Fandom Spotlight: Riverdale
For those of you who have been following Femslash Revolution since the beginning, you know that instead of Rarepair Thursdays, we used to have Fandom Thursdays. This was a day devoted to spotlighting a popular F/F fandom and spreading the news about popular ships. We haven’t had a Fandom Thursday in quite a long time, but this week, we’re bringing it back with one of the cult hit shows of the past year.
Riverdale is an hour-long teen drama that first aired on The CW in January of 2017. Season one ran until May of 2017 and had 13 episodes. The show was an instant hit, and the second season debuted in October of 2017 and ran for 22 episodes with a winter break. Season three will begin on October 10, 2018.
This show is loosely based on the characters from the long-loved Archie Comics, created in 1941 by John L. Goldwater and Bob Montana. The Core Four—Archie, Betty, Veronica, and Jughead—have gone through decades of high school drama, musical performances, and wild wardrobe changes, and the focus has always been the love triangle between Archie, Betty, and Veronica.
But Riverdale’s noir-inspired versions of these characters aren’t from your grandparents’ Archie trades. Archie Andrews (K.J. Apa) is a tortured musician day-lighting as a star football player, Jughead Jones (Cole Sprouse) is a brooding geek turned gang leader, and Betty Cooper (Lili Reinhart) and Veronica Lodge (Camila Mendes) are besties rather than frenemies. Fan favorite characters like Josie and the Pussycats (led by Ashleigh Murray), preppy Kevin Keller (Casey Cott), and gothic mean girl Cheryl Blossom (Madelaine Petsch) all make appearances, and teen idols of the past (including Luke Perry, Molly Ringwald, and Skeet Ulrich) now star as the parents.
Many femslash fans first had Riverdale on their radar due to our old enemy—queerbaiting. Yes, we fell victim once again. In the earliest trailers, we saw Betty and Veronica share a smooch in the gym, leading us to believe we’d get a romance between the two iconic rivals. But although the kiss did indeed occur in the pilot, it was nothing more than an attention grabber, and the girls remain friends instead of something more. The only actual LGBT characters in season one were Kevin Keller and his Southside Serpent boyfriend, Joaquin (Rob Raco). A lot of viewers were understandably frustrated, but the show’s over-the-top dialogue, soapy plotlines, and sexy stars kept everyone entertained (and possibly hate-watching).
Riverdale gained huge popularity between seasons. A lot of has to do with the cheese factor—let’s face it, the show can get pretty campy in the best way possible. And a lot of that has to do with breakout star Madelaine Petsch, who plays the waifish, slightly eerie queen bee, Cheryl Blossom. Cheryl started out as the misunderstood rich girl mourning her deceased twin brother, but in season two, her hidden depths were revealed, and she became one half of a very popular canon ship.
In season two, we meet Toni Topaz (Vanessa Morgan), the pink-haired, bisexual Southside Serpent who becomes friendly with Jughead when he changes schools. She originally started as a rival for Jughead’s affections, locking horns with good-girl Betty, but after one hook-up, she tells Jughead she prefers dating girls. After half a season of being more of a background character, she meets Cheryl Blossom. Cheryl Blossom/Toni Topaz was practically a ship before they even shared screen-time—people could just tell they had amazing chemistry. Toni’s strength and empathy eventually melted Cheryl’s icy exterior, and the two girls ended up saving each other from abusive parents and dangerous rival gangs. A lot of femslashers are drawn to this ship because it features two bisexual characters.
Despite starting as queerbaiting, Betty Cooper/Veronica Lodge still has a fan following and remains the second most popular F/F ship in the fandom. They do have amazing chemistry, and their devotion to each other and their friendship will always inspire shippy feelings.
A ship that was cut a bit short was Cheryl Blossom/Josie McCoy. They had a lot of fun scenes together and seemed to make a formidable team, but in the second season, Cheryl’s obsession with Josie took a dark turn. A lot of fans still enjoy canon-divergent fanworks, though. And if you’re a fan of the older generation, Alice Cooper/Hermione Lodge has a small but vocal following for all of your 90’s femslash desires.