I read Isaac Asimov's first Foundation book on holiday and so decided to check out the TV series. As it turns out, they're completely different beasts with the series borrowing names and a few similar concepts while adopting a very mainstream genre tone (as opposed to Asimov's adult, sombre hard sci-fi) and largely telling its own stories with its own characters. It's not bad, helped in large part thanks to a fantastic central performance from Lee Pace, but its lifts from Asimov feel purely cynical as there's nothing substantial from his work in there. It's a lot more enjoyable than Star Trek Discovery - characters don't burst into tears every five minutes, for one, and the narrative doesn't repeatedly batter you over the head with how nonsensical it is, even if there is a lot of filler - but shares two major annoyances with that show, notably characters talking in obnoxiously contemporary vernacular (this doesn't happen in Lee Pace's storyline, where characters speak in heightened regal-ese which is silly but not immersion-breaking like everyone jabbering in 21st century slang, probably why that storyline is the most engaging) and rote action sequences existing solely for their own sake and rarely choreographed or directed interestingly enough to cover for their lack of contribution to the story. As long as any Asimov readers can completely divorce themselves from the books (first, at least - I haven't read the others yet), it's a passable time-filler which doesn't have a clear enough direction of travel for its series-long narrative, or anything by the way of interesting characterisation, to be as epic and engrossing as it thinks it is. On the other hand, if you just want something colourful with an interesting starting premise, and one fantastic performance, to zone in and out of while having dinner or something, it'll do the job.