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Sasha and Esther Are the Best Couple
TV & Streaming

Sasha and Esther Are the Best Couple

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

[Editor’s note: The following story contains spoilers for “Nobody Wants This” Season 2, including its finale.]

Of the many pleasures in Netflix‘s smash rom-com series “Nobody Wants This,” Joanne’s (Kristen Bell) ability to see beyond her own petty foibles and romantic mishaps does not often rank. But when something is so obvious and so wrong that even Joanne can’t ignore it? Now we’re cooking.

In the fifth episode of the second season of the series, such a moment arrives in the most benign of places: a bowling alley. As Joanne squints and stares at her boyfriend’s sister-in-law Esther (Jackie Tohn), we also squint, stare, and labor to see what’s different. “I mean, are we just, like, not gonna talk about this?,” a gobsmacked Joanne asks Esther, Noah (Adam Brody), and Sasha (Timothy Simons). “You got bangs!”

Andrea Gibson and Megan Falley appear in Come See Me in the Good Light by Ryan White, an official selection of the 2025 Sundance Film Festival. Courtesy of Sundance Institute | photo by Brandon Somerhalder.

Don’t sniff: As Joanne immediately notes, such a snip signals a “major life transition.” And Esther? Oh, she’s going through it.

In its first season, the Erin Foster-created series was repeatedly called out for its depictions of Jewish women, including Esther who, at best, reads as abrasive. At worst? She’s a damaging stereotype: a demanding shrew, a gossip, and a meddler. And it didn’t help matters that she was pitted against a sassy blonde in the form of Joanne’s sister, Morgan (Justin Lupe), who enjoyed a flirty friendship with Esther’s husband Sasha that, quite frankly, seemed to take everyone by surprise.

That included Foster herself, who was quick to quash chatter about the two “loser siblings,” telling The Hollywood Reporter in October 2024 that, for the series’ second season, “We’re going to wrap up their weird ‘Is it romantic?’ thing. Because we want to see them together in Season 2, hanging out. We want to see Esther. I think we went down that road enough that now we’re going to pull back and reposition so we can have them all in scenes together without [Morgan] being, like, a full homewrecker.”

Nobody Wants This. (L to R) Timothy Simons as Sasha, Jackie Tohn as Esther, Justine Lupe as Morgan in episode 202 of Nobody Wants This. Cr. Erin Simkin/Netflix © 2025
‘Nobody Wants This’ERIN SIMKIN/NETFLIX

No, Morgan is not a “full homewrecker” this season — not even half a homewrecker! or a quarter of one! — and while audiences might initially miss the spark of Morgan and Sasha’s bond, it’s eventually Esther whose charm and sass prove to be the best foil for Sasha. (Of note: This season has added a pair of new showrunners in Jenni Konner and Bruce Eric Kaplan.)

That doesn’t mean it’s all sunshine and rainbows, though.

Esther has been softened this season, affording her a bit more grace as she and Sasha navigate some rough waters. And while the turns their relationship take are heartbreaking, there is something infinitely more satisfying about watching a long-term couple hash out their problems in a series that is built on the joy of watching a new couple try to work things out.

In the Season 2 opener, Joanne and Noah opt to throw their first joint dinner party, an extremely literal way to join their disparate friend groups and further meld their lives. Of course, some of those party guests already know each other, like Morgan, Sasha, and Esther, and the latter two bicker beforehand about how to best approach the Morgan-sized elephant in the room. Esther, so comfortable being in charge, even coaches Sasha on how to say hello to the woman.

And yet. And yet. When the trio descend on Noah’s house, they’re almost immediately pushed into a single room together to hash things out. Morgan is relaxed. Sasha hopes for a threesome. And Esther? She’s something else. Esther, so fired up in the first season, comes to release her anger. She’s just sad about the flirtation, she tells Sasha. But her sadness isn’t necessarily the result of her getting over it, but maybe fully getting around it.

No one can deny it: Morgan and Sasha enjoyed a fun and, yes, flirty relationship, “I’m fun!,” Esther yelps when Sasha dares to invoke the f-word when describing his bond with another woman in the first episode of this season. It’s maybe that element that hurts the most: that by thinking someone else is fun, Sasha is showing that he thinks Esther is not. Esther tries her damndest to prove her fun bonafides early in the season: dancing alone at that horrible dinner party, changing up her Purim costume (from her classic Queen Esther to a sexy cat get-up, all pleather and fake whiskers), and opting for those damn bangs.

