So Help Me Todd
So Help Me Todd is an American legal dramedy television series created by Scott Prendergast that aired on CBS from September 29, 2022, to May 16, 2024.[1][2] The series centers on Todd Wright, a skilled but unconventional former private investigator who reluctantly joins his estranged mother Margaret Wright's prestigious Portland-based law firm as an in-house investigator, leading to cases that mix courtroom drama, sleuthing, and familial tensions.[3] Starring Marcia Gay Harden as the meticulous attorney Margaret and Skylar Astin as her son Todd, the show features supporting performances by Madeline Wise as Margaret's associate Allison and Tristen J. Winger as office manager Lyle.[4] Filmed primarily in Portland, Oregon, it ran for two seasons comprising 31 episodes before CBS canceled it in April 2024 amid network scheduling decisions.[5][2] Notable for its blend of procedural elements and character-driven humor, the series received a 7.6/10 rating on IMDb from over 9,000 users and earned Harden a 2024 Astra TV Award nomination for Best Actress in a Broadcast Network or Cable Comedy Series.[6][7]Premise and format
Core premise
So Help Me Todd revolves around Todd Wright, a skilled but directionless private investigator who loses his professional license after being implicated in wiretapping and forgery by a duplicitous former mentor, leading him to accept a position as an in-house investigator at his mother Margaret Wright's Portland-based law firm following personal and financial hardships.[8][9] Margaret, a precise and accomplished defense attorney navigating the aftermath of her recent marriage dissolution, recruits her estranged son to bolster her firm's capabilities amid competitive pressures.[6][10] The core narrative hinges on the fraught mother-son dynamic between Margaret and Todd, where her adherence to rigorous legal protocols frequently conflicts with his improvisational, rule-bending investigative tactics honed from years as a private detective, fostering both professional friction and eventual synergy in resolving client cases.[11] This setup underscores Todd's status as the underachieving outlier in the high-achieving Wright family, prompting themes of redemption and familial reconciliation as he proves his value through unconventional problem-solving.[9] Episodically, the series employs a procedural structure centered on self-contained legal mysteries each week, typically involving Margaret's firm defending clients accused of crimes or facing disputes, with Todd's fieldwork—ranging from surveillance to evidence gathering—uncovering pivotal facts that shift case outcomes, often intertwined with serialized elements of family interpersonal growth and external threats to the firm.[12][13]Genre and stylistic elements
So Help Me Todd is classified as a legal dramedy, combining elements of procedural drama with comedic tones derived from character interactions and case resolutions.[6] The series features a case-of-the-week format centered on criminal investigations, where humor arises from the protagonist's unconventional methods clashing with formal legal processes.[11] This blend distinguishes it from stricter legal procedurals by incorporating light-hearted banter and situational comedy amid serious courtroom stakes.[14] Stylistically, the show employs running gags and character quirks, such as the mother-son duo's dynamic tensions and the son's improvisational sleuthing, to infuse levity into tense narratives.[6] Investigative techniques draw from realistic fieldwork, emphasizing hands-on evidence gathering over reliance on procedural norms, reflecting the lead character's background as a former private investigator.[15] These elements highlight empirical approaches to problem-solving, often prioritizing direct observation and verification in legal cases.[16] The tone balances family-oriented humor—rooted in interpersonal quirks and reconciliations—with pointed examinations of legal system inefficiencies, such as bureaucratic hurdles and credential-driven decision-making.[17] This structure allows for episodic resolutions that critique over-formalized practices while maintaining an accessible, engaging pace through comedic relief.[11]Cast and characters
Main cast and roles
