I really enjoyed this book. I had a lot of fun with it, and I learned a decent amount as well. It was compulsively readable, and I finished it in a day. As a Film/TV major, I think this was a valuable book to read, and as a Grey’s fan, it was just super fun. I think that if you’re interested in working in TV, this is also a good book to read, whether or not you like Grey’s at all. It gives you a really good look at how a writer’s room operates, how stories break, the overall bureaucracy and how network execs influence who stays and who goes in a show, etc. And for Grey’s fans, this is something I would definitely recommend because it’s pretty juicy, and like Daisy Jones, it’s written as an oral history, and different people’s accounts of the same event/situation vary, so it’s interesting and authentic in that sense.
My only real gripe with this book is the author refers to Shonda Rhimes as "Yale-educated" when she went to Dartmouth, when literally everyone knows she went to Dartmouth 🤦🏽♀️.