By Valentine’s Day, Sasha is trying too: taking Esther to a dance class, after she mentioned all the things she can’t wait to do when they become empty nesters in just five years (dancing, moving to a cool neighborhood, sleeping in on Sundays). But as sweet as the gesture is, it doesn’t quite land. In the following episodes, that becomes a trend.

As Morgan and Sasha chat it up at Noah’s family’s Purim party, a sad-eyed Esther stands off to the side, quietly watching the interaction. (It’s a far cry from earlier this season, when Esther demanded that Sasha spend just two minutes in Morgan’s car with his fellow “loser sibling” when she shows up at their home begging for relationship advice.) When Joanne strides over and asks Esther if she wants her to break it up, she says no.

And when Joanne asks her if she’s mad, she says no again. She means it.

Toning down Esther’s abrasiveness certainly helps batter back criticisms of her character, but there’s also some compelling character work here: It’s not just Esther loosening up about Sasha and Morgan, it’s about her actually not caring. Jealousy might be a bad look, but at least it’s a passionate response. Esther’s apathy? That’s really scary.

Nobody Wants This. (L to R) Jackie Tohn as Esther, Timothy Simons as Sasha in episode 203 of Nobody Wants This. Cr. Erin Simkin/Netflix © 2025
‘Nobody Wants This’ERIN SIMKIN/NETFLIX

As the distance between Sasha and Esther begins to grow, we learn more about their romantic origin story, which further clarifies Esther’s reactions to Morgan. When Sasha attempts to pass off his bond with Morgan as being purely a friendship, Esther reminds him that they too were once “just friends” … until they weren’t. Esther isn’t using their beginnings as a weapon, but as a lesson.

We also learn that Esther and Sasha married quickly — the undercurrent being “before they were ready to” — when Esther got pregnant with their daughter Miri. While Noah and Joanne fight constantly about the ways in which they’ve acted in previous relationships (a similar problem befalls Morgan and Dr. Andy too), it seems that Sasha and Esther have no other basis for their quibbles — their marriage is their only real point of reference.

A last-ditch effort to bond them — as inspired by Sasha and Noah’s perpetually meddling mother Bina (Tovah Feldshuh) — results in a quick flirtation with having another kid. But Esther doesn’t want that. That’s when she gets the bangs. That’s how bad this all is. And when she tells Sasha that she doesn’t want to try for another kid? The pain she feels, that Sasha feels, that the audience feels? It stings.

Noah and Joanne’s problems are myriad, but they all stem from one central conflict — itself the very backbone of this entire series and Foster’s own experiences — regarding their religious affiliations. No one who has watched all two seasons and 20 episodes of “Nobody Wants This” could possibly labor under the delusion that, if Joanne simply converted to Judaism, everything would be perfect, but it sure would sew up some bigger problems right quick.

Sasha and Esther’s problems are both more nebulous and more painful. There’s something wrong here, but no one can quite name it. That doesn’t mean it’s not obvious. And that doesn’t mean it’s not threatening their relationship. By the time the season finale rolls around, and Esther and Sasha (major spoiler alert) break it off, or at least opt to take a break from their marriage, it feels like the only right course of action. It’s also the one that hurts the most.

Consider this: Noah and Joanne know who they are, and they’re trying to figure out the ways in which they can fit together. But by the end of Season 2, the compatibility question of an entirely different couple has taken center stage. Sasha and Esther don’t know who they are, and that makes it impossible for them to fit together. That’s real heartbreak.

All episodes of Season 2 of “Nobody Wants This” are now streaming on Netflix.

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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Justine Lupe as Morgan in episode 202 of Nobody Wants This.
TV & Streaming

Justine Lupe on Morgan and Sasha

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

[This story contains MAJOR spoilers from Nobody Wants This season two.]

Justine Lupe returned for Nobody Wants This season two with a love story of her own. But it came with a twist.

The return of the hit Netflix rom-com saw Morgan (Lupe) bringing home her therapist, Dr. Andy (Arian Moayed), and they embark on a whirlwind romance that seems too good to be true — and, by the finale, she learns that it was. Morgan rushing into her new relationship was a reaction to feeling left behind after seeing her sister, Joanne (Kristen Bell), fall in love with Noah (Adam Brody, which creates friction between her and Joanne.

