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    Television
    Thursday, May 02, 2024

    Bounce TV’s ‘Finding Happy’ is B. Simone’s first lead role

    While streaming seems to be taking over the world, Bounce TV, an Atlanta-based broadcast network tailored to Black audiences, is quietly building its lineup of original programs.

    Its latest effort is a comedy “Finding Happy,” which stars Atlanta-based comic and social media influencer B. Simone as Yaz Carter, who on her 36th birthday finds herself super unhappy. She feels stagnant at work as an assistant to the boss at a small Atlanta media company. Her wishy-washy boyfriend of a year skips out on her birthday. She feels her biological clock ticking.

    So when her mom holds a big birthday party for her against her wishes, Yaz’s dark mood gets darker. When a baby-shaped cake meant for a baby shower shows up, she loses her mind and starts throwing cake everywhere. The tantrum goes viral. This triggers her own desire to get her life together and “find happy,” so to speak.

    Then Yaz finds out her new boss is a former college squeeze. Will they rekindle that old spark? Can she find a way to move up the ranks?

    The network is definitely zigging while others are zagging. (“Finding Happy” is available on the subscription-based Brown Sugar streaming app as well.)

    “I grew up watching John Hughes movies like ‘The Breakfast Club’ and ‘Pretty in Pink,’” said Kendra Jo, the showrunner and writer of all 10 episodes. “I really loved that era of storytelling. I really want to show Black people just being everyday people, how we go to the store or church or work. We’ve suffered a lot in this country with Black trauma. Every time you turn around, oh, my goodness, we need to laugh. I feel like that can be revolutionary.”

    She hopes Yaz and her friends and family are relatable, that the situations she places them in connect with viewers. She wrote many of the characters based on her own circle of people she knows.

    “Yaz is a Black woman who hasn’t found her magic yet,” Jo said. “There’s a lot of pressure to have Black Girl Magic. Some of us haven’t figured it out, and that’s okay. She may not be hitting all her marks but she wants to. There’s something about her that’s endearing. She loves her family. She loves her cousin, who is like her sister.”

    At the same time, Yaz sees people on social media having kids and families, and she feels despair. And at work, she wants to be a radio host but is stuck at a low-level job due to lack of confidence. She also has a tendency to worry too much about what other people think.

    Simone, who has never been a lead in a series before, embodies her insecurities as well as her charming attributes. “She was our Black Lucille Ball,” Jo said. “She was great with the physical humor.”

    Fellow producer Reesha Archibald noted that Simone, despite not being a trained actor, “dedicated everything of herself into that role. She always knew her lines. She executed flawlessly.”

    And while “Finding Happy” might remind viewers of Issa Rae’s recently completed award-winning HBO comedy “Insecure,” Jo said “Finding Happy” is more multigenerational, with meaty storylines set up for Yaz’s sassy sugar-loving aunt (Kim Coles of “Living Single” fame) and her overbearing mom (Angela Gibbs, daughter of sitcom legend Marla Gibbs).

    Coles, in a separate interview, said she was thrilled to see a show with such a singular vision.

    “I love that one African-American woman’s job was to create the entire arc of the show,” she said. “Each character came from her head and heart. It was fun and easy to do. She captured our quest to find the best version of ourselves so beautifully.”

    Archibald was also involved with another successful Bounce TV show set in Atlanta “Johnson,” which debuted last year and focuses on four 30-something Black male friends trying to figure out their lives. That show aired its second season over the summer and has generated solid ratings for Bounce.

    “Hopefully, ‘Finding Happy’ will encourage people to build courage to walk away from situations that don’t serve them well,” Archibald said.

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