Riverdale May 2026
But for its fans, Riverdale was a revolution. It proved that teen shows didn't have to be realistic to be meaningful. It proved that camp, when done with complete sincerity, becomes art. It gave us the "CW aesthetic"—shadows, fog machines, and high-waisted skirts. And it launched the careers of its four leads into the stratosphere.
What they got instead was a fever dream. Riverdale
The original pitch document for Riverdale famously described the show as "a twisted, subversive take on Americana… think Blue Velvet meets Dawson’s Creek ." The CW, hungry for a successor to The Vampire Diaries , bit immediately. But for its fans, Riverdale was a revolution
More importantly, Riverdale was a show that took risks. Every season, it asked: What if we did the thing nobody expects? Sometimes it failed spectacularly (the Gargoyle King finale). Sometimes it soared (the "Jailhouse Rock" musical number). But it was never, ever boring. It gave us the "CW aesthetic"—shadows, fog machines,
When Riverdale premiered on The CW in January 2017, the world thought it knew what to expect. Based on the long-running Archie comics, audiences anticipated a lighthearted, nostalgic throwback to wholesome Americana—think malt shops, drive-ins, and love triangles without stakes.
The season opened with Archie, Betty, Veronica, and Jughead navigating the murder of the town’s golden boy. The show introduced its signature visual style instantly: "bubblegum noir." The colors were hyper-saturated—neon pinks, deep blues, and the red of Archie’s hair popping off every frame. The dialogue was stilted and theatrical, with teenagers speaking like 1940s noir detectives.

