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Plum Kettle, a ghostwriter for one of New York Fashion magazine,who receives abuse by her boss and society. As men repeated assaults and abuse of women, she finds herself struggles with women rights and empowerment.
Dietland, a dark comedy from Buffy the Vampire Slayer producer Marti Noxon, gets off to a similarly sticky start, but its premise promises to be an interesting one should it manage to iron out the initial creases.
Creator Noxon certainly has put together an attention-getter in times when growing numbers of prominent men very deservedly have been exposed for past and sometimes ongoing sexual misconduct.
It's basically "Ugly Betty" meets "Mr. Robot," mixed with a little of "The Devil Wears Prada" and some of what I can only assume Amy Schumer's "I Feel Pretty" was trying to say.
What I loved most about this show was the way they didn't focus entirely on the vigilante stuff, but put all the focus on the characters. No one character wasn't fascinating.