Picture Credit: Netflix
By the time the smoke clears in Virgin River Season 7, Dan Brady has solidified his position as the show’s most complex psychological study. Once the town’s pariah, a man defined by a criminal shadow and a hair-trigger ego, Brady has spent the last several episodes clawing toward a legitimate life. Yet, in the world of Virgin River, stability is often a fragile illusion.
What’s on Netflix sat down with Benjamin Hollingsworth to discuss the heavy lifting behind Brady’s “2.0” transformation, the agonizing “just friends” dynamic with Brie, and why that final, devastating motorcycle crash feels like a cosmic joke for a character who finally found his footing.
This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity and length.
Early in the season, Brady makes a massive moral call. He lets Lark walk away with the money connected to Calvin. Do you see that as integrity finally winning out over his ego?

There are a lot of layers there. He’s angry at Lark for leaving and taking the money, sure. But he also recognizes the mirror image. Lark is essentially in the same spot Brady was in when Brie chose Mike; she feels like a consolation prize.
The bigger theme, though, is accountability. What he built with Lark and Hazel was real to him. Giving her that money wasn’t a payoff for Lark; it was a safety net for Hazel. He wanted to make sure that kid had a shot at a life better than the one he or Lark ever had. It’s Brady taking responsibility for a family, even if that family is fracturing.
Brady started the series as the man no one trusted. Now, he’s launching a business, helping with Charmaine’s legal battle, and fighting wildfires. What part of that growth feels the hardest-won?
The business. Definitely the business. Brady has spent his entire life scraping by, working for other people, usually in the shadows. Now, he’s trying to raise capital legitimately to build something he actually owns. It’s a total shift in his DNA.
We also see his friendship with Kaia deepen this season. What does she represent for him in the larger Virgin River social circle?
Kaia is a kindred spirit because she’s an outsider too. She didn’t grow up in that core “townie” group. This version of Brady, “Brady 2.0”, is also a newcomer in a way. Their friendship is vital because there’s zero romantic tension. It’s a clean, genuine connection that actually highlights why his relationship with Brie is so painful; it proves he can be a friend, just not to the woman he loves.
The wildfire sequence feels like the emotional climax for Brady. How did that near-death experience reframe his perspective?
Mortality has a way of stripping away the lies you tell yourself. Trapped under that fire blanket, Brady realizes Brie is the only thing that matters.
In the original script, there were supposed to be actual flashes of their past moments together during that scene. Even though they cut the visual montage, that’s exactly what I was playing internally. It was the moment he realized he couldn’t play the “friend” game anymore. It was too much of a lie.
That leads to the scene where he finally walks away from her. It felt less like desperation and more like a hard-won act of self-respect. Do you agree?
Precisely. I actually thought of the old show Lassie during that scene. There’s a classic trope where a boy has to yell at his dog to “Go on, get!” to save it, even though it breaks his heart. That’s Brady. He has to be harsh. He has to push her away because staying close is a slow-motion car crash for both of them.
When Brady tells Brie she was his “last thought” in the fire, it’s a rare moment of total vulnerability. How do you keep those scenes grounded without losing his edge?
Brady is a traditionally masculine guy, but he’s highly emotional. My trick is to find those private “mask-drop” moments. I’ll play a second where the audience sees the cracks in his armor, but the other character doesn’t. Then he pulls the mask back up and keeps moving. It’s that balance, the grit and the soft tissue underneath, that makes him interesting to play.
At the end of the season, the power dynamic flips. Brie is the one who chooses him. How important was that for his arc?
It was everything. When she approaches him at the end, he’s guarded. He’s thinking, “Don’t do this to me again. I’m not a yo-yo.” He needs to hear the words clearly. He needs her to claim him. Once she does, he can finally drop the defensive posture and believe it’s real.
The season ends with Brady finally happy, and then the motorcycle crash happens. What were you leaning into during that final ride?
It was a mix of pure joy and the underlying fragility of his life. Brady is the guy who finally gets everything he ever wanted: the girl, the shop, the peace, and then the universe pulls the rug out.
Filming it was a technical beast. I was on a stunt rig being towed by a truck with cameras inches from my face while I had to hit those high emotional notes. It’s a brutal cliffhanger because it feels so unfair.
Do you see the crash as his past catching up with him, or just a streak of terrible luck?
Honestly? It’s just bad luck. Brady is one of those people who just isn’t allowed to have nice things for long. It’s a reminder that even when you change, life doesn’t stop throwing punches.
Without giving anything away, does Season 8 keep him on the path of redemption, or does this accident reset his progress?
There are massive obstacles ahead. I can’t confirm the specifics, but a time jump is a real possibility in the narrative. Unfortunately for the fans, things are not going to get easier for Brady anytime soon.
Is there one experience you’d personally like to see Brady have before the series concludes?
I want to see him be a father. Given how he grew up, without that solid foundation, watching him try to be a role model for a child would be fascinating. It would be the ultimate test of his redemption.
Beyond the River: Hollingsworth’s Next Moves
Outside of the chaos in Virgin River, Hollingsworth is expanding his creative footprint. He recently starred in the holiday feature The Christmas Ring and is joining Zibby Allen for The Hollywood Rush, a high-stakes charity theater event raising funds for FosterMore.
The actor is also moving into the producer’s chair, developing several original scripts. “I’ve been writing a lot lately,” Hollingsworth notes. “I’m working on a few projects. I hope to get into production soon.”
Virgin River season 7 is now streaming on Netflix globally.














