When I posted online about reading this book, a friend promptly commented: “I am watching the show on Disney Channel!” It strikes me as remarkable: a woman in her forties watching in 2025 in Barcelona, enjoying an American TV show about four women in their mid-fifties living in Miami in the late 1980s. There must be something about this show that has appealed to audiences all over the world for 40 years. However, surprisingly, academia has shown little or no interest in the endeavors of Blanche Devereaux, Rose Nylund, Dorothy Zbornak, and Sophia Petrillo. In their introduction to The Golden Girls: Tales from the Lanai, editors Taylor Cole Miller and Alfred L. Martin Jr. pose a question that haunts Television Studies: “In our field, why is there so little written about this show?” Despite the sitcom's omnipresence in syndication and its resurgence as a “comfort” audiovisual product during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, The Golden Girls has historically been sidelined in academic discourse. This collection seeks to rectify that omission. By blending industrial history, textual analysis, and reception studies, the volume does not merely celebrate the show's fandom; it rigorously positions the series as a complex text that interrogates the intersections of aging, queerness, race, and television form. The volume's primary purpose is to legitimize The Golden Girls as a rich object of scholarly inquiry, moving beyond simple nostalgia to analyze why the show remains culturally potent 40 years after its premiere. The book is divided into three sections –“Industry and Historical Context,” “Text,” and “Audiences and Reception”—punctuated by interviews with the show's writers, photographers, and editors. This structure allows the contributors to bridge the gap between production studies and cultural theory. The Golden Girls was a vital asset for Disney's renaissance in the 1980s and 1990s. Peter C. Kunze notes that creator Susan Harris's reputation for sophisticated writing offered Touchstone Television the complexity Disney desired. At the time, there was a thick intertextual relationship between The Golden Girls and tabloid culture. As Claire Sewell notes, real-world stories in the National Enquirer sometimes mirrored show plots, such as disputes between actresses. Taylor Cole Miller and Kate Fortmueller explore the show's lasting popularity in syndication, detailing how marketing and retextualization have used gendered narratives to appeal to buyers and audiences, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, when it became a success on Hulu as part of the “comfort TV” trend. The program was watched not only for nostalgia but also because its familiarity and handling of social issues helped viewers process the contemporary moment. As for the analysis of the episodes, Ashleé Clark examines the main characters' relationship with food and body image within the context of 1980s diet culture. While the characters often worry about weight, the pilot established cheesecake as an integral comfort food, presented as a rejection of the era's low-fat diet culture and a site for companionship. Another feature of the series was the extensive use of flashback episodes. Jessica Hoover posits that the use of both external (new events) and internal (clip show) flashbacks created narrative complexity, making memory a central theme of the series. The Golden Girls often addressed contemporary issues, such as the HIV/AIDS crisis. According to Andrew J. Owens, by placing the threat of HIV/AIDS on older, heterosexual women, the series demystified who could be affected. Jared Clayton Brown argues that the show was a counternarrative to asexual stereotypes of older women, offering representations of sexually active and empowered older women. The series also offered a complex and comforting depiction of mothering, analyzed by Beth L. Boser. Her autoethnographic critique of motherhood ideology discusses tensions of control, collaboration, and choice. Although the series main characters did not include any Black or LGBTQ people, the contributors to this volume study how The Golden Girls resonates with minority audiences, despite its lack of explicit Black or LGBTQ representation. Alfred L. Martin Jr. argues that the series is an “implicitly Black text” due to NBC's programming practices and how Black fans interpret the non-traditional family structure. Ken Feil analyzes the show through the lens of camp comedy, arguing that its “comedy of bad manners” and “female smut” functioned as an act of resistance against the anti-gay backlash of the 1980s. Finally, Eleanor Patterson examines how live stage productions of The Golden Girls by drag troupes in the United States have made drag “safe” for mainstream audiences, acting as “paratexts” that allow the source material to be appropriated and “queered.” A significant portion of the book engages with Queer theory and Black Studies, challenging the binary of positive versus negative representation. The contributors argue that the erasure of the gay character, Coco, paradoxically created a queerer space where non-heteronormative bonds between women took precedence. This moves the scholarly conversation away from representation toward a “politics of resonance,” where minority audiences engage with white-cast media to construct alternative family formations. The text also complicates feminist readings, noting that while the show made the sexual agency of older women visible, it often framed it through comedy to mitigate anxiety, and characters frequently upheld traditional gender expectations even while subverting them. Ultimately, The Golden girls: Tales from the lanai is an essential resource that validates the study of “older” women's media as vital to understanding the current US television landscape. It successfully argues that the show is not merely a “comfort” watch but a “cultural forum” that negotiated the traumas of its time. My only criticism is that the scholarship is US-centered and completely forgets the global appeal of The Golden Girls. The book does not discuss the impact of the show on different countries or foreign spin-offs such as La edad de oro (Mexico), Brighton Belles (UK), Juntas, pero no revueltas (Spain), Большие Девочки (Russia), Xρυσά κορίτσια (Greece), Las chicas de oro (Spain), or Los años dorados (Chile). Luckily, some international authors such as Pedro Ángel Sánchez has written about them in Las chicas de oro. La serie que nos enseñó que las amigas son la familia elegida (2025), but more work is needed. Bring it on, girls, and thank you for being a friend!
Iñaki Tofiño (Wed,) studied this question.