He then reveals that he knows she has already found him—because for the first time, when she talks about her new life, her eyes are calm and certain. Maggie smiles, realizing he is right.
The final scene: In Los Angeles, Maggie sits in a park, watching her daughter play. A kind, gentle man approaches—her new partner. He is not flashy or dramatic. Maggie glances at the camera (as if toward Guzmin), then looks back at the man and smiles. She has found her “for you.” Maggie Mitchell (Cristin Milioti): Milioti brings a restless, neurotic, yet deeply warm energy to Maggie. She is intelligent but romantically naive, searching for validation through relationships. Her arc is not about finding a man—it is about learning to trust herself. Guzmin acts as her external conscience until she internalizes his wisdom. Her transformation from a woman who needs a doorman to read men for her to a woman who can recognize love in her own eyes is the episode’s true love story.
Maggie discovers she is pregnant from that encounter. When she tells Ted, he dismisses her coldly: “That’s not something I’m looking for.” She decides to keep the baby. Her deepest fear is not motherhood, but facing Guzmin—the man who warned her about every mistake. She expects shame. Instead, Guzmin asks only, “The father, is he a good man?” When Maggie admits, “No,” Guzmin nods and says, “Then he would not have made a good father. So, the baby is lucky.” He then places his hand on her belly, smiles for the first time, and declares, “Maggie, this baby… this baby is for you.” Modern Love 1x1
Maggie dates a series of unsuitable men. Each time she proudly introduces a new boyfriend to Guzmin, he gives a subtle, dismissive shake of his head. He sees through superficial charm, arrogance, or insincerity instantly. Maggie initially finds this annoying but secretly respects his uncanny accuracy. Eventually, she has a one-night stand with a former high school classmate, Ted (Brandon Victor Dixon) , a handsome, smooth-talking banker. Guzmin’s verdict: “Maggie… him, you don’t even bring home.”
The episode leaps forward. Maggie’s daughter is now a toddler. Maggie has received a job offer at a university in Los Angeles—a genuine career opportunity. She is terrified to tell Guzmin, fearing his disappointment. When she finally does, he is quiet, then simply says, “Then you must go.” On moving day, he helps load the truck. As Maggie tearfully thanks him, Guzmin reveals something profound: he never actually judged the men based on them—he judged them based on her. He explains: “I did not look at the men. I looked at your eyes. The man you will end up with? I will not need to look at him. I will look at you. And I will know.” He then reveals that he knows she has
The episode follows a clear, emotionally resonant three-act structure:
The debut episode of Amazon Prime’s Modern Love (2019) is based on the real-life essay by Julie Margaret Hogben, published in The New York Times ’ popular column of the same name. Directed by John Carney ( Once , Sing Street ), the episode sets the tonal template for the entire anthology: a bittersweet, humanistic, and quietly profound exploration of love in its many forms—not just romantic, but familial, platonic, and self-directed. The central relationship is an unlikely, deeply moving bond between a young single woman and the gruff, perceptive doorman of her apartment building. Plot Summary Maggie Mitchell (Cristin Milioti), a doctoral student in geology, lives alone in a New York City apartment. The gatekeeper to her life is Guzmin (Laurentiu Possa), the building’s elderly, imposing doorman. Guzmin is a former Romanian military officer with a stoic, eagle-eyed demeanor. He silently judges every man Maggie brings upstairs, always offering the same verdict after each fleeting romance: “Maggie, not for you.” A kind, gentle man approaches—her new partner
From that moment, Guzmin becomes her rock. He accompanies her to Lamaze classes (where he terrifies the instructor with military breathing commands), carries her groceries, and offers unwavering, non-judgmental support.