In its Season 1 finale, Hulu's Shrilldeclared war.
Annie Easton, played by Aidy Bryant, spent the last scene of her show’s freshman season hurling a potted plant through the window of a truck. With the asshole owner of said truck chasing her down the street, Annie fled triumphant, smiling ear-to-ear as the season’s final words, “fat bitch,” hung in the air.
After just six short episodes, Shrill had crescendoed to its prescient point: The way society treats women, particularly fat women, sucks. It’s hateful discrimination, and if you can’t see that? Have a potted plant. Critics applaudedthe message. Rumors of an Emmy nominationfor Bryant swirled. Shrill was a success.
Annie’s douchey boyfriend Ryan is alive, well, and taking up screen time.
In Season 2, the series hits its sophomore slump hard— trading that bold feminist stance for eight episodes of very cute, very bland whatever.
The plucky comedy falls into a number of traps, each making our beloved Annie less and less compelling. It’s a disappointing turn that doesn’t make the show unsalvageable, but puts its future in jeopardy.
For starters, Shrill Season 2 ventures into very little (if any) untrod territory. Episodes like the still-perfect and very original “Pool” are a no-show, replaced by tales of job interviews gone wrong and date nights turned sour. Instead of the antics we expected from the unabashed author of “Hello, I’m Fat,” Annie explores plotlines done and redone by countless other shows about privileged, white, millennial women who write on the internet.
Lots of these revolve around[insert long, audible sigh]a guy. Annie’s douchey boyfriend Ryan, who I still can’t believe she didn’t dump in Season 1, is alive, well, and taking up screen time.
To be clear, I adore actor Luka Jones and his chemistry with Bryant is delightful. But this fictitious man baby has no right to the many, many scenes he is gifted in Season 2. Time and time again, we watch him fail to live up to the requirements of adult man let alone significant other. Annie gets mad. They fight. He’s sorry. She forgives him.
Suffice to say, Annie’s journey becomes far less about her, and way more about “them.”
Annie’s journey becomes far less about her, and way more about “them.”
As a consequence, the more interesting aspects of Shrill get sidelined — again. As in Season 1, Annie’s roommate Fran, played by the iridescent Lolly Adefope, doesn’t get enough to do. It’s better than when she was fulfilling the “black best friend” stereotype, but Fran’s emotional arcs remain under baked and Adefope’s talent underutilized. (That said, she does perform a karaoke version of “Shallow” in episode 4 that 100% made me cry.)
John Cameron Mitchell’s snide Gabe, Patti Harrison’s bonkers Ruthie, and Ian Owen’s earnest Amadi are similarly confined. We see good moments from all of them, but they’re limited to whatever time isn’t reserved for Annie’s monotonous backsliding.
There isn’t much to be done when the explosive scenes we love Annie for never come.
Bryant does her best to ring feeling out of the will-they-should-they plotline, but there isn’t much to be done when the explosive scenes we love Annie for never come. Her complicated perspectives on success, talent, relationships, and worth aren’t articulated nearly as well this time around — and as a result, no potted plant moments come.
What’s worse, the essential representation of body diversity on screen is surprisingly limited this season and the conversations around fatphobia are even fewer. Creator Lindy West and Bryant have rightfully made it clearShrill isn’t about weight, but to imply that that conversation is over is foolish.
SEE ALSO: 'Chilling Adventures of Sabrina' Part 3 wins by going full 'Riverdale'If Shrill aims to continue dissecting the relationship between modern women and self-actualization, then it will need to take a hard look at its protagonist and what she wants to say about those things. Despite maintaining its snappy dialogue, airy feel, and poppy aesthetic, Shrill doesn’t stay true to its star or its audience — instead bringing only white noise to a screaming match.
ShrillSeason 2 is now streaming on Hulu.
Topics Hulu
The Soviet Children Who Survived World War II by Svetlana AlexievichPart Love Letter, Part Cookbook by The Paris ReviewStaff Picks: Ballet, Bob Dylan, and Black Smudges by The Paris ReviewSouvenir by Lucy SanteTranslation as an Arithmetic of Loss by Ingrid Rojas ContrerasThree Letters from Switzerland by Zelda FitzgeraldOn Breakups by Hanif AbdurraqibThe Central Park Squirrel Census by Jamie AllenMistranslated Book Titles Contest by The Paris ReviewJames Alan McPherson’s Powerful, Strangely Frightening Stories by Edward P. JonesAlways the Model, Never the Artist by Madison MainwaringThe Soviet Children Who Survived World War II by Svetlana AlexievichPoetry Rx: Remember the Sky That You Were Born Under by Kaveh AkbarParticipating in the American Theater of Trauma by Patrick NathanA Graphic Novel before the Term Existed by James SturmAlways the Model, Never the Artist by Madison MainwaringOn Seeing, Waking, and Being Woke by Jess RowWhither The Golden Penetrators? by Dan PiepenbringThe Silhouette Artist by Amy Jo BurnsDeath Valley by Brandon Shimoda 'We are united in grief': Solemn Obama addresses Orlando massacre 'Aquaman' splashes into Comic Major key alert: DJ Khaled and fiancé Nicole are expecting their first baby Why you should watch 'Harlots' on Hulu Firefox finally gets an option to mute sites with autoplay sound This ceramic can pot pipe will give you stoner nostalgia Facebook confirms it's building an internet satellite Georgia lawmaker takes heat for his racist antics on 'Who Is America?' U.S. officials say Russian hackers infiltrated electric utilities Little girl's official adoption hearing gets a magical Disney twist Simon Pegg on how sci 'Halloween' panel's Comic 'Wonder Woman 1984' Comic Dunkin' Donuts is releasing a coffee Twitter's best tweets during this past week A lot of Uber, Lyft rides get posted online without anyone noticing Uber drivers in New York State can get unemployment insurance 7 summertime shoe styles you loved as a little kid Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana, and other 'Guardians' support James Gunn 20 things you need to survive life in a college dorm
1.9308s , 10131.8046875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Revenge Ride Online】,Wisdom Convergence Information Network