She handles her reliance on medication with a mix of brutal honesty and dry humor, aiming to break the French taboo around mental illness. 3. The "Worth It" Factor

Unlike many sitcoms that treat sadness as a punchline, Désordres dives deep into:

To represent her depression, she uses a mysterious character that appears alongside her when she "thinks dark thoughts," as noted by Canal+.

The series is set in 2017 during the creation of her show Épilogue . It follows a fictionalized version of Foresti during the weeks she doesn't have her daughter (who is in joint custody). According to IMDb , the show explores the "beautiful mess" of her life where glamour rubs shoulders with routine, and laughter flirts with serious anxiety. 2. A Raw Look at Mental Health

It captures the "downs" of celebrity—the loneliness of a large apartment, the struggle for inspiration, and the disconnect between a public persona and private reality.

Foresti depicts her real-life struggles with solitude and the fear of death.

It manages to be funny without being a "comedy." It’s more of a dramedy that feels like a French cousin to shows like Better Things or Fleabag . Final Verdict