Next Gen NYC: The Show That Tried It
Darling, let’s talk about Next Gen NYC. Because whew—this show strutted in like it had Manhattan rent money in its pocket, but left the party looking like it just got bounced out of the club for sneaking in on somebody else’s wristband.
First of all, who told them “NYC” in the title was enough to guarantee success? Baby, slapping “NYC” on your brand doesn’t automatically give you Carrie Bradshaw vibes—it can also give you Craigslist roommate drama with no AC in the summer.
The Cast: Who Ordered This Lineup?
The cast came in like a group chat nobody asked to be added to. Some of them thought they were influencers; others thought they were the next mogul. But chile, the only thing they were influencing was me to hit the skip button. Messy connections, fake alliances, and storylines so thin you could see through them like Fashion Nova jeans.
The Drama That Wasn’t
The producers promised “shade, scandals, and success.” What we got? Awkward brunches where the most heated argument was whether someone Venmoed their share of the bill. This ain’t drama—it’s roommate pettiness on camera. You don’t need Bravo to show us that, just log into Facebook Marketplace.
The Vibes
Instead of giving high-rise energy, it felt basement-level at times. The confessionals were full of people trying too hard, acting like they were auditioning for a reality show… on a reality show. Meta, but not in the good way.
The Messy Truth
The real gag? Next Gen NYC wanted to be the “voice of the new generation” but ended up sounding like that one drunk uncle at the cookout who swears he’s still young. Cute idea, poor execution. And let’s be shady for a sec—word on the street is the network didn’t even want to pick it up for another run. When a show’s Instagram page has more comments from bots than fans? Yeah, it’s giving “unfollow.”
Final Sip of Tea:
Next Gen NYC is what happens when you order “culture and chaos” off Wish. Entertaining to laugh at, not with. But hey, at least it gave us something to gossip about—and in this city, that’s worth a MetroCard swipe.
No comments:
Post a Comment