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Liza faces her toughest challenge: keeping her life as a twentysomething publishing assistant a secret from her own daughter. As Josh becomes more comfortable with their age difference, however, Liza starts to doubt the relationship’s future, which makes her scenes with age-appropriate Charles all the more interesting.
Still vibrant, funny, effortlessly topical, and entirely anchored by the remarkable Sutton Foster, if the opening episodes of Younger's second year are ultimately less satisfying than its first, it's only by a hair.
From the beginning, one of the sustaining charms of Younger is that Liza never seems to learn her lesson, and as she continues away with playing younger, the happier we are.
Younger remains slick and modestly sexy, but Liza's predicament - basically a Working Girl ruse, with an age-discrimination riff built into it - always seemed to come with an expiration date
The show-a little bit My Fair Lady, a little bit Sex and the City, a little bit Breaking Bad-revels in its ambiguities. Which makes it perfectly fit for an age that is no longer quite sure what adulthood means, what womanhood means, what growing up means.