Degrassi Reddit Guide

Even when he was being a terrible boyfriend (which was... often), you can see the trauma driving it. Who do you think had the most realistic mental health arc in the show’s history? in Next Class is a close second for me.

I’m doing my annual rewatch, and I’m at the point where Holly J. (or Emma , Katie , etc.) is at her peak "menace" phase. Back when this aired, we all hated her, but looking at it through an adult lens? She was just ambitious and deeply insecure. degrassi reddit

Here are three different styles of "interesting" texts—from a debate starter to a funny meme-style post—designed to get the community talking. Option 1: The "Unpopular Opinion" (Engagement Bait) Even when he was being a terrible boyfriend (which was

I feel like the show lost a bit of its "indie Canadian" charm once it became a massive global hit on TeenNick. Does anyone else miss when the characters actually looked like awkward teenagers instead of 25-year-old models? What’s the one storyline from the early seasons that lives in your head rent-free? (For me, it’s still the Rick/JT saga—I'm still not over it). Option 3: The "Deep Dive" (Character Study) in Next Class is a close second for me

Can we finally admit that [Character Name] wasn’t the villain, they were just a realistic teenager?

I found my old "Degrassi: The Next Generation" DVD box set in the attic today and it hit me—nothing will ever top the 2004–2008 era. The low-rise jeans, the flip phones, and the absolutely unhinged drama at The Dot .

Watching Craig’s bipolar storyline as a kid was intense, but watching it now as an adult , it’s actually heartbreaking how much the adults failed him. Between the abuse from his father and the school just letting him spiral because he was a "musical genius," his arc is one of the most grounded things the show ever did.