Marcia Gay Harden stars as Margaret Wright, a razor-sharp and disciplined defense attorney at a prestigious Portland law firm, whose professional ambition drives her to integrate unconventional methods into her practice after hiring her estranged son.[3][18] Her character embodies meticulous legal strategy, often clashing with personal family tensions while navigating high-stakes cases that test her control-oriented worldview.[6] Skylar Astin plays Todd Wright, Margaret's charismatic yet rebellious son and a former private investigator with sharp instincts but a history of professional setbacks, including a revoked license, making him the family's black sheep who relies on merit-driven intuition over formal structure.[9][18] His role as the firm's in-house investigator injects procedural innovation and humor into the narrative, highlighting contrasts between intuitive fieldwork and courtroom rigor.[3] Madeline Wise portrays Allison Grant, Todd's sister and an ER doctor whose involvement in family matters adds layers of sibling rivalry and emotional support to the Wright household dynamics, occasionally intersecting with the firm's investigations.[4] Tristen J. Winger depicts Lyle Burton, a veteran investigator at the firm characterized by his judgmental expertise and know-it-all demeanor, providing grounded counterbalance to Todd's improvisational style and enhancing team-based case resolutions.[4][19]| Actor | Character | Key Traits and Narrative Role |
|---|---|---|
| Marcia Gay Harden | Margaret Wright | Ambitious, professional attorney central to legal conflicts and family reconciliation efforts.[3] |
| Skylar Astin | Todd Wright | Intuitive, non-conformist investigator driving investigative action and merit-based problem-solving.[9] |
| Madeline Wise | Allison Grant | ER doctor sibling contributing emotional depth and occasional case insights.[4] |
| Tristen J. Winger | Lyle Burton | Experienced, skeptical colleague bolstering firm operations with technical proficiency.[19] |
Recurring and supporting characters
Harry Wright is the patriarch of the Wright family, portrayed by Mark Moses, and serves as Margaret's ex-husband and the father of Todd and Allison. Diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, Harry initially attempts to evade treatment by fleeing to Iceland, prompting Todd to pursue him on a flight, which underscores ongoing family tensions and ethical conflicts arising from his health crisis and past marital dissolution. His return in the season 2 premiere complicates Margaret's post-divorce life and influences the siblings' personal motivations, including Todd's protective instincts toward his mother.[20] Francey Jones, played by Rosa Arredondo, functions as a supporting attorney associated with Margaret's firm, contributing to case investigations and internal operations across multiple episodes. She participates in high-stakes legal maneuvers, such as aiding in defenses involving journalistic murders, and her professional evolution includes accepting a competing job offer in season 2, which forces Margaret to adjust firm dynamics. Francey's role highlights realistic workplace rivalries and loyalty tests within the prosecutorial environment.[21][22] Chuck Grant, portrayed by Clayton James, is Allison Grant's ex-husband and appears in 14 episodes, often entangled in personal scandals that intersect with family and firm matters, such as a kickback scheme at a hockey arena he manages. His recurring presence exacerbates Allison's relational strains, providing consistent familial conflict and ethical dilemmas for the Wrights, including investigations into his financial improprieties.[23][24] Judy Maxon, introduced in season 2 and played by Heather Morris, operates a gift shop in the building housing Todd's workspace and develops as a potential romantic interest for him, characterized by unconventional perspectives on relationships and daily life. Her recurring appearances foster subplot tensions around Todd's personal life amid professional demands, evolving from casual encounters to deeper interpersonal explorations grounded in mutual eccentricities.[25] Other supporting figures, such as Chet Venables (Thomas Cadrot, 12 episodes), contribute to ongoing narrative threads involving client interactions and external alliances that support firm operations without dominating primary arcs.[24]Notable guest stars
Lisa Rinna portrayed Jennifer, a Portland morning show anchor, in the Season 2 premiere episode aired on February 15, 2024, bringing crossover appeal from her reality television background to enhance the episode's investigative dynamics.[26][27] Dean Winters appeared as a guest in the Season 2 episode "Dial Margaret for Murder," which aired on March 14, 2024, contributing his established screen presence from roles in procedural dramas to the procedural elements of the case.[28][29] Jenifer Lewis guest-starred in a Season 2 episode, adding depth through her portrayal of a witness figure in a high-stakes legal scenario, leveraging her extensive career in film and television for narrative variety.[30] Laila Robins featured as Natalie Harris in Season 1 episodes, including Episode 15, providing seasoned dramatic tension as a key figure challenging investigative assumptions.[31]Production
