Goodbye, Stars Hollow. Why âGilmore Girlsâ Leaving Netflix Feels Like the End of an Era for Gen Z
The first day of my Big College Internship, I stood on the sidewalk outside my new office, stared up at the high-rise windows and thought of only one person: Mitchum Huntzberger.
For those of you who skipped past Roryâs fall from grace in Season 5 of âGilmore Girls,â Mitchum Huntzberger â her boyfriend Loganâs dad, a media magnate â tells Rory on her first day of work that she âdoesnât have what it takesâ to be a journalist. This prompts Rory to have a breakdown of unprecedented proportions, causing her to drop out of Yale (famously) and steal a boat (also famously).
While luckily I didnât have to live through the same rejection, my nerves about the start of my own career made me want to say: Rory, please consider this my formal apology for judging you. If I had a Mitchum of my own? Forget the boat, I wouldâve thrown myself into the harbor.
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When âGilmore Girlsâ premiered on the WB in 2000, I hadnât been born. In 2007, when the show completed its seven-season run, I was 4.
Like much of Gen Z, I came across the show on Netflix, when I â and many of my fellow first-time viewers â were in the same phase of our lives as Rory was at the start of the show: high school.
The world of Stars Hollow felt realistic and relatable in a way so many of the shows that defined the later 2000s and early 2010s werenât. Most of us â hopefully! â didnât have stalkers who photographed our every move, or two vampire brothers that we were torn between. What everyone did have, however, was homework. And college applications, a best friend, a schoolmate nemesis (the type you can only really have when youâre 16), and a family to love and argue with.
Is it possible to be nostalgic for a time that youâve never really experienced? Besides reaching the younger generation at the right time, âGilmore Girlsâ has a cozy whimsicality thatâs hard to not be drawn into. Maybe itâs the fall New England foliage Amy Sherman-Palladinoâs show is so strongly associated with, or perhaps the warm, fast-paced banter between Rory and Lorelai that people spoof on TikTok to this day.
Thanks to Netflix â which âGilmore Girlsâ exited on June 30, after calling the platform home for 12 years â you could binge entire seasons in a sitting, watching Luke and Lorelai go from just friends to engaged in what felt like the blink of an eye. âGilmore Girlsâ took on a whole new life when fans brought their love for the show to social media, with fan edits and quotes making the rounds on Instagram and Tumblr.
The time-tested debate of which of Roryâs boyfriends was superior is basically a rite of passage for any viewer, although no oneâs really Team Dean. A school lunch where a friend pitched Jess Mariano to me with all the fervor of someone canvassing for a presidential candidate is what made me tune into the show, keen to see what all the discussion was about. (BTW â Team Logan, always and forever).
When I got to college, it felt that at least half of the student body had some type of âGilmore Girlsâ merch, whether it was a mug from Lukeâs Diner, a bubble art sticker of the girls themselves or the lone quirky Etsy sweatshirt advertising Chilton Preparatory.
Once potential fans no longer had to rent DVDs, âGilmore Girlsâ on Netflix created a feedback loop of sorts: the more people talked about it, the more people began watching. Nearly a decade after âGilmore Girlsâ stopped airing, the second wave of attention was brought in by viewers across the globe, many of whom were entering Rory and Lorelaiâs lives for the first time.
Not everything about the show has stood the test of time: Rory and Lorelaiâs criticism of other peopleâs bodies and women they disagree with, jokes about the queer community and the showâs lack of diversity have all been criticized â and for good reason. Rory, unintentionally, has become a widely disliked character for her poor choices, while a smaller percentage find Lorelai obnoxious as well. But whether you love them or hate them, the Gilmore girls have cemented themselves in pop culture.
The renewed interest in the show rose so greatly that in 2016 Netflix commissioned âGilmore Girls: A Year in the Life,â a revival miniseries that caught up with the family a decade after the series finale, and gave Sherman-Palladino a chance to end the series the way sheâd always planned. While reception toward the show was mixed, the title, which will remain on Netflix until Nov. 25, was a popular choice when it premiered and started a whole new line of discussion, leaving the audience with the major cliffhanger: âMom, Iâm pregnant.â
Who knows when weâll see Rory and Lorelai again, if ever? While the show is leaving Netflix, âGilmore Girlsâ is still available to stream and revisit on other platforms. But if you ask me, part of the nostalgia around the show is watching it on Netflix. The Consolas font subtitles and red progress marker are as synonymous with a âGilmore Girlsâ viewing experience as a cup of coffee or the leaves changing colors. Or at least, they are for Gen Z.
Goodbye, âGilmore Girls.â So long, Stars Hollow. See you on Hulu?
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