“That’s an intense thing to feel, that the person you love and align with is not in their authentic self,” Lupe tells The Hollywood Reporter.

In the end, Morgan breaks it off at their engagement party. “Doing it at a party is no bueno,” Lupe tells THR. However, she admits that Morgan, “just wants to grab her confidence by the horn and take care of business by breaking up with him.”

Also ending up single at the end of the season is Sasha (Timothy Simons) — and Noah and Joanne, briefly, before they ultimately get back together, like the season one finale — after Esther (Jackie Tohn) has a change of heart and says she needs time to find herself and what she wants. As Sasha and Morgan’s friendship continued to grow throughout this season, the question remains: Will Sasha and Morgan ever date?

Below, Lupe tells THR what’s next for Morgan as she reflects on her growth throughout this season, working with guest star Leighton Meester (who is married to Brody) and unpacks Morgan’s possible romance with Sasha.

***

What was your reaction to reading the script and finding out that Morgan was going to have a love interest this season? And then, what was your reaction to finding out that love interest was going to be her therapist?!

Excitement on both counts — glee and a little bit of nervousness about hoping I could do the character justice, and that the writers would not regret that they gave me this much real estate to play with as the character. (Laughs.) But the thing that I felt most was just pure excitement.

Why did it feel important for Morgan to break up with Dr. Andy at the engagement party?

She just was so down to the wire. We’re getting really close to the moment, and, I mean, doing it at a party is no bueno. It’s no good. (Laughs.) It’s painful, and that’s what makes it kind of fun. These people are all very reactive and very impulsive. But in the moment, her mom gives her this strength she didn’t previously have. Her mom is one person most of the time. In his circumstance, she’s so desperate to protect her child from making a mistake that she steps into being a real mama bear and says, “Hey, listen, get your shit together. You don’t want to make this a mistake. This is a big thing that I did, and I don’t want you to do this, too.” It means a lot to Morgan in that moment. Seeing her mom rise into this different version of herself is really impactful, and there’s something incredibly motivating about it, so she just wants to grab her confidence by the horn and take care of business by breaking up with him. That being said, I don’t think that an engagement party is the way to go with a breakup. (Laughs.)

The tension is higher this season between Morgan and Joanne. What’s deep at the heart of their relationship that’s driving this friction?

For Morgan, it’s the threat of losing her relationship with her sister to this new relationship. This whole season for Morgan is a reaction to her sister finding love and her feeling left behind, and her feeling a bit of an identity crisis and going, “What is my life and who am I and where am I going to end up and where’s my husband and where’s my love?” Because of that, she rushes into something that’s not real, not authentic — and Joanne can feel that. That’s an intense thing to feel that the person you love and align with is not being their authentic self, and I think Morgan is fighting so hard to feel OK and Joanne is fighting so hard to prove to Morgan that what she’s doing is not authentic that it creates a lot of tension between them. The whole thing is about caring about each other. Morgan caring about her relationship with Joanne changing, and Joanne caring about Morgan ruining her life because she’s jumping into something that is not gonna be good for her in the end.

Justine Lupe as Morgan, Kristen Bell as Joanne and Leighton Meester as Abby in Nobody Wants This season two.

Erin Simkin/Netflix

Leighton Meester came in as a guest star this season and brought so much fun energy to episode five. How did you, Kristen and Leighton approach those comedic moments together? 

You know, we didn’t talk about them. We all kind of know what that energy is. It was so well written. Leighton had built such a specific and fun character that we were like, “OK, let’s just play the circumstances of what’s going on and who this woman is and how we would honestly react with this kind of energy.” We all love Leighton. She’s so awesome and fun and talented that it was a very easy fit. She just slipped right into the whole thing and it was a blast. We really leaned into what was on the page and what Leighton had created as a character. It was a lot of fun.

Now that you and Sasha are both single, would you want Morgan to explore that relationship romantically?  

