The Oc - Season 1 !!link!!

The first season of is widely considered a defining pop-culture phenomenon of the early 2000s, blending high-stakes teen melodrama with self-aware humor and social commentary [11, 21]. Review Summary: Season 1

Ryan was all leather jackets and stoic silence, a stark contrast to Seth Cohen The OC - Season 1

Above all, Season 1 of The OC is a show about the performance of self. Everyone is playing a role: Julie the socialite, Jimmy the good guy, Marissa the damaged princess, Summer the superficial brat (until she reveals her intelligence), and even Seth the ironic outsider. The only characters who refuse to perform are Ryan, who is constitutionally incapable of artifice, and Sandy, who is too old and too principled to bother. The show’s defining visual motif is the “California” montage, set to the haunting Phantom Planet theme song—a series of sun-drenched images of beautiful people living beautiful lives. But the episodes themselves constantly subvert those images. The sun sets; the parties end; the drunk girls vomit in the driveway. The OC, in Schwartz’s vision, is a state of mind as much as a place: a beautiful prison where the only escape is through genuine human connection. The first season of is widely considered a