HBO’s ‘DTF St. Louis’ isn’t a direct true story but a fictionalized exploration of real midlife crises, infidelity, and murder, crafted by creator Steven Conrad to reveal how desperation can blur ethical lines.
The watercooler drama this season revolves around HBO‘s DTF St. Louis, a limited series that plunges viewers into a lurid 2018 love triangle just outside Missouri’s biggest city. The plot hinges on Jason Bateman‘s weatherman, Clark Forrest, who begins a clandestine affair with Carol Smernitch (Linda Cardellini), the wife of his colleague Floyd (David Harbour). When Floyd turns up dead weeks later, the resulting investigation exposes layers of betrayal, poison, and the quiet despair of middle age.
So, is any of this real? The answer, according to creator Steven Conrad, is both yes and no. The series is not a documentary, but its emotional core is ripped from life. Conrad has explained that the spark came from a 2017 New Yorker article about an upstate New York dentist who had an affair with a friend’s wife—a friend who later died. That real case didn’t involve murder charges, but it planted a seed about the messy, illogical choices people make when their lives feel stagnant.
Conrad expanded that seed by drawing from his own midlife observations. As he revealed in an exclusive interview with People, “I’m in my middle age, and most of my friends are too, and, somehow or another, it’s another phase of life where people make terrible decisions… The same misguided, desperate need to fit in or to find someone to feel safe, it comes back around in middle age, and it can lead to bad decision-making.” This personal lens transforms DTF St. Louis from a mere crime story into a broader commentary on aging, financial stress, and the erosion of self.
The fictional St. Louis setting allows Conrad to universalize the themes. “My last two shows existed in worlds where you would expect to find them,” he told Town & Country. “I wanted to move toward a landscape where you might not expect to find what you do, but nevertheless, there it is.” The series thus becomes a patchwork: the affair and poisoning plotlines are dramatic inventions, but the underlying emotions—loneliness, the search for connection, the feeling that one’s life is spiraling—are starkly authentic. Conrad emphasizes, “The reason that article was ever even interesting to me was because I already wanted to write about this kind of middle-aged crisis… Those big turns, they aren’t true in terms of any one piece that I was ever exposed to, but they’re true in people’s lives.”
Beyond the central murder plot, the show’s research into the “DTF” website (a fictionalized version of dating apps) uncovered unsettling truths about human kinks. Conrad recalled that whenever the writers asked, “Is this a real kink?” the answer was invariably yes. “We couldn’t come up with one that didn’t already exist—no matter what,” he said. “I would say, ‘No one’s into this, no way’ and one of my employees would say, ‘Yeah, it exists, and there’s a whole Reddit group for them.'” This commitment to exploring the vast, often hidden spectrum of adult desire adds a layer of societal critique, suggesting that the internet merely amplifies inclinations that have always existed.
What makes DTF St. Louis resonate is its unflinching look at ordinary despair. As Conrad puts it, “One of the things we are clear about on the show is that no one’s normal. It just looks that way from across the street.” This philosophy invites viewers to see themselves in characters who might otherwise be dismissed as villains or fools. The show argues that the capacity for poor judgment, for betrayal, for violence exists in many of us under the right—or wrong—circumstances. It’s less about solving a whodunit and more about asking: what would you do if your life felt like it was collapsing?
The critical and audience response has highlighted how the series taps into a cultural anxiety about midlife dissatisfaction. Unlike straightforward true crime, DTF St. Louis uses its fictional framework to ask bigger questions about accountability, empathy, and the masks we wear. By grounding extravagant plot turns in relatable emotional truths, Conrad and his team have created a show that feels both sensational and somberly real. It’s a reminder that the most compelling stories often lie in the gap between fact and feeling—where DTF St. Louis resides, haunting and unforgettable.
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