Teen Vogue is excited to debut its Fall Preview of shows and films that we're obsessed with. We're highlighting a diverse range of programming that touches on love, family, friendships, trauma, curiosity, and innovative perspectives about the world around us.**
Listen. There’s a lot of programming that’s about to hit you all at once. Streaming platforms and network television are full of comedies, dramas, sci-fi, and superhero shows that will keep you on the edge of your seat — or make you tap out after one episode. It’s a risky game one has to play to figure out what’s worth those precious hours you could be binging Gossip Girl for the 8th time.
So, to help you out, we did all the work.
We’ve watched a copious amount of TV to narrow down what new shows you should watch this fall/winter. Some will feel akin to Riverdale and have you questioning every character’s intention, while others are just good for a laugh, which, not to get all dark, we need during this perilous time.
We get that TV is an outlet to escape and to disconnect from the world and dive feet-first into the deep end of someone else’s drama. Just consider us your Oodles of Noodles foam floaties — and watch what we gathered below.
Series: The Politician
Platform: Netflix
Premieres: September 27
Ryan Murphy has done it again. The director’s new dark comedy on Netflix, The Politician, tells the story of Payton Hobart (Ben Platt), an overly-ambitious high school senior who’s running for class president. Payton’s true motivation behind winning the election is to be more desirable to Harvard University, the institution that has produced the most U.S. presidents. Surrounded by a devoted circle of friends — including Broadway actor Laura Dreyfuss; Theo Germaine, a nonbinary actor from Chicago; and newcomer Julia Schlaepfer who plays a Hillary Clinton-esque girlfriend — Payton’s desire to be the future president of the United States is the sole driving force behind his intensity. But it becomes clear in episode one, with the untimely death of a fellow student, that this journey to the White House will be treacherous.
Mirroring the real-life unpredictability and external influences of modern-day elections, the show portrays the one-percent in a ruthless, masochistic, and spectacularly conceded way.“The unique thing about our show is, we comically present a progressive reality where social issues like gender fluidity, sexual fluidity, social liberalism exist, and is assumed,” Ben Platt said to journalists after a screening last July. “It’s kind of the subliminal way of saying that we hope our world and our society is headed toward [this].”
Falling in line with Ryan’s previous projects, The Politician gives you musical scores (leaning into Ben’s vocal abilities as a former Dear Evan Hansen star and Tony-award winner) and complex characters — who all have their own storylines that delve into Munchausen by proxy, loneliness, identity crisis, and more. By no means, an easy watch, The Politician is truly a binge-worthy deep-dive into the mess that occurs when privilege and ambition mix with insincerity. — Danielle Kwateng-Clark
Series: Dollface