Cheer Season 2 Was a Rocky Reckoning; Can the Show Ever Bounce Back?
Photo Courtesy of Netflix
When we last left Navarro two years ago, the future was looking bright for our sparkly, strapping young cheerleading heroes: not only did they take home the win in Daytona, but many of them were catapulted into fame overnight. Cheer Season 1 was one of the last major cultural phenomena of our pre-pandemic lives due to the strong audience connection with the true story of underdogs with the passion to achieve their dreams and the team’s function as a “chosen family” for the kids, many of whom come from rough backgrounds. Greg Whiteley’s Netflix docuseries was nominated for six Emmys, taking home three for outstanding cinematography, editing, and overall achievement in an unstructured reality program. In January 2020, one would have been hard pressed to turn on the TV or scroll through social media without seeing the smiling, upbeat faces of coach Monica Aldama and her squad of celebrity cheerleaders, including Gabi Butler, Morgan Simianer, Lexi Brumback, La’Darius Marshall and Jerry Harris, the latter of whom is now notably infamous for his incarceration as he awaits trial for allegations of sexual misconduct against minors. Knowing what we know now, recapturing the unique, invigorating energy of the first season was always going to be a futile effort, despite the showrunners’ good faith attempts.
Season 2, which premiered in January, opens with a surface level exploration of the Cheer crew’s rapid ascent to their 15 minutes of fame. While their appearances on Ellen, Good Morning America, and pretty much every other talk show on the planet brought them money, fame and followers, the intense pressure these young adults faced, and continue to face, under the public eye is worth investigating—but is unfortunately left mostly untouched by the showrunners.
The first episodes of Season 2 also introduce us to the new kids on the Navarro block (Maddy Brum, Brooke Morosca, Gillian Rupert, Cassadee Dunlap) as well as Navarro’s rivals down the road, the Trinity Valley Community College cheer team (namely coaches Vontae Johnson and Khris Franklin), but thematically these episodes don’t go beyond what was already seen in Season 1. Rookies and vets alike experience the epic highs and lows of making mat or not, everyone has a traumatic backstory that ends with cheerleading as their ultimate salvation, and of course everyone desperately wants to win big at Daytona. Even with the addition of these new characters, the first four episodes offer too few revelations to justify the run time; the ideas are frankly too repetitive.
But a dark shift occurs for our heroes with Episode 5, titled “Jerry,” when the bad news just won’t stop crashing down around them and everything happens all at once. First, in March 2020, the coronavirus pandemic hits (maybe you’ve heard of it?), canceling Daytona 2020 only a few weeks before competition and taking away everything the team had been working so hard for. COVID-19 also makes team bonding a lot more difficult, as the kids are more isolated in their separate dorms (although in a cute moment, many of them are shown adopting quarantine pets to cope with the stress and disappointment).
Next, Monica leaves the team with zero warning in order to compete on Dancing with the Stars (she placed 10th), leaving the team with much less experienced assistant coach, Kailee Peppers; it’s not Kailee’s fault, but every Cheer fan worth their salt knows Navarro’s main appeal comes from the chance to learn and grow under Mama Aldama’s mentorship, so the kids’ deep disappointment at Monica’s absence is certainly understandable. Aldama’s jarring exit also causes an ugly public rift between her and longtime Navarro vet La’Darius Marshall; with their relationship functioning as more of a mother/son dynamic in both of their lives, it makes their split all that much more painful to witness.
And finally, right as Monica is about to make her Dancing with the Stars debut in September 2020, Navarro cheer is unceremoniously shaken by scandal: it’s abruptly announced that America’s Sweetheart Jerry Harris is under FBI investigation for soliciting sexually explicit photos and sex from minors. Of course, the showrunners’ handling of this was the most anticipated moment of Season 2; how would the surprise follow-up to such a genuinely “cheerful,” inspiring season of television address such a repugnant, pervasive issue?