DEADLINE: What I found very original in Season 2 was the way you guys used the fallout from Vietnam and the coming of Ronald Reagan as a dual backdrop for your characters. Is that something youll employ in Season 3s 2010 with the proliferation of digital technology and the consequence on our culture?
HAWLEY: Well, one of the things that is very interesting to me is in this modern moment where everyone photographs their meals and posts them online is a very confessional and very much about this desire to express every thought in a public way, literally the word selfie is a term. Thats the opposite, on many levels, of the way that the region as sort of dictated by the movie that Joel and Ethan Coen made is very Lutheran, very pragmatic, very humble. So the idea of the Minnesota Selfie, in terms of our show, is a very interesting idea to explore.
DEADLINE: How?
HAWLEY: Were a franchise that is built around the idea that tragedy inherently comes from an inability to communicate. So how do you in the era of the overshare tell a story about people whose instinct is to do the opposite? I dont know yet how that becomes the crime story in the way that 1979 became very much the times being distilled into a crime story, I havent yet got the dynamic of it. But I think thats interesting and whatever story you tell has to resonate with people in the moment so were always looking for ourselves in the stories that we live and watch and how to live in this world.
DEADLINE: How has the world of Fargo evolved for you from Season 1?
HAWLEY: Well there no rules and Im just making it up as I go along, and like everything you end up trusting your instincts as to whether an homage to the Coens in a particular episode feels like too little or too much or stylistic elements or whether to put a UFO in the show. It all has to make to sense to me, but just like the audience Im always discovering more. Its such a fun world and voice to write in, so every time they let me do another one, I get very excited.