

The second season expands on them and gives them bigger arcs. The best aspect of the first season was the main characters and their struggles. The second season continued what worked in the first season and toned down what didn’t. It was basically a crude comedy that worked because of its likable and reliable characters because audiences would have been or currently going through the same growing pains. The first season of Big Mouth was a pleasant surprise when it came out considering the awful trailer Netflix released. Throughout the season new characters are introduced, from love interests in the form of Gina (Gina Rodriguez) to another spiritual being tormenting the teens in the form of The Shame Wizard (David Thewlis). The second season picks up where the first left off – Jessi (Jessi Klein) and Jay (Jason Mantzoukas) have run away from home while Nick (Nick Kroll) and Andrew (John Mulaney) lament of their differing levels of physical development.

Netflix re-examines the trials of puberty with the second season of their surprise animated hit Big Mouth.
