Content warning: This article deals with the topics of suicide and sexual assault and may be triggering for some readers.
The first season of 13 Reasons Why quietly dropped on Netflix midway through last year.
For weeks, the TV show that depicted the violent suicide of a teenage girl dominated online conversations.
It sparked hundreds of think pieces and a whole lot of discussion about youth mental health and suicide.
Some believed the show should never have aired, while others thought it shone a light on a topic we don’t discuss often enough.
When a second season of the Netflix original series was announced later in the year, people were skeptical, worried, some were even furious.
But now season two has dropped and it feels different.
It’s almost like an after school special twist on the gritty, raw drama that made season one so controversial.
This season 13 Reasons Why is tackling as equally important topics, but somehow with more drama and less shock value.
And under all its dramatic teenage story lines, it’s hit a nerve and forced an almost hidden subject matter into the spotlight.
Season two starts about six months after the events of season one, in which the tapes Hannah made before her death were distributed to the students who were featured on them.
Hannah’s mum, Olivia (Kate Walsh), takes the school to court over their role in Hannah’s death.
This means most of the key players from season one are forced to testify in court. Their testimony provides a narrative for the season, just like Hannah’s tapes did for season one.