A 15-year-old girl and her trials and tribulations of being a teenager and dealing with friends, guys, parents, and school.A 15-year-old girl and her trials and tribulations of being a teenager and dealing with friends, guys, parents, and school.A 15-year-old girl and her trials and tribulations of being a teenager and dealing with friends, guys, parents, and school.
- Nominated for 4 Primetime Emmys
- 6 wins & 12 nominations total
Featured reviews
This is the definition of a cult hit and the prime example of the folly of TV execs. Although it was low rated (for its times), its young audience would have today's TV execs drooling. For its times and on network TV, it was a realistic teen drama. Angela with her inner monologues lay bare her emotional turmoil. The show isn't flashy. It's different from its contemporary network teen fare. It was angst teen drama ahead of its time. It didn't hurt to have a great Claire Danes to lead it with her Jared Leto crush. Even then, her star power was undeniable.
This will comfort and encourage teenagers. It's so real, and anyone who's watched more than a couple episodes will agree! Angela, Ricki, and Rayanne are the typical teens. Even though it was made in 1994, you'll find that Angela's mind works like it's in this time period. You'll laugh, you'll cry (I should know)and you'll feel much better about life in general. Watch it, and you'll be transfixed on the show. I rate it four stars!
There are only nineteen episodes of this most compelling of programs, then it is done. As the nineteenth episode ends, you are left with a painful feeling deep inside. You have come to care for these people and now they are gone. The next day, the rerun cycle will begin again and you will watch, entranced, as Angela and Rayanne and Rickie and Jordan and Brian and Sharon and Patty and Graham and Danielle travel through the same nineteen hours again, as you sit back, longing for that nineteenth episode to be followed by episode twenty. But it never comes. It's cruel.
"My So-Called Life" is a good argument to never watch television again. And a great argument to say you're glad you did. It's not simply a show about angst-ridden mid-ninetees teens. It's much more.
You owe it to yourself to watch these nineteen episodes, to get a glimpse at what a five-star television series looks like...and how wrong it is when a television network takes it away.
Kudos to all involved.
This series is required viewing.
this show is AMAZING. i've seen every episode twice and i still watch it every night on the N. if you doubt how fully amazing this show is, just watch the end of the episode "self esteem" where jordan realizes he loves angela because she's real and has flaws...then walks across the hall and asks in front of everyone if they can "go somewhere". as they're walking away, he takes her hand. MAGIC!
One of the most distinctive threads that runs through the series is the way both children and adults deceive themselves about what they really want and need out of life. The drama and humor of the series often revolves around the struggle of the different characters to break through to their genuine selves.
Among many fine story lines, one standout is that of Rickie Vasquez, probably the first depiction of a gay teen on series television, and if not the first, certainly the most unapologetic. I could go on way too long about all the other moving, surprising, heartbreaking and ironic story lines, about the way characters are always surprising us with unexpected depths or insights or abilities, about the use of music, about the incredibly honest and unexploitative depiction of teenage sexuality, and about the performances, which are uniformly superb, even in the smallest roles. Best of all the show is so rich and crafted so brilliantly that it rewards repeated viewing.
Did you know
- TriviaRickie Vasquez was the first openly gay teenager to appear on American network television.
- Quotes
Brian: Dear Angela, I know in the past I've caused you pain and I'm sorry. And I'll always be sorry 'till the day I die. And I hate this pen I'm holding because I should be holding you. I hate this paper under my hand because it isn't you. I even hate this letter because it's not the whole truth. Because the whole truth is so much more than a letter can even say. If you want to hate me, go ahead. If you want to burn this letter, do it. You could burn the whole world down; you could tell me to go to hell. I'd go, if you wanted me to. And I'd send you a letter from there. Sincerely, Jordan Catalano
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 52nd Annual Golden Globe Awards (1995)
- SoundtracksMake It Home
Written by Juliana Hatfield
Performed by Juliana Hatfield
Courtesy of Mammoth Records/Atlantic Records
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