“Girls5eva” Is Even Sillier and Gayer in Season 2

Something weird and wonderful happened to me this week: I was watching season two of Girls5eva, and I started laughing so hard I fell off my couch and rolled around on the floor holding my stomach like I was in Tom & Jerry cartoon for a solid five minutes. I didn’t plan to laugh like that. I didn’t plan to laugh at all. The world is so on fire right now I don’t even know which way to look, and I didn’t think anything could distract me from it — but when the Girls have a collective flashback to a concert where they’re performing their classic holiday hit, “Oops Christmas is on Jesus’ Birthday,” and Renée Elise Goldsberry breaks into a solo of “Oh Holy Night” while crushing a Christmas ornament with her bare hand because her gall bladder is rupturing, I could not get it together. And that was only the beginning of my guffawing. Season two of Peacock’s aging girl group hit is somehow even sillier than the first one, and gayer too. It also pokes fun at getting older like the Golden Girls writers room got back together and turned out eight scripts while high on Gloria’s pain killers.

Gloria sits on a hospital bed with an ice pack on her knee while the other Girls5eva stand around looking worried

While season one focused on getting the girls back together, season two is all about their deal with Property. As in The Property Brothers. Who own a record label. Because they recorded a smash country album. Yes, Girls5eva still exists inside that surreal, fun house version of pop culture reality, like all the best running gags on 30 Rock.

Gloria’s storyline is especially gratifying this season. An ER doctor advises a knee replacement — “You can get a second opinion, but it will signal to me that you don’t trust a female doctor” — which will take 12 weeks of recovery and rehab, something the Girls don’t have if they want to capitalize on their success from The Jingle Ball and run with the momentum Lil Stinker gave them. She opts for the treatment they give “half-dead NFL players” (cortisone and pain killers) and ends up high and doing a Liam Gallagher impression on a promo podcast. She also decides she’s going to win back her wife, Caroline (played by her real-life wife Janine Brito). It’s a long shot; they were the first gay couple in the state of New York to get divorced, after all. But Gloria knows what she wants! Season two also pairs Gloria with Wickie most of all, which was an absolute delight for me. Renée Elise Goldsberry deserves an Emmy for her work on this show and season two made me believe it even more.

GirlsEva gather around the piano and sing

Not all of Girls5eva‘s jokes work. Like everything Tina Fey does these days, there’s a real out-of-touch vibe about things like “cancel culture” and wearing “I dissent” RBG enamel pins as the ultimate sign of Being a Feminist. Luckily every episode is so thick with genuinely hilarious moments, it’s easy to just roll your eyes at the SNL-ness of the ones that don’t land. And, somehow, the songs are even catchier and stupider this season? I mean both of those things in a good way!

The hilarity and absurdity, the smash-cut pacing, the fact that season two is giving every Girl a solo real-life storyline to pair with their group career storyline — it makes the whole season whiz by. I finished it all in almost one sitting, and am now twiddling my thumbs, humming “4 Stars,” and waiting for season three.

Before you go! Autostraddle runs on the reader support of our AF+ Members. If this article meant something to you today — if it informed you or made you smile or feel seen, will you consider joining AF and supporting the people who make this queer media site possible?

Join AF+!
Related:

Heather Hogan

Heather Hogan is an Autostraddle senior editor who lives in New York City with her wife, Stacy, and their cackle of rescued pets. She's a member of the Television Critics Association, GALECA: The Society of LGBTQ Entertainment Critics, and a Rotten Tomatoes Tomatometer critic. You can also find her on Twitter and Instagram.

Heather has written 1719 articles for us.

5 Comments

  1. Oh, a woman calling out another woman for not being a “good enough” woman?? What a shocking “neo-feminist” development!

    Tina Fey has written exactly zero episodes of this show. And in case you want to blame her for running things, she is simply an Executive Producer, a title she shares with 5 other people. Meredith Scardino both created this show and is its showrunner, so how about you throw that woman under the bus instead? Or… maybe blame all of the writers because everybody knows these things are written by a writing TEAM… I see 12 credited writers, only 5 of which are men. What a bunch of horrible “feminists”!

    Also, Tina Fey has a writing partner as well as other people she collaborates with. Rarely will you see her as the lone writer on an episode of any show she’s been a part of. Halfway through 30 Rock I don’t think she has more than 3 writing credits a season. The same goes for Mr Mayor. And I think she had 2 for each season of Kimmy Schmidt.

    So either start hating on all women in Hollywood or just shut up about Fey because you are too ignorant to speak on that subject authoritatively.

    • hmm, so some neutral comments in a critique that note an issue some people are concerned about continues to be present are not ok, but your comment which puts a lot of effort into dragging another woman with the temerity to have a public opinion is ok? by your assertion, either it’s ok to criticize each other or it’s not. you might consider that you dumped alot of negativity here.

      if a property has Tina Fey attached to it, it’s her brand and a, if not the reason why it’s getting made. pretty common logic to see her as a responsible party.

  2. The hardest I’ve laughed this year was at “When I stare at the mirror I see God” and “I’m a real meat and potatoes genitals gal”. Paula Pell is just killing it this season.

Contribute to the conversation...

Yay! You've decided to leave a comment. That's fantastic. Please keep in mind that comments are moderated by the guidelines laid out in our comment policy. Let's have a personal and meaningful conversation and thanks for stopping by!