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  1. Jun 20, 2017 · Liz Flahive and Carly Mensch ’s new half-hour series, GLOW (short for the Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling) feels like a spiritual combination of two other Netflix shows: Orange Is the New Black and ...

    • Allison Keene
    • Jackie Strause
    • Who Are the Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling? The original series, GLOW: The Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling, broke glass ceilings and went on to become a cult hit.
    • The First Season Is an Origin Story. Assuming GLOW will see future seasons to come for Netflix — and that the show within a show gets picked up — this first season functions as an origin story and takes its time building up to a big extravaganza in the finale.
    • The Women Do Their Own Stunts. Thanks to wrestler-trainer Guerrero Jr. and stunt coordinator Shauna Duggins, the wrestling moves viewers will be seeing in the ring are primarily done by the actresses.
    • Who Is the GLOW Audience? Given the fact that three of the four executive producers on GLOW hail from Orange Is the New Black, it’s no surprise that the comedy has a similar feel and will appeal to the same audience who has been tuning into the antics of Litchfield’s female prison for the last five seasons.
  2. Text Daisy Woodward. Last weekend saw the launch of Netflix ’s latest series – the 80s-tastic, all-female wrestling drama G.L.O.W. (an acronym for the Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling). The show was inspired by the real prime-time wrestling series of the same name, which ran from 1985 to 1990.

    • Producers Didn’T Want Alison Brie in The Cast.
    • Kia Stevens Is A Wrestler in Real Life.
    • Brie Sees Ruth as “Sexless."
    • Working with Women Bosses Made Betty Gilpin Reflect on Her Entire career.
    • It Also Made Gilpin Fight Harder Against The Male Gaze.
    • The Show Changed One Important Element to Home in on The Camaraderie.
    • Brooke Hogan Made A Cameo.
    • Working on Glow Is Like Boarding School.
    • The Match Bash Recalls Seeing in Season 2 Is Real.
    • The Series Will Be Coming Back For A Third season.

    Like her character, Ruth, Alison Brie got rejected a lot before getting the role, enduring a grueling casting processfor producers and a casting director who wanted an unknown for the part. “I cried in my car after every audition,” she said. “I would sit in my care like Ruth and sob. And we were both listening to the same Ultimate ‘80s mix while [w...

    The cast is full of actresses who all work with trainers to catch up on all the chiropractor-defying moves they have to do, but Kia Stevens (who plays Tammé “The Welfare Queen” Dawson) has been making those moves for decades. Wrestling under the name Awesome Kong and Amazing Kong, she’s a five-time Women’s Champion. Stevens has also wrestled in the...

    One of the catalysts of the show’s plot is Ruth having an affair with her best friend Debbie’s (Betty Gilpin) husband (Rich Sommer), but the rest of the show is hardly romantic for Ruth, which is probably why Brie views the character as “sexless.” “I don’t think she thinks of herself as being very sexual,” Brie toldThe A.V. Club. “It’s a major diff...

    GLOWis rare for having so many women in the cast and behind the camera, something that the actors have noted affected the shooting environment as a “protected, feminist bubble.” For Gilpin, it also raised some questions about herself. “Being on a set with female bosses [co-showrunners Liz Flahive and Carly Mensch], the level of comfort and bravery ...

    Since Gilpin doesn’t have a stunt double, and she’s doing the wrestling moves herself, GLOW has forced her to reexamine how she views her body while acting. Specifically, she’s gotten a lot less self-conscious and unshackled her movements from fear of the male gaze. “The way we think about our bodies is completely changing,” Gilpin told The Huffing...

    They fight in the ring, they fight outside of it, they lift each other up, they undercut each other. It’s all part of the show’s drama and grounded realness. It’s a family, and to develop that sensibility, GLOW borrowed from the conditions the real-life women trained under. That includes staying two-to-a-room at a shabby motel, but the show dropped...

    Hulk Hogan's daughter made a brief appearance as a theater owner who rents her space to the ragtag production. She’s not nearly the only personfrom the wrestling world to make a cameo appearance, either.

    Too often, shows have one spot in the cast for a woman. GLOW initially had 15. According to Gilpin, “I went to boarding school, and being on GLOWreminds me of that. When your call is 5:45 a.m., and there’s a group of 14 women all talking at once, it can be a little much, but it’s also the greatest gift. It’s constant happiness and support all day, ...

    There’s a moment in season 2 where Bash (Chris Lowell) described a personal memory of watching a match between Stan Hansen and Bruno Sammartino where the former busted the latter’s neck. The match is real. So is the injury. At Madison Square Garden, on April 26, 1976, Sammartino was defending his world title against Hansen when Hansen failed to pro...

    On August 20, 2018—more than two months after GLOW's second season dropped on Netflix—entertainment outlets began reporting that the series had officially been renewed by Netflix for a third season. The decision may not have been an easy one to make, however; as Variety reported: "Industry sources claim that the series is not among Netflix’s most w...

  3. Jun 19, 2017 · Your complete what-to-know guide about Netflix's 'GLOW' – from the real-life wrestling league that inspired it to why this could be a must-binge hit.

  4. Jun 20, 2017 · Sarah Larson reviews “GLOW,” the 2012 documentary by Brett Whitcomb about the Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling, which is streaming on Netflix and inspired a new scripted series.

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  6. Jun 21, 2017 · From the producers of 'Orange Is the New Black' comes a new Netflix series that is a throwback to the gutsy, glittery and glorious days of women's professional wrestling.