Another audacious TV venture into mental health

Criticism , Television Feb 20, 2016 No Comments

One of television’s best new shows began airing on Eleven recently, a little over half-a-season behind its US run. Created by Rachel Bloom and Aline Brosh McKenna—the minds behind the Hugo Award-winning ‘Fuck Me, Ray Bradbury’ and The Devil Wears Prada, respectively—Crazy Ex-Girlfriend is bold, ambitious, punchline-a-minute and, perhaps counterintuitively given these other things, one of the most clear-eyed depictions of anxiety and depression on television. In a sitcom landscape characterised by regular bombardments of Modern Family and The Big Bang Theory, and re-runs of Friends and Everybody Loves Raymond, it comes as a breath of fresh air.

Rebecca Bunch (Bloom) is a high-profile New York lawyer on the cusp of a life-changing promotion. However, rather than filling her with a sense of achievement, the prospect fills her with existential dread. Following a chance run-in with an old flame from summer camp, Josh Chan (Vincent Rodriguez III), Rebecca decamps for West Covina, California (“only two hours from the beach—well, four in traffic”), where she happily pours her meds into the trash compactor, knowing that everything’s going to be all right from now on.

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Read the full article at Daily Review.

Matthew Clayfield

Matthew Clayfield is a journalist, critic and screenwriter.

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