Selena Gomez Unveils Suspicious Minds, the AI Docuseries Redefining Fame — Watch the Exclusive Trailer
ComingSoon debuts the exclusive trailer for Suspicious Minds, a timely docuseries probing the dangers of A.I. from executive producer Selena Gomez, who recently married record producer Benny Blanco. The series premieres October 17, 2025.
AI is not just cranking out deepfakes and homework cheats anymore. Suspicious Minds, a new docuseries backed by executive producer Selena Gomez, is zeroing in on the mental side of all this tech — the stuff that messes with your sense of reality. Yes, that Selena Gomez (Only Murders in the Building). Also yes, she just married record producer Benny Blanco.
Trailer drop and release plan
The first look leans into how AI can warp perception, spike paranoia, and trigger some very real psychological fallout. The series kicks off October 17, 2025, and it is rolling out weekly across video and audio platforms — think YouTube, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Substack, and the usual suspects — for a total of eight episodes.
"A docuseries that investigates the disturbing rise of artificial intelligence as a trigger for delusional thinking."
— from the official synopsis
What the series is actually digging into
This isn’t sci-fi paranoia for fun. The show is looking at real cases where AI — from chatbots to everyday surveillance fears — becomes the spark for complex, sometimes life-altering delusions. The goal is to flag how omnipresent digital triggers are altering our baseline sense of what’s real, and to map how these modern tech-fueled delusions echo and collide with what we thought we knew about the human mind.
The team and who you’ll hear from
- Creator/director: Sean King O'Grady
- Executive producers: Selena Gomez, Sean King O'Grady, Mandy Teefey, Jonathon Glucksman, Molly Borman, Jesse Ford, David Tuohy
- Featured voices: Dr. Joel Gold, Ian Gold, Etienne Brisson, Ryan Turman, Lacey Turman, Allan Brooks
- AI experts: Nick Haber, Nate Sharadin, Dr. Amy Levy
- Production companies: Wondermind and Agoric Media
The bottom line
If you’ve ever felt like the feed is subtly rewiring your brain, this one is very much waving a flag about that. Suspicious Minds is less about flashy AI tricks and more about the quiet, unsettling ways the tech gets inside your head — and how fast that line between reality and algorithm can blur.