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After the end of her relationship with Lawrence, Issa, a young African woman, lives in Los Angeles and suffers from the racial discrimination according to her color, who get upset after the ignorance of Lawrence to her, as he refuses to meet her, so she begins to make another relationship.
The sumptuous, symmetrical overhead shots of South L.A., the impeccably curated soundtrack, the effortless chemistry between cocreator-star Issa Rae and her costar Yvonne Orji-everything is right back where we left it.
The show toggles between devastatingly funny and quietly poignant with unflappable ease, and its performances and music direction continue to be some of the very best on television.
Rae is concerned with representation and identity in all its messy, awkward truth; she's not concerned with virtue signaling or teachable moments or talking to a nonblack audience.