A Different World: The 30th Anniversary

After the success of the popular 1980’s sitcom, The Cosby Show, a spinoff show hits the airwaves that started off showcasing the college experience of Denise Huxtable. 30 years ago, on September 24th, 1987, A Different World was aired. The show starts off all about Denise, the daughter of both Heathcliff and Claire Huxtable who in the beginning struggles to find her own way in college life. She’s slacking off, grades not looking too good, she’s trying to find a job to pay off what she owes, and not staying focused on her studies, all the while, occasionally dealing with a southern belle who goes by the name Whitley Gilbert. Whitley is a bit of an uptight, snotty and spoiled young woman who comes from a family who has money. Later on she becomes the star of the show after the first season. As well as Whitley, Denise also puts up with a guy named Dwayne Wayne. He’s a stylish, skinny kid whose smart and very good at math but in the first season, he kind of comes off as annoying and a bit creepy the way he’s always in Denise’s face trying to get with her. After the first season, it was said that Denise drops out of Hillman to go traveling and the show focuses more on Dwayne and Whitley and then everyone else. As the show progresses, each episode gives the viewer a closer and closer anticipation of the friendship between Whitley and Dwayne. They went from hating one another to being an on and off couple to being husband and wife in the end. Besides their love affair, we also get a taste of the other characters on the show who are like the pieces of the puzzle on the show. Each character has their own uniqueness and way of shining on the screen with the way they all connect and made you believe that Hillman was an actual college and that you wanted to attend. There’s Dwayne Wayne’s close friend Ron Johnson, Freddie, Kim, Shaza Zulu, Jaleesa, the lost goes on. The show was important in a way that focused on black students being productive and positive college students with dreams while also touching on worldly topics and issues that mattered. Especially for black people. It was an overall positive show that made you laugh, cry, it was suspenseful, knowledgeable, insightful and powerful. It’s something that needs to be shown on television again today. Something so moving and enjoyable. 30 years later, the show is still just as popular as it was then. It was on Netflix a year or two ago and still being played on television with reruns of the episodes. It’s definitely my favorite sitcom of all time. One of the greatest.