Crazy Ex-Girlfriend examines the Emmy Award-winning television series Crazy Ex-Girlfriend as one of the most innovative programmes of the post-network television era. Combining insights from television studies, media studies, fan studies and popular culture scholarship, the book explores how the series transformed contemporary television through its distinctive blend of musical storytelling, genre hybridity, narrative experimentation and audience engagement.
Across four chapters, the book traces the series from its collaborative creation by Rachel Bloom and Aline Brosh McKenna through its production history, industrial context and critical reception. It examines how Crazy Ex-Girlfriend fused romantic comedy, sitcom, dramedy and the integrated book musical to create new forms of television storytelling, while also analysing its use of irony, intertextuality, multilingualism and self-reflexive narrative techniques.
The study pays particular attention to the programme's representations of gender, mental health, sexuality and cultural identity, exploring how these themes were woven into both the narrative and musical structures of the series. It also investigates the show's extensive digital afterlife through fandom, fan fiction, live performance, aca-fan scholarship and online communities, demonstrating how contemporary television extends beyond broadcast screens into participatory cultures.
Arguing that Crazy Ex-Girlfriend is more than a cult television success, the book positions the series as a significant case study in the evolution of post-network television. By bringing together analysis of production, form, representation and reception, it reveals how the programme expanded the possibilities of what television could achieve in the streaming era.
Accessible and engaging, this volume will appeal to scholars and students of television studies, media studies, screen studies, fan studies, popular culture and musical theatre, as well as television critics, practitioners and fans interested in one of the most distinctive television series of the twenty-first century.