American Bitch

"American Bitch" is the third episode of the sixth season of the American television drama series Girls and the 55th episode of the series overall. It is written by Lena Dunham, and directed by Richard Shepard. It aired on the HBO channel in the United States on February 26, 2017.

The episode focuses on Hannah (Dunham) who meets with a fictional writer, Chuck Palmer (Matthew Rhys), whom she recently wrote about concerning sexual misconduct allegations made against him. Palmer invites her to his New York City apartment where they talk about her story, his life and literature while also debating the allegations swirling around him. The episode tackles fame, wealth, privilege, consent, cancel culture, and power imbalances between men and women. It's the first bottle episode since Season 2's "One Man's Trash" (2013) with Patrick Wilson.

The episode received critical acclaim with praise for the writing and the performance by Matthew Rhys who received a nomination for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series. Due to the Academy Awards telecast, HBO made this episode available to watch on HBO Go and HBO Now ahead of Girls usual airtime of Sundays at 10 pm.

Summary
Hannah has a tense meeting with Chuck Palmer, an author she once greatly admired, about the disturbing allegations swirling around him. Together they debate the ethics of journalism, power imbalances and privilege. She notices that Palmer has a signed copy of the novel "When She Was Good" by Philip Roth. She mentions how it was rumored that the book's alternate title is "American Bitch". Palmer's apartment features a photo with him and Toni Morrison and a painting of Woody Allen, both prominently featured. Together they share a connection and bond over literature. He asks her to sit with him on the bed and he exposes himself to her. She is shocked and grabs his dick. Before she leaves the apartment his young daughter Miranda Palmer (Caroline Watters) arrives who wants to practice her flute playing. Hannah is introduced to her and Miranda asks if she can play for them. The episode ends with Hannah watching Chuck as he admires his daughter performing Rihanna's "Desperado" on her flute.

Cast

 * Lena Dunham as Hannah
 * Matthew Rhys as Chuck Palmer
 * Caroline Watters as Miranda Palmer

Production
Dunham said the story came about when discussing "the gray areas of power dynamics" and putting "Hannah in a scenario where she had to grapple with this intellectually". Executive producer Judd Apatow stated "what's interested in the episode is it's Palmer who thinks he's the one being used by the college students" and how the episode is about consent and how "somebody is abusing their charisma". Executive Producer Jenni Konner stated they wanted to explore the idea of what they think" and juxtaposition of the father admiring and caring for his daughter while unable to communicate with women. The episode is the first since Season 2's "One Man's Trash" in 2013 to feature only Hannah's character from the main cast. It was a two hander between Dunham and Patrick Wilson. The episodes director Richard Shepard told IndieWire, "The bottle episodes are extremely challenging and also extremely fun because you get to spend all this direct time with the actors and the characters..and you get to shift the cinematic style a little bit because of the nature of whatever it is. We do things that had not been done on the show before."

Critical reception
The episode received critical acclaim with Caroline Framke of Vox wrote "[it] isn’t so much about Hannah as about the inherent power imbalance between younger women and older men... Dunham’s script is sharp and pithy as per usual, but maybe the smartest thing “American Bitch” did was cast Rhys [who] manages to make Chuck both menacing and pathetic." Critic Emily Nussbaum of The New Yorker wrote of the episode, "It’s a power game that’s a little bit David Mamet’s Oleanna, a little bit Michael Chabon’s Wonder Boys, a little bit Apatow’s Funny People with some Clouds of Sils Maria. In certain ways, it’s a classic exchange between an older artist (rich, decadent, in print) and a younger artist (poor, moralistic, online)." She added, "[It] is a cunning episode; it’s a timely one, too". Amber Dowling of IndieWire, praised the structure and writing declaring, "The entire episode’s dialogue is sharp, smart and crackling; it would be possible to watch Rhys and Dunham verbally spar for hours. As the 27 minutes unroll, you see both sides of the argument"

Release
Due to the Academy Awards telecast on Sunday, HBO made this episode available to watch on HBO Go and HBO Now ahead of Girls usual airtime of Sundays at 10 pm.