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Cassie (Skins series 1)

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"Cassie"
Skins episode
Sid and Cassie sitting in the cafeteria at college
Episode no.Series 1
Episode 2
Directed byPaul Gay
Written byBryan Elsley
Original air date1 February 2007 (2007-02-01)
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
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"Tony"
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"Jal"
Skins series 1
List of episodes

"Cassie" is the second episode of the first season of the British drama television series Skins. It was written by Bryan Elsley and directed by Paul Gay.[1] It is told from the point of view of main character Cassie Ainsworth. It aired on E4 on 1 February 2007.[2]

Plot

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The episode begins with Cassie waking up after a party at Michelle's house. She then travels around the house and finds Anwar praying. She then finds Michelle's calendar and reminds Michelle to tell her that her mom is coming home back home that day. She kisses a sleeping Sid on the head before she leaves the house.

Cassie takes the bus home, she finds a post-it note on her back from the party that reads 'EAT'. She watches other patrons on the bus eat, including being offered a piece of chocolate from a child that sits opposite to her. Cassie comes home and helps her little brother Ruben as her parents ignore them, she is messaged to 'EAT' from an unknown number on her phone.

Cassie's father is preoccupied with painting her mother and she reminds them it's her last day in the clinic. Cassie is then picked up by Alan, her taxi driver, of which they are good friends. She puts weights in her undergarments to prove she has gained a half kilo of weight in order to leave the clinic while in the taxi, she is successful in her examination. In her group therapy, we learn Mad Twatter is still upset about Sid not paying him back for the weed he'd lost in the previous episode.

Back at college, Cassie sits with Sid in the cafeteria. Cassie expresses she likes Sid and trusts him enough to teach him how to look like she's eating when she's not. He thinks it's wrong about how she lies about eating. Then she explains how it's nobody business if she eats or not and how nobody cares, Sid claims that he does care. Cassie looks back at Sid's plate of fries they now spell 'EAT'. Cassie tells Sid how Mad is still upset about the missing money, Sid goes into crisis mode.

Sid, Tony and Chris all run into Angie, their Psychology teacher, in the staff showers, this arises tension between Chris and Angie. Sid then goes to Angie for advice on how to solve the debt. Cassie sits in English class as she receives another 'EAT' message on her phone and it is revealed that Mad Twatter will be the forthcoming substitute teacher for the class. Cassie gets another 'EAT' message and thinks it is from Sid as he put down his phone as soon as she walks out from college. We learn from Sid that Cassie hasn't been receiving any messages at all and that Sid was not sending them to her.

Cassie runs home, then calls Alan who shows up to a restaurant with her and encourages her to eat. The episode ends with Cassie eating a burger she'd ordered.

Soundtrack

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All the music featured in this episode.[3]

Reception

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"Cassie" is ranked No. 9 of the most highly rated (8.6) Skins episodes by IMDb.[4]

This episode was the first look in on Cassie's life and would reshape the show and it's fanbase. This episode has been of great criticism years after its initial premiere for its use of the visual representation of an eating disorder. Although seen as 'revolutionary' for even speaking on it, it 'glorifies' the disorder.[5] Cassie also gives a demonstration of how she avoids eating, giving teenagers a view into how to dedicate themselves to this lifestyle.[6]

References

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  1. ^ "E4.com - Skins, series 1, episode guides, episode 2: cassie". 17 December 2008. Archived from the original on 17 December 2008. Retrieved 10 December 2024.
  2. ^ Gay, Paul (1 February 2007), Cassie, Skins, Nicholas Hoult, Joe Dempsie, Mike Bailey, retrieved 10 December 2024
  3. ^ "Music guide: series 1, episode 2 - skins - E4.com". 4 October 2008. Archived from the original on 4 October 2008. Retrieved 10 December 2024.
  4. ^ Sterlin, Svetlana (6 September 2020). "Skins: 10 Best Episodes, Ranked According To IMDb". ScreenRant. Archived from the original on 24 March 2021. Retrieved 10 December 2024.
  5. ^ Leszkiewicz, Anna (25 January 2017). "Ten years on, how Cassie from Skins' eating disorder affected a generation of teenage girls". New Statesman. Archived from the original on 21 May 2024. Retrieved 10 December 2024.
  6. ^ Johnston, Emily (16 October 2020). "Tiktok needs to stop romanticizing eating disorders". The Vermont Cynic. Archived from the original on 17 April 2024. Retrieved 10 December 2024.