When a work trip to New York extends into a lonely solo holiday, Maggie unexpectedly finds herself entering into a whirlwind romance.
Maggie and Birdy seek to rekindle their closeness with makeovers, baking cookies and trips down memory lane, only for tensions to finally explode in a big way.
The girls throw a queen-themed house party. It’s clear Birdy would rather be with Nathan and despite Maggie’s protestations she finally bails, leaving them to party without her.
Maggie decides to ‘grow-up’ by focusing on work and swearing off sex and booze. Driving everyone mad with her new ‘grown-up’ behaviour, events come to a head at the Heirs & Graces.
Struggling to come to terms with Birdy’s blossoming relationship, Maggie heads to her hometown for a messy and humiliating weekend that leads her to reevaluate her relationships.
In a 2012 London house-share, childhood best friends Maggie and Birdy — now in their 20s — experience bad dates, heartaches and humiliation. With flashbacks to suburban adolescence in the early noughties, the series begs the question: can platonic love survive romantic love as we grow up?