?BoJack Horseman? is the only show that really gets my city
Unlike other shows set in LA, the Netflix series feels like it was made for people who actually live here. | Netflix
Tucked into the often-bleak narrative are disarmingly familiar glimpses of Los Angeles life To live in Los Angeles means forever catching glimpses of your street or favorite restaurant staged as a stand-in for someplace else. Moving around town becomes an exercise in avoiding those film shoots, a constant reminder that we reside on a giant soundstage, where at any given moment, a beloved block or building is being carefully snipped from the surrounding context.
In the last few years, however, shows have been set in actual LA neighborhoods, with characters referencing real places, sometimes with stunning geographic accuracy. There?s the show Love, which takes place in a well-known apartment complex in the Valley. In Transparent, the neighborhoods where the family members live, from Silver Lake to Marina del Rey, provide cues about their characters. LA?s noir past intersects with present-day addresses in the thriller Bosch. Issa Rae?s Insecure is probably the best example of the genre, offering a look at everyday life in South LA with locations as mundane as a Rite-Aid pharmacy.
But BoJack Horseman?the animated Netflix show by writer Raphael Bob-Waksberg and artist Lisa Hanawalt, who were high school friends?is the first show to create an entire Los Angeles universe that feels like it was made for people in LA.
For people who don?t live here, BoJack Ho...
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