I think Morgan knows — and I know — that Sasha is going through something deeply upsetting and deeply life-changing, and that there’s something really substantial to what he’s going through right now. At the end when she says, “Sasha, you’re a good guy.” After, he says, “Hey, if she thinks I’m going to wait around for her, then she’s right.” I think Morgan is earnestly saying you’re a good guy in that moment and their friendship has evolved into something that’s very supportive and platonic. They’re each other’s partners in a specific way that’s not romantic in that moment. So I don’t know where it’s gonna go, but right now he’s got some healing to do and so does Morgan. I don’t have any hopes because I think no matter what happens, it will be fun between them. Instinctively, I’m like, “You guys just support each other as friends because I actually think that you could be very healing presences for each other.”

Do you think, though, that sometimes the best relationships can start from friendships? You guys do have an undeniable chemistry.

Totally. And if it ends up there, I get it and I can see that. But I also think in this moment, she just broke up with someone where she rushed into a chaotic [relationship], she’s clearly not in her right mind in this season. She has soul searching to do and some self-confidence to gain and stabilizing to do as a human. He has to really process what’s just happened with his wife and mother of his child. So I think rushing into a romantic thing…. I mean, this is just my opinion as an audience member. As an actor, I would be thrilled to do anything. Tim is my favorite person. He’s really one of my best friends now, and I would truly love to sit on a block with him and say nothing for like 15 hours in a scene. I’d be happy just to read the phone book with Tim. So whatever happens, I’m down. But as an audience member, I appreciate that they’re in this moment and that it could, down the line, evolve into something else, but right now, they’re just being really good friends to each other.

The ending very much insinuated that Joanne will finally convert, as we see her and Noah get back together. What is your take on the ending and what do you hope to see for their future?

I felt relief. This has been the friction that’s underneath all of the idiosyncrasy. There’s a lot of compromise. A lot of negotiating. There’s a lot of friction between the two of them in these moments post deciding to get into this relationship. That’s really interesting and we all can relate to once you agree to be in a relationship and you’re off the honeymoon high that you’re like, “Oh, and now we have to navigate these little things.” And this is the big underlying question underneath all that: Is this gonna happen? Can we do this? Are you interested in doing this? I just thought it was beautiful.

Jackie Tohn’s monologue as Esther about what Judaism is and what the feeling behind Judaism is and what the essence of what it means to be Jewish, I found it so compelling. I loved that monologue and I loved that there’s a moment that Joanne clicks into understanding that this is something that feels right to her. I felt that she honestly understood, [that] I actually want to do this and I actually want to convert. So, for me, the ending was incredibly satisfying and romantic. It didn’t feel muscled because of the tracks that they laid throughout the season. I was really excited that they both came together at the end.

Timothy Simons as Sasha, Jackie Tohn as Esther and Lupe as Morgan in Nobody Wants This season two.

Erin Simkin/Netflix

In addition to Leighton, this season saw some great guest stars, including Seth Rogen. But who are some other dream guest stars you’d like to see in a potential season three? 

Lynn (Stephanie Faracy), my mom’s best friend on the show is named Goldie, and every time they say Goldie, like, “Oh, she’s doing shrooms with Goldie. This is what she does on her birthday.” I think of Goldie Hawn and so, I would just love to have Goldie Hawn on the show. I think she’s brilliant and fun and there’s something about her playing Lynn’s best friend that very much works.

Since the show has filmed, you’ve gotten married and become a parent. Has that changed your perspective on how you view the relationships in the show at all, and in what ways?

No, to be honest, it hasn’t changed. I have an incredible partner who is an incredible person to date. So, if anything, it’s fun to watch this thing that feels very aspirational and inspirational. People are like, “But does it exist?” And to be cheering on the sidelines, “It does exist!” My husband’s taught me a lot about healthy partnership and the ability to support one another and help each other evolve. These are all things that are valuable about the show. This show really explores two fully realized adults trying their best in a non-toxic way to date each other, even with all their flaws. They’re really working on being the best versions of themselves and trying to show up for the relationship. It’s something that I feel like my partner is incredibly good at. I have a lot of girlfriends who are single and they’re in their late 30s and they’re like, “Will I find the person? And are there nice guys out there? Do these people exist that treat each other well?” The thing that my life brings to this whole narrative is me feeling like, “Yeah, there are good guys out there and they can behave nicely and it can go well and it can be smooth.” So, I like that the show has a relationship that’s representative of that.

***

Nobody Wants This season two is now streaming all episodes on Netflix. Read THR’s cover story on season two.

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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