Development and conception
Scott Prendergast created So Help Me Todd drawing directly from his experiences as a private investigator who collaborated with his mother, a criminal defense attorney, on real cases emphasizing evidence-based resolutions over courtroom theatrics.[32] The series' core dynamic mirrors Prendergast's own path, where he transitioned from personal struggles—including $27,000 in credit card debt and injury—to assisting his mother in investigations, prioritizing causal chains of evidence to uncover truths.[16] A pivotal real-life event on October 5, 2005, fueled the conception: Prendergast's mother's husband abruptly vanished after emptying half their home ahead of a planned trip, prompting Prendergast to track him down through persistent sleuthing that led to a confrontation and eventual resolution.[16] This incident, combined with Prendergast's reflections on his evolving relationship with his once-controlling mother amid his own fatherhood, shaped the show's focus on authentic family tensions and procedural realism, avoiding exaggerated legal tropes in favor of grounded, investigative causality.[16][33] CBS greenlit the pilot under the working title Untitled Mother/Son Legal Drama, ordering it to full series on May 12, 2022, alongside other procedurals like Fire Country and East New York, with an eye toward blending weekly case-driven narratives with interpersonal depth rooted in Prendergast's empirical approach to mysteries.[34] The initial vision emphasized procedural integrity—deriving plot resolutions from verifiable investigative steps—over sensationalized drama, reflecting Prendergast's intent to depict legal work as methodical truth-seeking rather than politicized spectacle.[16][32]Casting decisions
Marcia Gay Harden replaced Geena Davis as Margaret Wright after Davis exited the pilot during filming, with the change announced on March 23, 2022, and production briefly paused in Vancouver.[35][36] Davis' departure was not attributed to specific creative or personal reasons in public statements, but Harden's selection brought an established dramatic intensity suited to the role's demands for a commanding, detail-oriented attorney; her Academy Award-winning performance as the resilient Lee Krasner in Pollock (2000) exemplified the authoritative gravitas required for Margaret's no-nonsense courtroom ethos. Skylar Astin was cast opposite her as son Todd Wright shortly before the recast, leveraging his proven comedic versatility from leading roles in Crazy Ex-Girlfriend (2015–2019) and Pitch Perfect (2012), which captured the character's blend of affable charm and institutional skepticism essential for investigative realism in a dramedy context. These choices emphasized performers' demonstrated range in blending humor with procedural tension, prioritizing skill-based authenticity over representational quotas.Filming and technical production
The series was filmed primarily in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, doubling for its Portland, Oregon, setting to leverage the city's diverse urban architecture, including office towers and streetscapes suitable for depicting legal and investigative environments.[37][38] Specific Vancouver sites included the TD Tower at 700 West Georgia Street, which represented the law firm of Margaret Wright, as well as locations like the Vancouver Art Gallery, Save on Meats, and Gastown districts for exterior and procedural scenes.[39][40] Production on the pilot episode occurred between March and April 2022, with principal photography for the first season commencing on July 27, 2022.[38] To achieve a grounded portrayal of investigations, the production emphasized on-location filming in real Vancouver buildings and streets, facilitating authentic depictions of evidence collection and site inspections with minimal reliance on digital effects.[37] Episodes were captured in 16:9 HD aspect ratio, utilizing color cinematography and stereo sound mixing to maintain a procedural realism suited to CBS's broadcast standards.[41] Creator Scott Prendergast initially sought to film in Portland for greater fidelity to the story's inspiration but defaulted to Vancouver due to logistical and financial constraints, including tax incentives unavailable in Oregon.[42] Season 2 production continued this approach, wrapping principal photography in Vancouver by early 2024.[43][44]Episodes
