Despite some reservations by its original cast members, a reboot of the beloved teen drama Gossip Girl is currently in development. The new series promises to look very different from the Upper East Side that you knew and loved.
Seven years after its season finale, Gossip Girl is still wildly popular with fans and is considered a millennial pop-culture staple. The CW series followed a group of privileged teenagers living in Manhattan, their lives fraught with an incredible (and sometimes improbable) mix of sex, drama, and unbelievable wealth. Looking back, however, the series was problematic in more ways than we recognized at the time — specifically when it comes to representation.
The series took place, for the most part, in modern-day New York City, one of the most diverse cities in the country. A walk through the concrete streets, anywhere from the Bronx to Brooklyn, will lead you to people from every walk of life and every corner of the world. Yet, in Gossip Girl, most of the characters are white and straight. As a fan of the series and a current resident of New York City, I think it’s fair to say that casting a majority white, majority heterosexual ensemble of actors in this melting pot of a city is not only offensive, it’s inaccurate.
In addition to highlighting the stories of more marginalized groups, the reboot will also explore the intrinsic role of social media in the lives of its characters. In the early 2000s, we were busy clicking away at our sidekicks and Blackberry phones, utilizing our new unlimited text messages and calling each other after 9 p.m. Today, teenagers are connected through the world of social media, and the minds behind Gossip Girl fully intend to lean into that aspect of Generation Z.HBO’s Zendaya-led Euphoria. Sans the explicit sex scenes and drug usage, of course.
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