- Best friends Penny and Mia set out to right all that's wrong with the world, blissfully ignorant of how many people they torment along the way.
- Mia, Penny and Austin are storming through their early twenties in the divisive socio-political hellscape that is 2021. They are barely coping with their growing independence, struggles with money, and dreams that seem unachievable.
Mia, fierce and absolutely narcissistic, is aware of the social capital she has as a bi, South Asian woman, and milks her position at the intersection of these minorities for all it's worth. Whether that's keeping a job she's objectively terrible at, or exploiting creeps on the internet for cash, Mia gets exactly what she wants, at the expense of everyone around her.
Anxious and righteous Penny is on a quest to be the ultimate ally to Mia - and every other person who has potentially experienced oppression. She is quick to leap to the (usually unnecessary) defence of those wronged and is always the first to stand up against the bigots (real or imagined). Penny is ready to Do The Work. She will support Muslims, organise protests, and denounce a once beloved and now problematic idol - all in the name of justice. Penny's housemate, Austin, has never had to work. An artist, struggling to break through in the competitive drag scene, he is experiencing a bad case of the clinically diagnosed blues. He goes to a therapist once though, so it's probably fine.
Through six hilarious and unapologetic episodes, we see these three characters follow their questionable modern day moral codes in confronting the complex social issues of an outrage driven world, leaving a path of destruction in their wake.
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