You've Got Female is the eighth episode in Season 1 of Sydney to the Max. It first aired on March 22, 2019 to 0.52 million viewers.[1]
Contents
Plot
Sydney organizes a school protest for clubs to be more inclusive of women; Young Max befriends a skater girl, but is conflicted because the Dog Boys don’t allow girls in their crew.
Cast
Main Cast
- Ruth Righi as Sydney Reynolds
- Ava Kolker as Olive Rozalski
- Jackson Dollinger as Young Max Reynolds
- Christian J. Simon as Leo Webb
- Ian Reed Kesler as Adult Max Reynolds
- Caroline Rhea as Judy Reynolds
Recurring Cast
- Oliver Alexander as Josh
- Rizwan Manji as Vice Principal Virmani
Special Guest Cast
Guest Cast
- Wyatt Walter as Riccoli
- Keyon Bowman as Miles
- Mac Jarman as Griffin
- Helena Assis as Yolanda
- Gilbert Aguirre as Jake
Trivia
- The title is a play on the popular email provider AOL's log-on greeting, "You've got mail" and the 1998 film of the same name. Also, The Thundermans had a title with this pun. Their episode was called "You've Got Fail".
- Ruth Righi stated that she cannot wait for fans to see this episode, and according to her, her character Sydney takes a stand for women's rights and finds her passion.[3]
- Siena Agudong from Nickelodeon television series Nicky, Ricky, Dicky & Dawn and Star Falls guest stars in this episode as Brittany.
- In this episode, the same customer at Just Fun and Games which wants a CD comes for it. In Can't Dye This, he wanted a dinosaur eraser.
- The most challenging Season 1 scene that Jackson Dollinger said he had to do was when he had to run back and forth to try to impress both the Dog Boys and a skater girl simultaneously.[4] He was most likely referring to this episode.
- It's implied that Max and Brittany never talked again about the events of finding out Max lied to her.
- It's also implied "The Dog Boys" also held a grudge against Max.
- This is a special episode about women's rights.
- The scene with Sydney and Max eating cake was used for the theme song just before Ruth Righi's credit, and stayed ever since.
- Likewise, the scene before with Sydney finishing her bass line was used for Seasons 1 and 2.
- Moral: Everyone should be included, no matter the gender.