“The Idol” has only aired two episodes, but week to week has faced intense criticism and controversy, some of which occurred before the series even premiered.
Lily-Rose Depp plays a rising pop star, struggling with a comeback who meets a self-help guru and cult leader (played by Abel “The Weeknd” Tesfaye), who begins to exert undue influence on her as she’s pulled into the underbelly of the music industry.
The show has received a lot of backlash for its graphic and extensive sexual and nude scenes, most of which feature Depp.
Hank Azaria, who plays Haim, the manager of Depp’s character, addressed some of the criticism as well as the alleged issues reported in an article by Rolling Stone in a new interview on “Today.”
Sunday night’s episode of the HBO show drew fresh comments from viewers, which included scenes of Depp engaging in self-harm, and later masturbating, Tesfaye using a shock collar on a person, and Depp and Tesfaye engaging in graphic sex.
Hank Azaria stars in “The Idol” alongside Lily Rose Depp. (PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA/AFP via Getty Images)
“I hated this so much I started skipping,” wrote one person Twitter.
“I really need Abel to get dragged for this nasty scene in The Idol,” said another.
Before the show’s premiere, Rolling Stone spoke with 13 anonymous cast and crew members, some of whom claimed the show had been plagued by delays, budget issues and last-minute rewrites, and went “wildly, disgustingly off the rails.” It was also alleged the show’s content reeked of being a “rape fantasy” and a “degrading love story with a hollow message.”
The article also noted that director Amy Seimetz, of “The Girlfriend Experience,” was originally hired to helm the drama before leaving after shooting 80% of the six-episode limited series, and Levinson was brought in to direct, according to Rolling Stone. The article claimed Tesfaye felt Seimetz was leaning too much into the “female perspective” of the story.
Lily-Rose Depp, center, with Rachel Sennott, and Troye Sivan, on set of “The Idol.” Depp’s character is a pop star struggling with her career and mental health who falls in with a self-help guru and cult leader. (Eddy Chen/HBO)
Abel “The Weeknd” Tesfaye plays a self-help guru and cult leader alongside Lily Rose Depp in the HBO show. (Getty Images)
During the segment on “Today,” host Craig Melvin noted NBC had not independently verified the report. When he added that they’d reached out to Levinson for comment, but was told his team won’t be giving any, Azaria quipped, “Oh so they left me here to do it!”
“That would be like walking onto, like, a Robert Altman set where they’re improvising, or a Mike Leigh set, or a Larry David set, or a Judd Apatow set, where brilliant folks are being encouraged to improvise and change and tweak under the caring eye of a director, and audibles are being called based on such and saying, ‘Oh well the actors just don’t know their lines, this is chaos,’” he continued, referencing several directors and creators who are known for allowing their actors to improvise.
Hank Azaria defended the working conditions on “The Idol,” telling “Today” that the claims in the Rolling Stone article were “ridiculous.” (Roy Rochlin )
“I understand how certain people could feel that way, I felt that way the first couple of days, I’m like, ‘Wait what are we doing, what’s happening?’ Because a lot of changes were made sometimes based on the light, the beauty of the light we were shooting in, or how the script was changing, or how a character’s story was evolving, but it was incredibly creative and wonderful, really. And I’ve been on sets where it was the opposite.”
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Lily-Rose Depp told Fox News Digital in a statement earlier this year she felt “supported” by director Sam Levinson. (Eddy Chen/HBO)
Depp has also spoken out about her work with Levinson, saying she felt “supported.”
The 23-year-old told Fox News Digital in a statement earlier this year, “Never have I felt more supported or respected in a creative space, my input and opinions more valued. Working with Sam is a true collaboration in every way – it matters to him, more than anything, not only what his actors think about the work, but how we feel performing it. He hires people whose work he esteems and has always created an environment in which I felt seen, heard, and appreciated.”
Fox News Digital’s Brie Stimson contributed to this report

