Jane’s strategy is brilliant. She doesn’t argue that her client is “healthy” or “trying to lose weight.” Instead, she argues that the client’s work performance was stellar, and the only variable was her body size. In the climactic courtroom scene, Jane delivers a powerful monologue about how the word “fat” has become a weapon—more offensive than any slur because it is used to deny humanity, competence, and dignity.
The episode’s title, “The ‘F’ Word,” has a double meaning. On the surface, it’s about “fat.” But deeper, it’s about —Grayson. Deb must watch Grayson move on, dating a slender, beautiful paralegal named Nikki. In a heartbreaking scene, Jane visits the cemetery where her old body (Deb’s body) is buried. She kneels at her own grave, whispering, “I miss you.” It’s a poignant moment of grief for the person she was.
The opposing counsel is none other than (Deb’s fiancé from her previous life, now Jane’s colleague and secret love). Grayson, unaware that Jane houses Deb’s soul, argues that fashion is about image, and the magazine has a right to curate its public face. This creates a delicious tension: Deb, who once lived for those very magazines, must now argue against the values she once worshipped. drop dead diva episode (season 1, episode 2)
This episode is not merely a follow-up; it is a mission statement. It forces Deb (inside Jane) to confront her own prejudices, her new reality, and the first major legal battle that echoes her personal transformation. The episode juggles two parallel narratives—a professional case and a personal crisis. The Legal Case: A Matter of Size Discrimination Jane’s law firm, Harrison & Parker, takes on a wrongful termination lawsuit. The client is a talented, plus-size woman who was fired from a high-profile fashion magazine. The magazine claims it was a “restructuring.” Jane suspects the truth: her client was fired because she was too fat to represent the brand’s image.
Jane wins. The jury acknowledges size discrimination as a form of sex discrimination (since women are disproportionately judged by appearance). It’s a landmark television moment for body positivity, long before the term went mainstream. The Personal Crisis: Deb Meets Her Mirror While fighting for her client, Deb-as-Jane faces her own reckoning. She is still obsessed with her old life, sneaking peeks at photos of her former thin body. She struggles to fit into Jane’s clothes, to walk in Jane’s shoes (literally—she trips in heels designed for a smaller foot), and to command a room without the armor of conventional beauty. Jane’s strategy is brilliant
This was revolutionary for network television in 2009. And it set the template for Drop Dead Diva ’s entire run: each week, a legal case would mirror Deb’s internal growth. Most TV shows take half a season to find their rhythm. Drop Dead Diva found its soul in Episode 2. “The ‘F’ Word” is funny, heart-wrenching, and intellectually sharp. It takes a potentially preachy topic and makes it personal. We don’t just understand that size discrimination is wrong—we feel Deb’s shame, then her pride, as she argues her first real case.
9.5/10 Best for: Anyone who has ever felt judged by their body, anyone who has lost themselves and is trying to find a new self, and anyone who loves a good courtroom underdog story. The episode’s title, “The ‘F’ Word,” has a
When Drop Dead Diva premiered in 2009, it arrived as a daring, quirky, and surprisingly profound legal dramedy. The premise was high-concept: a shallow, aspiring model named Deb dies in a car accident and, through a celestial clerical error, is reborn in the body of a brilliant, plus-size lawyer named Jane Bingum. Season 1, Episode 1 (“Pilot”) established the bizarre rules of this universe. But it is Episode 2, “The ‘F’ Word,” where the show truly finds its voice, tackling its central theme head-on: How does a woman who valued only thinness and beauty navigate a world that devalues a body like Jane’s?