Harrington becomes the show’s moral compass not through action but through observation. She witnesses a RegenTek hitman murder a terminally ill child to prevent the mushroom from being tested. In that moment, the state’s claim to a monopoly on legitimate violence collapses. The paper argues that Harrington’s eventual defection from the DEA represents the series’ hope for institutional reformation: the recognition that when the law protects murder (of the sick) and punishes healing, the law has become the disease.
This psychological complexity shields the character from sentimentality. The series asks a brutal question: Is the healer morally superior to the system if the healer’s methods are unsystematic and unaccountable? Marshall’s refusal to document his cures or explain his process leads to chaos. He heals a dictator, allowing the dictator to return to power and commit further atrocities. The "common side effect" of unconditional healing is the perpetuation of evil. The show thus rejects the simplistic "drug dealer vs. doctor" binary, suggesting that individual acts of healing, without structural change, are merely triage. Common Side Effects
The "common side effect" of living in a mycelial world is the loss of certainty. We do not know who will be healed or when. We do not know if the mushroom is good. The series’ final shot is of a blue fungus sprouting from a crack in a RegenTek parking lot, next to a puddle of oil. It is beautiful, toxic, and alive. Harrington becomes the show’s moral compass not through
The paper identifies Marshall as an involuntary ascetic . He rejects money, fame, and comfort not out of virtue but out of trauma. Flashbacks reveal that his father died of a treatable illness due to an insurance denial, a wound that drives Marshall to view the medical system as a murder apparatus. Consequently, his use of the mushroom is compulsive. When he heals a dying gang member or a poisoned rat, he is not acting altruistically but therapeutically for himself—each healing is a balm against his original failure. The paper argues that Harrington’s eventual defection from
Common Side Effects borrows heavily from real-world mycology (the work of Paul Stamets is an evident influence). The mushroom is not a singular miracle but a fruiting body of a vast, underground mycelial network. This network serves as the show’s primary metaphor for resistance.
In an era saturated with dystopian narratives, Common Side Effects (Adult Swim, 2025) distinguishes itself through its quiet, fungal apocalypse. Created by Steve Hely and produced by Joe Bennett (co-creator of Scavengers Reign ), the series trades nuclear wastelands for the mycelial networks beneath a hyper-capitalist, surveillance-saturated present. The central McGuffin—a blue, bioluminescent mushroom capable of curing any ailment, from a broken leg to end-stage brain cancer—is not merely a plot device but a philosophical pressure test.