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The bold type
The bold type








the bold type
  1. THE BOLD TYPE SERIES
  2. THE BOLD TYPE TV

THE BOLD TYPE SERIES

In the meantime, the Starz series Run the World seems equally ready to pick up Younger and Bold Type fans looking for their next easy binge.Īnd then, of course, there’s HBO Max’s Sex and the City revival, And Just Like That. Harris will have a guest role in the new season, possibly signaling a tonal shift-though it’s just as likely that Harris will spend his screen time wearing couture and slinging bon mots. The series has already announced that provocative playwright Jeremy O. For proof, look no further than the heavily hate-watched Emily in Paris, also created by Darren Star-a surprise Netflix phenom currently shooting its second season.

THE BOLD TYPE TV

As inclusion becomes more of a priority in media and beyond, limited perspectives like these have begun to seem strikingly tone deaf.Įven so, TV doesn’t seem quite ready to let go of career-girl-in-the-big-city shows once Younger and The Bold Type both finish their runs. There’s also the age-old question of diversity (or lack thereof) in these shows: though they’re set in New York City, on both Younger and The Bold Type, most of the characters are white, straight, cisgender women who enjoy societal privilege and financial stability. (This is to say nothing of their depictions of a media industry where junior staffers have ample time to gossip in the fashion closet and book editors spend more time schmoozing potential authors than, you know, reading the manuscripts.) The show’s other stars voiced their solidarity with Dee on social media, and Freeform said in a statement to Vanity Fair that they “applaud Aisha for raising her hand,” promising to constitute “positive change.” (In the recently aired first episode of the show’s final season, Kat’s burgeoning relationship was promptly wrapped up.)Īs earnest as those efforts may have been, the worlds depicted in The Bold Type and Younger-teeming with designer duds, crowded karaoke bars, and boozy corporate parties-have never felt further from our pandemic-inflicted work-from-home reality. The Bold Type’s own reform came after star Aisha Dee called out her show for a lack of diversity behind the scenes, and criticized a storyline in which her character, Kat, develops feelings for a conservative woman. But by episode’s end, they’ll each be tucked back into their exposed-brick apartments, gazing out a window as Betty Who plays. Sure, Liza or Jane might trip on a metaphorical banana peel.

the bold type the bold type

In the worlds of Younger and The Bold Type, making rent is a non-factor deadlines feel more like brunch conversation than an actual threat one can glide from the Upper East Side to Brooklyn within minutes. While Younger and The Bold Type have both made an effort to set their action in recognizable facsimiles of New York City, mostly by name-dropping real publications-Liza and her colleague Kelsey’s “content incubator” is featured on Vulture Jane’s work mishap lands her boss in Page Six-both otherwise took a decidedly laissez-faire approach to depicting reality. As both come to a close, we can’t help but wonder: has the #GirlBoss era of millennial-themed TV finally sung its swan song? Or is its sparkly encore imminent? But just as certain aspects of SATC feel more alarmingly out-of-touch with every passing year, Younger and The Bold Type already seem fairly dated in their depictions of the media and feminist landscapes. the “Dot Com.” Younger centers on Liza, a 40-something woman who poses as a millennial to break into publishing at the fictional Empirical Press-though at this point, everyone left on the show is onto her ruse.īoth series offer the same brand of fizzy-flavored escapism, though obviously neither invented it each is a clear successor to Sex and the City, with Younger even sharing the same creator in Darren Star. The Bold Type stars a trio of friends (Jane, Kat, Sutton) working at Scarlet-a Cosmo-type magazine and its website, a.k.a. This summer, both The Bold Type and Younger-a pair of glossy dramedies about what it means to be a 20-something in the big city-end their respective runs on Freeform and Paramount+.










The bold type