday, September 6.

The show follows the story of three strangers who come upon a brilliant yet controversial digital currency tech idea called GenCoin (sound familiar?) It has the potential to truly change the world. But these people aren’t exactly your typical incubators, described as being “on the wrong side of the tracks.” Thus, they end up in a dangerous game involving a Haitian gang and crooked FBI agent Phil Rask that will go to any length to bring them down.

Recommended Videos

Brody plays the uber-smart boutique firm financier Nick Talman, while Freeman is the aforementioned agent who seems to have a vendetta with Talman’s father. After Talman’s dad goes missing, Nick attempts to hide the family money in this tech venture, the creation of tech whiz/hacker Izzy Morales, who will be played by Otmara Marrero (Graceland). Also starring is The Blacklist’s Ed Gathegi as Ronald Dacey, a key member of the Haitian gang, which left the money with Talman’s father.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

The cast additionally includes Wayne Knight (Seinfeld) who plays Benedict Blush, a successful entrepreneur with “blue-collar sensibilities;” and Aaron Yoo (21, Blacklist) as Alex Bell, a hot premiere tech venture capitalist.

Set in Miami, Sony Pictures Television, which owns Crackle, describes the series as an “exciting narrative, focusing on the high-stakes struggle of what one will do to reach ultimate success.”

StartUp is produced by Critical Content and Hollywood Gang Productions. Tom Forman, Andrew Marcus, Ray Ricord, Gianni Nunnari and Shannon Gaulding all serve as executive producers. The series is written by Ben Ketai (Chosen, The Forest) who also serves as executive producer and director. Brody and Anne Clements (Cleaners) are producers.

At a time when start-up culture and new tech ventures, particularly in fintech and mobile payments, are arguably at their hottest, the show has a good chance at resonating with viewers. If the previously released teaser trailer (shown above) is any indication, it showcases a passionate battle, both internally and externally, between good intentions and temptation. After all, any good technology, in the wrong hands, can become bad.

Christine Persaud
Christine has decades of experience in trade and consumer journalism. While she started her career writing exclusively about…
All the 2025 Best Picture Oscar nominees, ranked
Timothee Chalamet stands near a desert wall in a still from the movie Dune: Part Two.

Los Angeles smolders, but the show must go on, apparently. Delaying no further, the Academy yesterday announced the nominees for the 2025 Oscars — one year to the day from the last time they unveiled the contenders in every category. No Barbenheimer looms over our new Oscar season, try though entertainment journalists and social media users did to manufacture a sequel to that double-feature moviegoing event for the ages. This week's nominations narrowed a crowded race without pointing towards a certain winner. The Best Picture lineup was tougher to predict than last year’s, which conformed so entirely to expectations that the 2024 version of this very article could be written entirely in advance.

Easier than identifying the frontrunner for this year’s Oscar is picking a favorite. Perhaps even more so than usual, Best Picture runs the gamut from worthy to decidedly not. The best of the nominees was truly the best movie of the year. The worst would make for a historically blunderous end to the 97th Academy Awards. In between, we’ve got blockbusters not half as good as the big winner of 2024, Oppenheimer; a better-than-average example of a generally lukewarm genre, the musical biopic; and a staggeringly ambitious budget epic whose reach exceeds its grasp (but hey, the reach is admirable all the same). 

Read more
3 sci-fi movies on Hulu you need to watch in January 2025
Rinko Kikuchi suits up in Pacific Rim (2013), directed by Guillermo del Toro.

Hulu dropped a lot of its classic sci-fi movies at the end of December, so it will probably be a few months before the missing Planet of the Apes or Alien films return to their natural streaming home. In the meantime, Hulu has a handful of films on loan from other studios that should scratch that itch for genre lovers.
This month's picks for the three sci-fi movies on Hulu that you need to watch in January include two action films that don't require a lot of thinking, and you may enjoy them more if you don't try to make sense of them. Our final choice is a movie that tells a unique time travel story despite its low budget.

Need more recommendations? Then check out the best new movies to stream this week, the best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Hulu, the best movies on Amazon Prime Video, the best movies on Max, and the best movies on Disney+.
Pacific Rim (2013)

Read more
What is Star Trek: Section 31? Inside the origins of Paramount+’s new TV movie
Michelle Yeoh as Philippa Georgiou in Star Trek: Section 31. She sits behind a desk wearing an elegant gown.

It’s been nearly a decade since the release of the last theatrical Star Trek film, but in that time, Star Trek has returned to television in a big way, launching five new series with more to come. Now, while Paramount Pictures continues to drag its feet on a follow-up to Star Trek Beyond, their TV counterparts are kicking off what they hope will be a new tradition of direct-to-streaming features.
First on their slate is Star Trek: Section 31, a spy-fi action flick in which Academy Award-winner Michelle Yeoh reprises her role as the somewhat-reformed tyrannical Emperor Philippa Georgiou from Star Trek: Discovery. The film sees Georgiou rejoin the United Federation of Planets’ shady black ops agency, marking the first time that Section 31 will feature as the protagonists of a Star Trek story rather than a villain or obstacle.
How exactly did Section 31 mutate from the Federation’s Illuminati to its Impossible Mission Force? For our answer, we’ll have to dig into decades of behind-the-scenes intrigue and centuries of Star Trek continuity.

Section 31 was Deep Space Nine’s scariest villain

Read more