Hacks Is Showing Us the Future of Gen Z Comedy
Photograph by Jake Giles Netter/Max
There always has to be a show on TV making fun of TV shows, and in our current moment that responsibility falls on Hacks. The Max comedy presently finishing its third season is the latest in a lineage of great skewerings like 30 Rock and most recently The Other Two that understand all the absurdity of contemporary entertainment.
But Hacks’ greatest addition to the genre is its decision to center the impact of the latest demographic influencing entertainment: Gen Z. Hacks’ Gen Z characters aren’t background jokes; their influence is central to the show’s story and they are fixed at the heart of the series’ narrative action.
Hacks also feels special because it’s one of the first shows to depict Gen Z characters not just as sparkly silly teenagers (and yes, this is a Euphoria callout) but as adults with careers. Hannah Einbinder’s Ava Daniels is a promising writer (and a millenial/Gen Z cusper) who is part of the older end of the generation that is starting to find career success. The always excellent Megan Stalter’s Kayla is a nepo baby with responsibilities in the world of entertainment as a talent agent’s assistant.
Through Hacks’ three seasons its older characters are constantly learning more and having their points of view challenged by their younger counterpoints. The innovation of Deborah’s material through Ava’s Gen Z lens is the central method of change for Deborah’s character. She’s the quintessential washed-up comedian with a Vegas residency that’s too old for a dated city that’s about to be pushed into irrelevance by someone younger that appeals to younger people.
Parallel to Deborah and Ava is the pairing of Jimmy and Kayla. While Jimmy isn’t as much older than Kayla, her larger than life attitude and approach to the business of entertainment helps Jimmy reframe his own perspective of how to make a name for himself. They both got their jobs because of their fathers, but Kayla’s youth is another obstacle to being taken seriously. In Season 3 we see that she has the ingenuity to use her privilege as a tool by asking her dad and getting a Fatty Arbuckle movie made or putting aside her hangups with her high school bully in order to land a new client. Jimmy may think less of Kayla due to the way she acts, but her young reckless abandon is consistently shown to be more in line with how to get things done in the entertainment industry.
In Season 3, Deborah’s Ava-induced transformation becomes the most apparent. It’s not just her act that has changed; it’s her entire sense of self. She can’t enjoy jokes about crazy bisexuals with a bunch of legendary old school comedians at a colonoscopy party anymore. Her fight with Ava afterwards is one of Deborah’s great turning moments of the season. Ava makes Deborah realize that she can be funnier and smarter. She can’t be satisfied in the old bubble anymore.