Series episode overview
So Help Me Todd comprises 31 episodes divided into two seasons, with Season 1 consisting of 21 episodes and Season 2 featuring 10 episodes.[45] The series employs a procedural structure, centering on standalone legal investigations resolved within each installment, while incorporating serialized elements focused on the central mother-son relationship and family conflicts that evolve across episodes.[46] Episodes typically run for 43 minutes, allowing for a balance between case resolutions and character development subplots.[41] The narrative progression begins with foundational episodes establishing the protagonists' professional partnership and personal tensions following the pilot on September 29, 2022, gradually building toward heightened interpersonal stakes and relational complexities in subsequent installments, culminating in the Season 2 finale on May 16, 2024.[47] This format maintains episodic closure on primary cases while advancing overarching arcs without resolving them until season endpoints.[48]Season 1 (2022–2023)
The first season of So Help Me Todd premiered on CBS on September 29, 2022, introducing the core premise of Margaret Wright, a principled defense attorney, hiring her son Todd, a skilled but undisciplined former private investigator, as an in-house consultant at her Portland law firm after his professional setbacks.[1] Consisting of 21 episodes, the season aired weekly, establishing the procedural format through cases where Todd's empirical investigative techniques—relying on physical evidence, witness scrutiny, and logical inference—complement Margaret's courtroom advocacy, often overcoming initial resistance from firm partners skeptical of his unorthodox, unlicensed methods.[47][49] Throughout the episodes, structural developments focus on Todd's integration into the firm environment, highlighting realistic tensions such as bureaucratic constraints on investigations, interpersonal clashes with colleagues prioritizing procedural compliance over results, and the gradual building of credibility via successful case outcomes grounded in verifiable data rather than speculation.[50] Family dynamics evolve amid professional pressures, with Margaret's authoritative style clashing against Todd's improvisational approach, fostering incremental trust built on demonstrated efficacy in uncovering causal links in legal disputes.[51] The season arc progresses from Todd's probationary role and early missteps to more collaborative victories, underscoring the value of evidence-based sleuthing in a field prone to confirmation biases and institutional inertia.[6] The finale aired on May 18, 2023, resolving immediate case threads while amplifying unresolved personal conflicts, including strained family loyalties and ethical dilemmas within the firm, rooted in authentic escalations of prior tensions without contrived resolutions.[52]Season 2 (2023–2024)
The second season of So Help Me Todd premiered on CBS on February 15, 2024, with the episode "Iceland Was Horrible," and consisted of 10 episodes airing weekly on Thursdays.[53][47] Delayed from a fall 2023 start due to the 2023 Hollywood strikes, the mid-season launch compressed the schedule into a spring run, limiting the season to fewer episodes than the 22-episode first season.[54] This shorter format heightened narrative urgency in the ongoing family tensions at Crest, Folding & Wright, where private investigator Todd Wright (Skylar Astin) navigated his uneasy partnership with attorney mother Margaret (Marcia Gay Harden), amid escalating professional risks and personal revelations.[55] Episodes centered on case-of-the-week procedurals that intertwined with the firm's financial strains and interpersonal conflicts, including investigations into a live-TV murder, drugging allegations against a tennis coach, and office dynamics strained by pranks and betrayals.[53] These stories amplified stakes for the Wright family, probing dependencies on institutional legal processes through Todd's unorthodox methods clashing with formal courtroom procedures, often exposing evidentiary gaps and ethical dilemmas in prosecution and defense.[56] The season's arc built toward revelations about the firm's origins and hidden agendas, with Todd's investigations uncovering layers of corruption that tested loyalties and forced reevaluations of alliances.[57] The finale, "The Tooth is Out There," aired on May 16, 2024, resolving a pivotal FBI probe into the firm while concluding on a cliffhanger involving the sudden reappearance of partner Merritt Folding, leaving key mysteries about the firm's past and future unresolved.[58][59] This abrupt endpoint, scripted prior to network decisions on renewal, underscored empirical loose ends in the narrative, critiquing reliance on opaque institutional structures without closure.[20]Broadcast and availability
