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Freakshow
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Forum Icon Join Date: Feb 01, 2008
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 56,961
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Hulu Renews "Shrill" for 3rd Season
"Shrill" Renewed for Season 3 at Hulu
by Denise Petski March 31, 2020 Hulu has renewed praised comedy series "Shrill" for a third season, Deadline has confirmed. The streaming platform has ordered eight episodes, the same as Season 2. https://deadline.com/2020/03/shrill-...lu-1202896697/ |
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Member
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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 124,542
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Aidy Bryant: Shrill's Season 3 premiere was inspired by a doctor recommending that I should get gastric bypass surgery
The final season premiere is based on Bryant's experience when she was examined by a doctor as part of the insurance process for the 2016 film The Big Sick. The doctor told her “people do it all the time" while recommending gastric bypass. “Their assumption is that I have that as a goal, and just by looking at me, they assume that’s the reason I’m there at the doctor’s office,” Bryant tells The Washington Post. “And there’s an assumption that if you’re fat, you’ve given up on yourself. And it’s like, I exercise all the time. I don’t eat doughnuts for breakfast, lunch and dinner.” Bryant has been using Shrill to combat fat stereotypes -- and trying to avoid linking any of her problems with her weight “Where you find the laughs is a choice, and I think she knows how she can get laughs without being in some way hurtful,” says SNL's Lorne Michaels, who produces Shrill. There is also an answer for one of Bryant’s pet peeves: the fat lady sex scene. “I can think of about a million examples, and I won’t name names, where sex between a plus-sized woman and a man is represented by her jumping on him and then he falls over,” she says. “That’s a classic. And there’s something so demeaning and devastating about that to me. It feels like trying to joke it away rather than sincerely finding an actual funny moment. In a normal sex scene between two normal-sized people, you could still find comedy in that. And I think our show does.” Bryant, who had never done sex scenes before, worked with costume designer Amanda Needham to develop specific wardrobe items so she could feel more comfortable in front of the camera. Still, the scenes required Bryant to show herself in a way that’s not typical for plus-sized women on TV. As Shrill comes to an end with Season 3, it doesn't need closure "The last season of a television series usually brings some form of closure," says Jen Chaney. "The main characters find what they’re looking for, or seem to be on the right path, or at the very least are left in a place that feels like it belongs at the very end of a book. The third and final season of Shrill doesn’t come with a sense of closure. That may be partly because, as noted in a recent Washington Post piece, co-creator and star Aidy Bryant originally had hoped Shrill would run for four seasons. But closure also isn’t really in keeping with Shrill’s sensibility." Chaney adds: "Shrill’s subtlety may have led overtaxed binge-watchers to pass it by in favor of shows about more attention-grabbing things like murder or fish-out-of-water soccer coaches or anything affiliated with Marvel or Star Wars. But it’s the sharp attention to life’s everyday calamities and how regular people learn to navigate them that has always made this series such a pleasure to watch. That’s what will be missed, especially as a lot of upcoming TV starts to lean more toward grand spectacle than small but meaningful insight." ALSO:
Shrill seamlessly transitioned to they/them pronouns for E.R. Fightmaster's non-binary character “It’s like the most respectful version of what actually happens,” says Fightmaster, whose character's name was changed from Emily to Em for Season 3. “Which is you change your pronouns and for a year, people give you **** about it, or tell you how hard it is to remember. That didn’t happen on the show, which is a dream.” ALSO: Fightmasters adds to Shrill's pantheon of warm, thoughtful identity representation. |
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Last edited by TMC; 05-22-2021 at 06:01 AM. |
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