“Future Tense” had a lot of highs and lows, but one thing you can always count on with this show is the cast knocking their material out of the park. Every character action feels risky and consequence-laden, in part because the performances are so genuine. Teen dramas seem to have to work a little harder to make their conflicts feel attention-grabbing, since it’s easy to write them off as immature and fluffy, but Faking It has a knack for bringing some of the most achingly sincere portrayals out of its actors. Here are my personal favorites from this past week:
3. Bailey De Young is just so great, folks. Lauren had a smaller subplot in this past episode, focused on her efforts to impress a college rep and her eventual reunion with Theo, but she still successfully broke everybody’s heart with her response when she found out her choice college valued her for being intersex more than any actual skills she put time
2. I have a complicated relationship with Reagan. She was my favorite new addition of last season; I loved her character and thought she introduced so many interesting new things to the story, plus it was refreshing to see Amy in a relationship with her first girlfriend after crushing on Karma for so long. Since the series came back from hiatus, though, a lot of Reagan’s actions have been wearing thin. I get that she behaves from a place of vulnerability, like everyone else on this show — all of the kids have messed up and/or been jerks at some point — but Reagan has felt so comparatively mean-spirited and overboard in the specific ways she lashes out. I don’t begrudge her for being insecure about Amy’s Karma-related baggage, but her general philosophy of mistrust and anger towards questioning/bisexual girls due to one bad breakup reflects a lot of hateful real-world attitudes towards people who aren’t sure of their sexuality. Layer on the fact that she pressures Amy to “prove” her lesbianism through making out and calls Amy a coward for being scared to talk about something that Reagan was always viciously intolerant towards, and I was starting to feel pretty over their relationship for much of “Future Tense.” It felt like twenty minutes of bullying, which I’m not into seeing portrayed as basic relationship incompatibility.
1. It feels like a copout to list the lead actress as my favorite, but, y’know, logic dictates that Rita Volk snagged Faking It’s main role for a reason. This episode was amazing for her range — we saw her excellent comedic timing in Amy and Karma’s bad “commercial” as well as her dramatic chops when figuring out how to deal with Reagan’s expectations.
I just want Amy Raudenfeld to be happy SO MUCH, people. I do not feel like this is a lot to ask.