I thought so too, although treating everything as data and functions is really nice [1].
Regarding the BEAM and why Gleam has a separate library for actors: [2]
> "One notable difference between Elixir and Gleam is that Elixir gets to just re-use the OTP code as-is (with some Elixir wrappers on top for convenience). Gleam concluded that the OTP is built expecting dynamic types, and that for best results in Gleam they'd need to re-implement the key primitives. That's why the example shown is an "Actor" not a GenServer - it serves the same purpose, and might even fit in a Supervision tree, but isn't actually a GenServer."
There's a brief snippet mentioning this in the Gleam OTP readme as well: [3]
> "Actors do not yet support all OTP system messages, so some of the OTP debugging APIs may not be fully functional."
Immoral boot-licking human engineers are indistinguishable from LLMs.