Daily Democrat (Woodland)

HBO’s ‘Insecure’ is growing up, cracking wise

- By Karla Peterson

Anyone remember drinks with friends? Beach parties with friends? Nachos with friends? Nachos with anyone, ever?

Not me. And as its fifth and final season gets under way, HBO’s “Insecure” doesn’t remember, either.

It’s not because creator-star Issa Rae and her group of TV friends, lovers and former lovers are hamstrung by the rules and worries of pandemic life. They don’t have to remember the big and small thrills of living their young, highly sociable Los Angeles lives because they are too busy living them right now.

And it is no small thing to say that at least we get to watch.

Since its debut in 2016, “Insecure” has been very good at many things. Like Rae’s breakthrou­gh web series, “The Misadventu­res of Awkward Black Girl,” this comedy about Issa Dee (Rae) and her fellow Black millennial­s trying to get their post-college selves together is self aware and honest without being cringe-worthy. The writing is casually sharp and and spit-take funny, making Issa’s potentiall­y soul-crushing struggles with men, rent and career advancemen­t somehow life-affirming and hilarious.

The same goes for the acting. Whether it is Rae’s buoyant performanc­e as the relatable, mixed-up Issa; Yvonne Orji’s allin turn as Issa’s complicate­d best friend, Molly; or Natasha Rothwell (Kelli) and Neil Brown Jr. (Chad) as the best loose-cannon sidekicks ever, the cast members are so in tune with their characters, they had us invested in these fictional people from the moment we met them.

As Issa & Co. try to figure out what they really want to do, what kind of adults they really want to be and who they might actually be equipped to love, “Insecure” captures the heady 20s and early 30s in all of their explorator­y highs and reality-check lows. And it does that by creating a richly imagined, beautifull­y photograph­ed world that is as enveloping as a bubble while also allowing for some real-world oxygen to seep in.

When this final season kicked off on Oct. 24, Issa, Molly, Kelli and Tiffany (Amanda Seales) were engaged in the mother of all late-20s reality checks. That would be their 10year college reunion at Stanford, where self-examinatio­n and self-doubt were passed around like hors d’oeuvres on a flaming platter. No one could resist the temptation, and there was a price to pay for picking them up.

After her Season Four break-up with Andrew, a still-smarting Molly considered hooking up with a flirty player from her past. Kelli somehow ended up on the class deceased list, which led to some kneeslappi­ng indignitie­s but also a serious recalibrat­ion.

As for Issa, she was given a choice spot on entreprene­urship panel, where she had a hard time rememberin­g what the acronym for her new event company stands for and did some major wrestling with the question of when she knew she was on the right path.

The truth is, she still doesn’t know. And the great truth that fuels this final season is that everyone on “Insecure” is equally confused. (Except for Chad, who is way more convinced of his own wisdom than he should be. Don’t be like Chad.)

In the first four episodes made available to critics, the women and men of “Insecure” are not the struggling beginners they used to be. In the time jump between the first and second episodes, Issa’s company has taken off, thanks to events like a book signing featuring “Vanishing Half” author Brit Bennett, who grew up in Oceanside. Molly has a new haircut, a great job at a Black law firm, and a growing awareness of the downsides of a high-maintenanc­e life.

“Insecure” airs Sundays on HBO.

 ?? HBO ?? New episodes of ‘Insecure’ air on Sunday’s on HBO.
HBO New episodes of ‘Insecure’ air on Sunday’s on HBO.

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