
Imagine this: a teen show... for teens. That's what Netflix's second season of Heartbreak High unapologetically is.
I'm not saying the new season can't be enjoyed by anyone outside of Gen Z. As a millennial, I enjoyed every minute of it — but at the same time, I can recognise that this season is not for me.
And this means not everyone... gets it.
Despite the show rocketing to the number one spot on Australia's Netflix and exploding on TikTok, the new season has received some not-so-good reviews.
In one case, reviewer Luke Buckmaster gave a measly two stars in his review for The Guardian Australia. Buckmaster wrote that the "the tone is hyper-real, borderline cartoonish" and "the show's mocking undertones don't allow for genuine social debate".
This seems to miss the point of why the season works: it is quite ridiculous and that's okay. It's over the top. The series is constructed for a Gen Z audience through a thread of TikTok-worthy moments and fan-cam edits — but this shouldn't mean its content, themes and storylines are discounted.
A mocking tone and the ability to host important social debates are not mutually exclusive. In fact, it's the basis of most political satire and is potentially an enticing way to educate and inform a generation of disillusioned young people.
In the same review, the writer admits he hasn't watched the entire season — a rather glaring problem. He lists his frustration with "the first five episodes (what I've watched so far)", and for anyone who has seen the full eight, they would know that the season is a slow burn but with a huge payoff at the end.