It is very, very queer. — Joshua Safran (@Anthologist) September 7, 2020
It is very, very queer.
Gossip Girl definitely takes advantage of current technology. It was a challenge until it wasn't, if that makes any sense. And then it becomes one of the fun parts! — Joshua Safran (@Anthologist) September 7, 2020
Gossip Girl definitely takes advantage of current technology. It was a challenge until it wasn't, if that makes any sense. And then it becomes one of the fun parts!
The tone is different. At first that scared me, but all of us really want this to be its own thing, so I've embraced it. — Joshua Safran (@Anthologist) September 7, 2020
The tone is different. At first that scared me, but all of us really want this to be its own thing, so I've embraced it.
The majority of characters being diverse and/or queer. — Joshua Safran (@Anthologist) September 7, 2020
The majority of characters being diverse and/or queer.
As the show takes place in the same universe as the original, I hope at some point people might drop by. And as this version is set in 2021, 4 years after the end of the original's flash-forward, there will be mentions here and there as those people are still around! — Joshua Safran (@Anthologist) September 7, 2020
As the show takes place in the same universe as the original, I hope at some point people might drop by. And as this version is set in 2021, 4 years after the end of the original's flash-forward, there will be mentions here and there as those people are still around!
I really wanted this to feel like an extension and in no way a reboot. So it's an evolution of the story, not a retread. That said, there are echoes. Constance and St. Judes are still Constance and St. Judes, after all. — Joshua Safran (@Anthologist) September 7, 2020
I really wanted this to feel like an extension and in no way a reboot. So it's an evolution of the story, not a retread. That said, there are echoes. Constance and St. Judes are still Constance and St. Judes, after all.