Gossip Girldebuted long before streaming was a thing, which meant that catching the latest episode ofGossip Girlmeant watching it live when it aired on the CW between 2007 and 2012.
The show was must-see TV, partly because of its teen dramas and scandals, and partly because of itsincredible fashions which we’re still talking about today.
The show’s costume designer, Eric Daman, says (viaVanity Fair), “It was very clear from the beginning that we wanted to editorialize television and give it this high-fashion, international flair… when we came back with Season 2, so many designers were lining up and wanting to be a part of it they wanted their stuff on eitherBlake[Lively, who played Serena van der Woodsen] or Leighton [Meeser, who played Blair Waldorf].”

So while the show had questionable content, it has to be noted that the books were even more controversial.
Gossip Girl’s books were banned in libraries
Even if the show featured topics that made most parents die a little each time it flicked across the screen, it appeared to have nothing on theGossip Girlbooks written by Cecily Von Ziegesar.
While the book series kicked off in 2002, theAmerican Library Associationsays theGossip Girlbooks did not cause waves until the TV show premiered in 2007.

Parents, churches, and community leaders then decided to get the series banned from libraries because the young adult books addressed mature topics such as sex and drug use.
If you think parents might have overreacted, consider this: Naomi Wolf, a women’s rights advocate, called Von Ziegesar’s books “corruption with a cute overlay… [and that] sex saturates the Gossip Girl books…
This is not the frank sexual exploration found in a Judy Blume novel, but teenage sexuality via Juicy Couture, blase and entirely commodified” (viaBanned Books Week).
Ouch.
Gossip Girl’sproducer, Stephanie Savage, admits that adjustments had to be made to the book before it was aired on TV, and interestingly enough, that decision actually annoyed the book’s fans (viaEntertainment Weekly).
But since it didn’t really hurt the show’s success, you’ll just have to pick up the books to see exactly what the show left out.