10 Best TV Episodes of 2017: GLOW


This year, weve asked 10 writers to pick some of their favorite TV episodes from 2017 and weigh in on why they were great stand-alone eps and the highlights of our viewing year. Today: Amy Plitt on GLOWs Maybe Its All the Disco.

It hasnt exactly been easy to be a woman in the year of our lord 2017. (Were going to pause for a second to let you savor the understatement there.) Even before the Reckoning exposed monsters in every corner office and Hollywood boardroom, weve had to deal with a man who has been accused of assault by more than a dozen women on tape, no less and was then sworn in to the highest office in the land. And once he got there, Donald Trump got to work on systemically undermining womens health, from supporting a ban on abortions after 20 weeks, to making it easier for employers to not cover birth control coverage for so-called moral reasons. Its enough to make you want to tear your hair out or get in a wrestling ring and kick some sleazy, patriarchy-upholding ass.

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This is where GLOWcomes in. Its not a surprise that the Netflix series, about the creation and ascension of the Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling in the 1980s, struck a chord with viewers particularly female ones. Sure, its a Lycra-drenched period piece about a scrappy band of would-be divas learning to find their inner Ultimate Warrior. But the showis also, at its core, a story about women in all their weird, messed-up, complicated glory one that doesnt shy away from jokes about period sex or a characters miscarriage (referred to, at one point, as a womb goof), and gives its diverse, wonderful cast multiple chances to shine.

This elevation of womens interior lives is why the series eighth episode, Maybe Its All About the Disco, works so well. Its an altogether quieter affair, absent the theatrics and in-the-ring antics of previous episodes. The main storyline concerns Ruth (a pitch-perfect Alison Brie), who finds out that her ill-advised affair with Mark (Mad Mens Rich Sommer) the estranged husband of her teammate/onetime bestie/current nemesis Debbie (Betty Gilpin) has led to an unexpected, and obviously unwanted, pregnancy. She ultimately decides to get an abortion. While the procedure itself happens off-camera, everything that leads up to it feels downright revolutionary.

After one of their practices, the G.L.O.W. ladies discover that theyre all on the same menstrual cycle (Sisters of the moon, rejoice!, one of them jokes). Ruth realizes that shes not synced; she may, in fact, have a bigger problem on her hands. Our heroine gets an extremely old-school pregnancy test, which looks like a chemistry set. She takes it back to the drab hotel room she shares with Sheila the She-Wolf. She waits. The results, of course, are not what she wanted and Brie plays this scene perfectly, with just the right amount of anxiety and oh fuck, what do I do know? pathos. (The use of Under Pressure by Queen and David Bowie, as Ruth waits for the tests results, may have been a little too on the nose, but well allow it.)

Theres a brief moment at a run-down roller rink where Ruth sees a woman coaching her young son at a roller-skating rink, and we think that she just might change her mind. But, to the showrunners credit, they know their character: shes career-minded, obsessed with making the whole wrestling thing work and enormously not ready for the responsibility of having a kid. Particularly one borne of an affair she would rather forget altogether.

Its not the right time, she tells G.L.O.W. ringleader and sleazemaster Sam (Marc Maron), who accompanies her to the clinic for her abortion. Not the right baby.

Her certainty about her decision, and the ease with which she makes it, is what makes this episode so impressive and so radical. Its rare enough for a TV show to even mention the word abortion without getting completely hung up on the implications of that choice, let alone have a character go through with it without feeling regret or remorse for her decision. Think of it this way: The episode of Maude,in which the title character decides to have an abortion, is still held up as a touchstone of the genre and that happened in 1972. We havent come all that far in 45 years, it seems.

The episode also gives Maron a chance to show that Sam, for all of his sleaziness and seeming indifference to the feelings of the G.L.O.W. ladies, maybe has a bit of a soft spot beneath his crusty exterior. He jokes with Ruth at the abortion clinic, and crucially, without pressuring her makes sure shes okay with her choice. And for her, its not a decision thats fraught with complications; it just is.

Thanks to our current political climate, where the fight for a womans right to choose is likely to become more difficult than it has been in decades, showing that abortion is, fundamentally, a medical procedure that a woman chooses, and that it can be no big deal, is so utterly vital. You never get the sense that Ruth is exactly happy about the abortion; its more a relief that she was able to make that choice for herself and whats best for her life. May it still be a choice that were able to make in the near future.

Previously: The Good Place, Dance, Dance Resolution
Next: Better Things, Eulogy