Domestic airing and scheduling
So Help Me Todd premiered on CBS in the United States on September 29, 2022, occupying the Thursday 9:00 p.m. ET time slot following The Amazing Race.[47] The first season consisted of 21 episodes airing weekly through May 18, 2023, with no significant preemptions deviating from routine network adjustments for holidays or special events.[47] For the second season, CBS scheduled the series to return mid-season, premiering on February 15, 2024, in the same Thursday 9:00 p.m. ET slot, reflecting standard post-strike programming delays in the 2023–2024 television cycle.[60] The season concluded on May 16, 2024, maintaining consistent weekly broadcasts without notable interruptions beyond typical sports overruns or news specials.[47] Episodes of both seasons were available for on-demand streaming on Paramount+ immediately following their CBS broadcasts, providing subscribers with next-day access to full episodes and enabling extended viewing windows.[61] This dual broadcast-streaming model aligned with CBS's strategy for procedural dramas, ensuring availability across linear television and digital platforms.[61]International distribution
So Help Me Todd is distributed internationally by Paramount Global Content Distribution.[62] The series has been made available on Paramount+ in select markets, including Canada and Australia.[63][60] In Canada, season 2 episodes aired on the Global Television Network Thursdays at 9:00 p.m. ET/PT beginning February 15, 2024, with streaming options via the Global TV app and StackTV on Amazon Prime Video Channels.[60] In the United Kingdom, UKTV acquired the first season for its Alibi channel, which premiered the series on July 11, 2024, at 9:00 p.m.[64][65] The show's cancellation in May 2024 limited additional syndication opportunities beyond pre-existing agreements.[58]Cancellation
Announcement and official reasons
CBS announced the cancellation of So Help Me Todd on April 19, 2024, shortly after the Season 2 finale aired on May 16, 2024.[66][67] The network attributed the decision to the series being the lowest-rated CBS drama in spring 2024 across both linear viewership and multi-platform metrics, despite averaging 7.7 million viewers in Live+35 ratings for Season 2.[67][68] CBS executives emphasized strategic programming choices, including constrained shelf space for new content amid a crowded lineup of established procedurals.[69] Series creator Scott Prendergast confirmed the end of planned narrative arcs, noting in subsequent interviews that Seasons 3 and beyond would have explored unresolved character developments and family dynamics originating from his personal experiences.[70][66]Viewership metrics influencing decision
"So Help Me Todd" recorded an average of 6.39 million total viewers across its first season (2022–23), based on Nielsen's seven-day multiplatform measurements, placing it among CBS's mid-tier performers but below top procedurals like "NCIS."[71] The second season (2023–24) saw a 3.8% decline to 6.15 million average total viewers, reflecting steady but insufficient growth amid a network-wide emphasis on higher-yield slots.[71] Live-plus-same-day figures further underscored the trend, with Season 1 at 4.61 million viewers and a 0.35 rating in the adults 18–49 demographic, dropping slightly to 4.43 million viewers and a 0.33 rating in Season 2.[72] These metrics fell short of CBS renewal benchmarks, where successful dramas typically sustain 0.5 or higher in the 18–49 demo for ad revenue viability, especially on competitive Thursday nights facing NFL preemptions and streaming alternatives.[73] Initial Season 1 retention in the 18–49 group was solid relative to genre peers, holding above 0.3 amid premiere buzz, but failed to scale to the 0.6+ thresholds observed in retained shows like "Tracker."[74] The second season's delayed February 2024 start, stemming from Hollywood strikes, contributed to fragmented audience buildup rather than erosion from content, as live metrics remained consistent with prior episodes before external scheduling disruptions.[72]| Season | Total Viewers (millions, 7-day) | 18–49 Demo Rating | Live+Same-Day Viewers (millions) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 (2022–23) | 6.39[71] | 0.35[72] | 4.61[72] |
| 2 (2023–24) | 6.15[71] | 0.33[72] | 4.43[72] |