Dear White People: Season 4 (Volume IV) – Review/ Summary (with Spoilers)
Dear White People ends triumphantly for most, as we not only get to see how senior year went but get an idea of what the future holds.
Dear White People ends triumphantly for most, as we not only get to see how senior year went but get an idea of what the future holds.
Volume III, or Season 3, of Dear White People presented a noticeable, but not necessarily drastic, shift from its previous seasons. Here are some of the highs and lows.
After watching Dear White People’s season 3 (Volume III) finale, there are some things we’re left to question. Here are a handful of things which need answers.
As Brook tries to hunt down Sam, who continues to struggle with her junior project, Lionel heads to the House of No Pi with D’Unte.
As Joelle continues to figure out how she’ll be as host of Dear White People, Rashid struggles with his role within the Black American community.
In a hyper-aware premiere, Dear White People implies there are going to be notable changes in season 3. For it doesn’t want to end up like other Netflix shows.
Season 2 of Dear White People shows immense growth from the first season but still has this vibe that it is the type of show that just preaches to the choir.
In this post, you’ll find collected quotes, and .gifs, from the Netflix program: Dear White People.
We’re left on a cliffhanger, but do learn who burned down Davis house and get a major development in the secret societies plot.
Sam heads to her dad’s funeral, with Joelle and surprisingly Coco, and comes to terms with, not just her guilt, but also a renewed love for her father.
Gabe and Sam have a real conversation. One that fully addresses Sam, narcissism and all, as well as Gabe and how white allies, or those who attempt to be, will forever be dealing with the learning process.
Stripped of the qualities he took upon for status, Troy is left trying to find who he is in spite, and because, of his community and upbringing.
The person behind AltIvyW is revealed, and Brooke gets added to the list of people who need their own episode.
FINALLY Joelle gets her time in the sun and while they lay it on thick what she goes through, as a dark-skinned Black woman, it’s to compensate for the topic being generally avoided.
Coco makes a new friend and puts tests that friendship with quite the task.
Lionel comes into focus as does his life after exposing the Hancocks. But, what really matters is a potential love interest you could get behind.
Three weeks after having a gun pointed at him, Reggie is only getting worse and it seems partying, sex, therapy, and alcohol aren’t doing a damn thing.
Dear White People returns and Sam is struggling to get back into her groove, until some anonymous person takes things too far.
Um, I’m starting to think Netflix isn’t that good at making season finales that can actually feel like a period or exclamation mark rather than an ellipsis.
Coco once more is the focus and, unlike Lionel, we get to complete her storyline of going from insecure to some form of self-actualized.
In our 2nd Lionel episode, the focus is him truly getting to know Troy and how his journalism career is going.
Gabe gets his own episode and, like mostly every other character, it is all about his relationship with Sam.
When your victimhood is politicized and popularized, what time or ability does that give you to grieve? That is the question posed as Reggie deals with the aftermath of having a gun pointed at him.
Reggie found the perfect woman for him but she belongs to someone else, a white guy, and that hurts his ego so much it clouds everything else.
Colorism is one of the main focuses of Coco’s episode and damn if the display of it may not bring you to tears.
Troy takes center stage and his storyline is sans a white girl and plus Nia Long.
Dear White People makes up for the lack of exploring Lionel’s sexuality in the movie version in this episode.
I feel like I should preface my review by saying that I was not blown away at all by the movie version of Dear White People. To the point that I’m quite surprised it was adapted into a series. If only because I found it to be like a watered down version of all the…
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