Try GOLD - Free
An overdose of oversmarts
Mint New Delhi
|July 19, 2025
Remember when Lena Dunham was the most important voice in television? Girls, her chaotic, semi-autobiographical HBO series, smashed its way into the prestige TV landscape like a giggling wrecking-ball, all elbows and ambition.
Remember when Lena Dunham was the most important voice in television? Girls, her chaotic, semi-autobiographical HBO series, smashed its way into the prestige TV landscape like a giggling wrecking-ball, all elbows and ambition. It was bold and brash and unshaved. It was "cinema" for the small screen, with characters that were abrasively specific and men who were off-puttingly real. In 2012, when Girls premiered, we bought into its first season—its rawness, its honesty, its audacity—and we went in a little harder on a man named Adam Driver, breaking through with such magnetism that you could practically see future Oscar nominations floating above his head.
Then Girls kept going. And going. And it turned out, maybe that flavor of raw, like cookie-dough, was best in small doses. The series devolved into a self-indulgent mess, incoherent in tone, inconsistent in character, so uncomfortable that not even schadenfreude could keep you glued. Driver, a messy-haired escape artist, soared into stardom. The rest faded into podcast territory.
Over a decade later, Dunham returns with Too Much, a Netflix confection that, at first glance, appears to be the anti-Girls. Where Girls was grubby and narcissistic, Too Much is breezy and big-hearted. There is structure. There is romance. There is—dare I say—wholesomeness?
At the center of the series is Megan Stalter, that loud and luminous scene-stealer from
This story is from the July 19, 2025 edition of Mint New Delhi.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Mint New Delhi
Mint New Delhi
Indian companies eye tariff refunds after US SC ruling
Indian exporters across sectors such as tyres, tractors and apparel are scrambling to figure out how they can recover the Trump administration’s hiked tariffs on shipments to the US after its top court struck them down as illegal, paving the way for potentially significant refunds.
3 mins
June 02, 2026
Mint New Delhi
HOW USURIOUS LENDING APPS SURVIVED RBI'S CRACKDOWN
Despite heavier scrutiny, the high-cost lending market has adapted rather than disappeared
9 mins
June 02, 2026
Mint New Delhi
India’s GDP growth likely slowed to 7.3% in Q4: Poll
India’s economy likely expanded 7.3% year-on-year in the January-March quarter (Q4FY26), slowing from 7.8% in the previous three months but remaining on a solid footing amid resilient domestic demand, government spending and improved agricultural activity, according to a Mint poll of 15 economists.
1 mins
June 02, 2026
Mint New Delhi
Reforms bills prep for monsoon date
Securities, housing laws may be tweaked in monsoon session
3 mins
June 02, 2026
Mint New Delhi
Wockhardt chases commercial success after FDA nod for new drug
Wockhardt's $800-million bet on antibiotic research paid off on Saturday with the US drug regulator's approval for Zaynich, only the second homegrown new drug from India to achieve the feat, and the first without a foreign partner.
2 mins
June 02, 2026
Mint New Delhi
India-Oman FTA kicks in; 99% exports get duty-free access
The pact, signed on 18 December, takes effect with the completion of internal procedures
2 mins
June 02, 2026
Mint New Delhi
Let's grant price signals a larger economic role
India’s economy must attract more capital to see off a ‘perfect storm’ of risks. Global investors may need the assurance that the country’s policy moves will by and large be market oriented
2 mins
June 02, 2026
Mint New Delhi
Companies eye US tariff refunds after court ruling
India's exports to the US were taxed at 25% under the reciprocal tariff regime, which was later raised to 50% amid differences between the two countries over New Delhi's import of Russian oil. Since the US Supreme Court ruling, a flat 10% tariff has been imposed on all countries.
2 mins
June 02, 2026
Mint New Delhi
AI boom: why the market is both right and wrong at the same time
Split signals suggest irrational AI exuberance may be exposing the US to instability risk while India’s investments are secure
4 mins
June 02, 2026
Mint New Delhi
US bombs Iranian military sites in retaliatory strikes
US hits radar, drone sites as Iran downs a drone; Kuwait reports incoming fire from Iran
3 mins
June 02, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
