The first "You're the Worst" season 2 episode is coming on September 9 but some critics have already been granted the chance to see the first two.
The second season will start with main characters Jimmy Shive-Overly (Chris Geere) and Gretchen Cutler (Aya Cash) now living under one roof. Some fans thought this new scenario is just one of those boring cliché among romantic-comedy series. However, it seems that is hardly the case.
Entertainment Weekly's Natalie Abrams said she saw the first two "You're the Worst" season 2 episode and her description of those episodes is "superb."
"I watched the first two episodes last night and have to say that the show returns even stronger than the superb first season. Now that Jimmy and Gretchen are living together, though, they're struggling with what domesticity means," Abrams wrote when a fan asked for a "You're the Worst" season 2 spoiler.
"You're the Worst" season 2 trailer
Abrams then went on to quote series creator Stephen Falk about how "You're the Worst" season 2 premiere panned out.
"We'll see right from the very first frame Jimmy and Gretchen being very reticent to be a boring couple and in fact, in the first episode, going way, way, way out of the way to not be a boring couple at great detriment to their health and a lot of laws," EP Stephen Falk said.
The show is also set to get a new feel this season as Falk confirmed "You're the Worst" season 2 episode will be like a musical. Gretchen's rap clients are about to get more exposure, starting with a rap feud.
"You get to see more with the rappers and [Gretchen's] work life," Cash told reporters Friday at the Television Critics Association's summer press tour.
"Sam, Shitstain and Honeynutz have a rap beef this season so they have to write dis tracks, which is what you do - you drop diss tracks on SoundCloud or what ever to respond as Drake and Meek Mill are doing right now," Falk told The Hollywood Reporter after the TCA panel. "But we did it before this new rap beef came out. As a writer, it's my job to then write the words that come out of the actors' mouths, and in this case it is raps."