Lonny Flash may have joined the team as the most famous trainee Nazi hunter, but the character was just another member when various missions played out. For Josh Radnor, the critical point lies in his place in the group. Their reaction to his time as a movie star isn't something positive, telling Collider, "... the hunters do not care about that, at all. In fact, it's a ding against him that he's a movie star." Radnor also thinks their opinion comes from Flash's obnoxious and self-absorbed personality, displayed throughout both seasons.
The character's change from portraying action heroes to taking down Nazis enforces the team's impact on his altered persona. Radnor added that Flash being in the company of these unique people helps the transition; while he'll never be on the level of others, it seems like the fictional actor is learning along the way. The man who portrays this '70s genre star thinks this camaraderie means even more to his character as each challenge is added to the story. "He is limited, but he's in the thick of it with the role of a lifetime, and he loves it."