By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy. We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.


Is Riverdale getting too dark and gory for you? Well, The CW might have just what you need with Katy Keene — debuting Thursday, Feb. 6 at 8/7c — a light and breezy Riverdale spinoff starring Lucy Hale as the titular fashion designer chasing her dreams in New York City. A glammed-up combo of Sex and the City and The Devil Wears Prada, Katy Keene is definitely a hard turn away from Riverdale‘s grim and bloody subject matter: Think less serial killers and cult leaders and more cute rom-com antics and all-night BFF chat sessions. As a Riverdale viewer, I don’t mind getting a break from the Black Hood, et al… but after seeing how utterly lacking in conflict Katy‘s first three episodes are, I almost wanted the Black Hood back.
Actually, aside from a few cheeky references, Katy Keene is quite separate from Riverdale, telling a new story set five years later, with Katy working as a stylist in a swanky department store while stitching up her own designs at night. Riverdale‘s Josie (Ashleigh Murray) is her new roommate — now with red hair! — joining Jorge (Jonny Beauchamp), who dreams of Broadway stardom while performing in drag at a nearby bar. Rounding out the tightknit friend group is creative gadfly Pepper (Julia Chan), who drops more names than The Good Place‘s Tahani and manages to say things like “I just gave a TED talk on the feminist power of Snapchat” with a straight face. They’re all best friends and “obsessed” with each other, giving each other heartfelt advice while upbeat girl-power songs thump away on the soundtrack. The tone here is aggressively, almost desperately optimistic and aspirational. We’re all having fun here, right? Right?!?
I do appreciate Katy Keene‘s youthful energy, and that ineffable spark of young people following their hearts in the big city. (Like many, I can relate to those lean years with lots of friends crammed into a tiny apartment.) But this show needs friction. Everything is too low-stakes and easy for Katy and her pals. Any setbacks they experience are either quickly undone or turn out to be blessings in disguise. There are virtually no consequences, so there’s nothing to invest in emotionally. Again, I don’t need the life-and-death stakes of Riverdale here, but something in between would be nice. (This is New York City! There is conflict out there!) It’s admittedly fun to watch Katy and company glide through life without a care, but it’s all so lightweight, it practically evaporates.
The all-smiles fantasyland that is Katy Keene is best epitomized by Katy’s hunky boxer boyfriend K.O. (Zane Holtz), who might be the most blindly supportive boyfriend in TV history. He’s like a teen girl’s blueprint of what a boyfriend should be: endlessly loving, with plenty of muscles and no discernible personality of his own. Katy basically walks all over him, changing her mind back and forth again, and he just grins and tells her how amazing her shoes look as they trample his body. His unfailing devotion to Katy almost becomes a running joke as the series progresses; I’m considering watching more just to see if he ever grows a spine.
The young cast of hopefuls do get to shine here: With her fresh face and big eyes, Hale looks like a living cartoon, so she’s a perfect fit as Katy. Plus, it’s nice to see Murray get a chance to spread her wings and show off her vocals after being sidelined on Riverdale for so long. They need a strong villain to play off of, though, and generically mean rich girl Alexandra Cabot (Camille Hyde) doesn’t quite cut it. I found myself wishing for more screentime for The Other Two‘s Heléne York, who plays Katy’s bitchy coworker Amanda. She’s sharp enough to provide a worthy foil for Katy, at least… but in the world of Katy Keene, it seems, any and all sharp edges have been rounded off to a safe dullness.
THE TVLINE BOTTOM LINE: The CW’s Riverdale spinoff Katy Keene is fun and fizzy, but it’s too lightweight, lacking any kind of emotional stakes.
I swear CW just repeats itself 🙄 this is just gossip Girl with new cover! It’ll be the the bf who can do no wrong until the bff or nemesis seduce him then Katy will get mad and meet a hot guy 🙄typical gay guy, undercover gay girl/guy the wayward father who’s cheating on his wife 😑 and of course with CW Katy will troll the government 🙄 let’s not forget the stereotype minority 🙄
I’m shocked that anyone thinks Snapchat is relevant today, let alone in 5 years
The plot sounds so similar to The Bold Type….
But without the realistic drama that The Bold Type has. It actually sounds like a Disney Channel version of The Bold Type (which is ironic, since Freeform is owned by Disney).
In a world where there is so many drama shows on tv I’m excited for a more fun hour long show. Even if it lasts only 1 season.
I think a lot of us would like that. The problem is, that seems to be an unsustainable style of writing. At least, not on a network TV production schedule. Eventually, like all CW shows, this will descend into melodrama.
It looks interesting, I’ll check it out.
Sometimes all you need is fluff.
Riverdale is an absolute mess but this show barely seems to connect with it except for Josie. So hopefully that means it is good. People have mentioned The Bold Type here. I think it also resembles The Carrie Diaries which I enjoyed but didn’t have a lot of viewers. Not sure this show will last.