By comedy way, the series presents the struggling of Plum Kettle, the woman who works as a ghostwriter but no one in the society know her. Also her boss treats her badly. What can she do to get out of these situations?.
Dietland, a dark comedy from Buffy the Vampire Slayer producer Marti Noxon, gets off to a similarly sticky start, but its premise promises to be an interesting one should it manage to iron out the initial creases.
Creator Noxon certainly has put together an attention-getter in times when growing numbers of prominent men very deservedly have been exposed for past and sometimes ongoing sexual misconduct.
It's basically "Ugly Betty" meets "Mr. Robot," mixed with a little of "The Devil Wears Prada" and some of what I can only assume Amy Schumer's "I Feel Pretty" was trying to say.
What I loved most about this show was the way they didn't focus entirely on the vigilante stuff, but put all the focus on the characters. No one character wasn't fascinating.