‘The Girls on the Bus’ Review: Max Series Crashes Into Brain-Melting Alternate Political Universe

Melissa Benoist and Carla Gugino headline an awkwardly glossy look at US politics in the modern era

girls-on-the-bus-melissa-benoist-carla-gugino-christina-elmore-natasha-behnam-max-nicole-rivelli
Melissa Benoist, Carla Gugino, Christina Elmore and Natasha Benham in "The Girls on the Bus." (Nicole Rivelli/Max)

The most head-spinning, brain-melting alternate-universe TV show of the year so far isn’t technically science fiction. In fact, its source material isn’t fiction at all. “The Girls on the Bus” kinda-sorta adapts Amy Chozick’s campaign memoir “Chasing Hillary,” about the writer’s experiences covering Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaigns of 2008 and 2016. In doing so, the series fictionalizes the book (“inspired by” is the preferred nomenclature of the credits) so that its story isn’t literally about Hillary Clinton or Chozick herself.

It’s an understandable decision that nonetheless forces a time-travel-like effect on the show’s whole world.

To construct a series of fictional characters covering a contemporary presidential race whose outcome isn’t already known, Chozick and her series co-creator Julie Plec must build out a whole alternate timeline.

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