That said, our real-world history books are a large part of Zero Day‘s canon. References to Ronald Reagan are made, and the 9/11 terrorist attack is an event that is confirmed to have taken place in Zero Day‘s past. Still, questions arise when a photograph of a large crowd dated to Summer 2020 is shown, and not a single mask is in sight. Does this mean that the COVID-19 pandemic did not happen in Zero Day‘s world?
ScreenRant spoke with Zero Day director Lesli Linka Glatter and star Matthew Modine to decipher where the show’s legitimate American history ends and where its fictional branch begins, as well as how Modine’s Speaker of the House feels about De Niro’s Mullen being appointed back to power after the cyberattack.
Zero Day’s Canonization Of American History Explained
“In my mind, all of those things did happen…”
Despite uncertainties surrounding certain pieces of American history, Zero Day director Lesli Linka Glatter sees it all as being canon to her show.
“In my mind, all of those things did happen,” Glatter told ScreenRant‘s Liam Crowley. “This is a paranoid conspiracy thriller. It is within that genre, but we are also creating a realistically real world. It is not a fantasy world, though. We are extending. I read everything written about this before jumping into this, because when you’re dealing with a realistically real world, you want the best advisors, you want the most information.”
Glatter added that where the fiction gets sprinkled in comes in the sheer power of the cyberattack.
Star Matthew Modine, who plays Speaker of the House Richard Dreyer, also chimed in, pointing out how world events like the COVID-19 pandemic have different impacts on different generations.
“I’m so shook by that question because, of course, the impact of COVID and masks for me is so much different than you because you were probably in high school,” Modine added. “That’s a very interesting detail [to notice]. Thank you for that.”
Matthew Modine’s Speaker Wars With Robert De Niro’s Former POTUS
“I Don’t Think That Dreyer Trusts Anyone…”




Another big element that Zero Day mirrors from the real world is the power struggle that occurs within political systems. This is evident with Matthew Modine’s Richard Dreyer, the Speaker of the House who takes issue with Robert De Niro’s George Mullen returning to power to head up the Zero Day Committee.
Modine added that he envisions Dreyer’s personal life as being largely dormant, as all he cares about is seizing power.
“I don’t think he really cares about anybody but himself,” Modine continued. “I was really happy because there was going to be a scene in my apartment or my house, and I wondered would had Richard have had a wife, would he have had a dog. Part of me wanted to be sleeping in my office and just eating takeout all the time because he was just a political animal, and all he wanted was power. We ended up [having a scene at Dreyer’s home], but I am alone in bed.”