The Amazon Prime Video adaptation of Brian K. Vaughan and Cliff Chiang's comic book seriesPaper Girls has four well-written pre-teen characters who time travel from the late '80s to 2019. Erin Tieng (Riley Lai Nelet) becomes a paper girl along with Mac Coyle (Sofia Roskinsky), Tiffany Quilkin (Camryn Jones), and KJ Brandman (Fina Strazza). The girls each have their own strengths and flaws, and they get to know each other during their route one early morning before their lives change forever.
While all of the characters on Paper Girls are full of depth, and they are definitely the strongest part of the show, Tiffany stands out, especially when she meets her adult self and learns what really happens to her in the future.
Paper Girls Review
Camryn Jones plays Tiffany Quilkin onPaper Girls, a girl on the cusp of teenagehood who loves Math, science, and who dreams of attending MIT. In the comic book series, Tiffany plays a ton of video games, and while she's more focused on math and science in the TV show, she's still the same smart character. Tiffany is an excellent character, possibly one of the best on a TV show about teenagers, because she doesn't hide the fact that she's smart and savvy and knows who she is and what she wants. That's meaningful to see and it's great for a TV series to celebrate a character's love of learning, strong work ethic, and ambition.
While it's fun watching young Tiffany try to figure out the time traveling algorithm and focus on facts, figures, and data, it's when Tiffany meets the adult version of herself that things really kick into high gear. While all science-fiction TV shows explain the rules and guidelines of the worlds that they have set up, that might be the weakest part of Paper Girls as
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