Ted Danson as Charles in ‘A Man on the Inside’ on Netflix.
PHOTO BY COLLEEN E. HAYES/NETFLIX
Whenever I’d call my 88-year-old dad to see how he was doing, he’d say, “Well, I’m on the right side of the grass.” He had a real will to live. For many, however, that spark dims as the years go by.
Netflix’s A Man On The Inside tackles the golden years in a way that makes getting older look more fun than daunting. Ted Danson isn’t just starring in the series created by Mike Schur; he’s redefining what reinvention looks like at any age.
Danson sat alongside his real-life wife and on-screen girlfriend, Mary Steenburgen, who joined the cast this season, and Schur, for an interview just before the November 20 premiere of season two.
Mary Steenburgen and Ted Danson in ‘A Man on the Inside’ on Netflix.
PHOTO BY COLLEEN E. HAYES/NETFLIX
He admitted that he still gets “giddy” around Steenburgen after nearly 30 years of marriage. Throughout the interview, the theme of starting over came up repeatedly. I asked if they agreed that this is a story of reinvention at a time when most people think it’s over and that their best years are behind them.
“Definitely, and I think all those thoughts are self-limiting,” Danson answered, addressing Steenburgen, “You like to say, Mary, how we encourage our children that they can be and do anything. But with ourselves, all of a sudden, there’s this voice in our head, ‘Oh no.’ And that’s a shame. Don’t do that. Don’t listen. Keep going.”
A Man On The Inside offers a heartfelt look at aging with humor and kindness, while gently showing viewers that despite life’s many hardships, it’s never too late to begin again.
The eight-episode first season followed Danson’s Charles Nieuwendyk, a grieving retiree-turned-detective who had a choice after his wife passed away: He could sink into the loneliness and isolation that often accompanies those of a certain age, or he could learn to live again and start a new life.
Audiences met Charles, a former college professor who taught engineering, just after he’d lost his wife to Alzheimer’s disease. He had succumbed to his monotonous but safe routine and was lonely and lost.
His daughter Emily (Mary Elizabeth Ellis) encouraged him to find a hobby, which led to an entirely new career opportunity in his late seventies as an investigative assistant for a private detective named Julie (Lilah Richcreek Estrada).
Mary Steenburgen and Ted Danson in ‘A Man on the Inside’ on Netflix.
PHOTO BY COLLEEN E. HAYES/NETFLIX
Season two sees Charles fall in love again with Mona (Steenburgen), a music teacher at the college where he’s working undercover. When asked what falling in love is like in the golden years and how love changes as one gets older, Danson put his hand on Steenburgen and said, “I don’t really know, because I don’t really have anything to compare it to. So I’d say it’s pretty great!”
In a laugh-out-loud moment, Steenburgen corrected her husband about that. “Well, I am your third wife, so you do have something to compare it to.”
It was the kind of shared laughter that only decades of happy marriage can create; a gift those who have lived to a certain age get to experience. “Halfway through, you notice that I bailed,” Danson replied, laughing.
Danson teamed up again with Schur for this series, which Schur based on Maite Alberdi’s Academy Award-nominated documentary The Mole Agent. The two previously worked together on the hit show The Good Place.
Season one followed Charles as he went undercover at Pacific View Retirement Community in San Francisco. He discovered a new talent, made friends, and found a renewed purpose in life.
Immediately, fans gravitated to the show for its heartwarming look at aging. Charles represents so many of our older loved ones and their daily fight against monotony and loneliness.
Ted Danson in ‘A Man on the Inside’ on Netflix.
PHOTO BY COLLEEN E. HAYES/NETFLIX
The highly anticipated second season takes Charles and his crew on a new (equally hilarious and uplifting) adventure and undercover case. Schur moved the story from a retirement community to a college and added new cast members, including Steenburgen and David Strathairn.
Old friends from his days at Pacific View, portrayed by Sally Struthers, Stephen McKinley Henderson, John Getz, and Stephanie Beatriz, return to help Charles with his new case.
Charles must find out who is blackmailing Wheeler College president Jack Berenger (Max Greenfield). He goes undercover as a professor to find out if these threats have anything to do with the iconoclastic billionaire Brad Vinick (Gary Cole), a Wheeler graduate, and his proposed donation to the school.
He finds no shortage of possible suspects, but his attention is quickly diverted by the free-spirited Mona, whose zest for life awakens feelings he thought he’d buried after the passing of his wife.
Danson spoke to the unexpected joy of his character finding love again after such a painful loss. “It’s a hopeful story. It is a powerful story. I’m that way around Mary. I get giddy around my wife, I do. And it was fun to play Charles, who was scared and excited because his dating history is nonexistent. You know, he probably fell in love with one woman and was married, then she passed away. So, it was like being able to play this 78-year-old teenager. It was very exciting.”
He described Charles as a great example of someone who is starting over. “It’s true and it’s real, you know, don’t limit yourself by negative thoughts of, ‘Oh no, it’s too late,’ or whatever. It’s one of the themes of my life, our life, and the show, which is, ‘Stay curious. Stay hopeful. Keep going. Keep your foot on the gas.’”
Mona plays by her own rules. When asked if she’s anything like her character, Steenburgen laughed, explaining that she’s been repeatedly told that they wrote Mona “very specifically” for her.
“So evidently, yes, we are alike, but I think I’m more constant than she is. She has not had a long relationship like Charles did. He was married for 50 years. One gets the feeling Mona has experienced a lot of, you know, adventures and has not had that kind of long, constancy that I’ve had,” Steenburgen explained. “So, there are ways that we’re alike and ways that we’re different. But I think creatively, we’re very similar.”
When asked why he wanted to explore a story about starting over later in life, Schur said now that he’s in his fifties, this was more of an aspirational exercise. “I think I’m writing at some level a message to my future self, by saying there is a finite amount of time we get to walk the earth and that amount of time needs to be honored with doing as much as you can, as often as you can, as well as you can, and with as much love as you can.”
Admitting he has an inclination to sit on the couch and watch basketball, eat nachos, and then go to sleep, Schur added, “I don’t want that to be my life when I’m older. I want to travel with my wife and experience new things. It’s me reminding myself, hopefully, if I’m lucky enough to get to, you know, 80, 90, whatever, to keep your foot on the gas as Ted is fond of saying, and just keep trying to have new experiences.”
Following the premiere of season one in November of 2024, A Man on the Inside debuted atop the English TV List with 6.9 million views. Certified Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes, critics quickly called it perfect television.
Danson and the entire cast give flawless performances that inspire an appreciation of life, not despite its many challenges, but because of them. Charles’ story is about reinvention at any age.
Ultimately, this show is a reminder that aging isn’t something to fear. It’s a privilege not everyone is granted.
Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/danafeldman/2025/11/20/the-netflix-comedy-a-man-on-the-inside-is-a-story-of-reinvention/


