Benito Skinner built Overcompensating on the specific discomfort of pretending to be someone you’re not. Season 2, it turns out, will test that idea quite literally. Speaking at Prime Video’s Obsessed Fest on Saturday, the creator and star revealed he plays two characters in the upcoming second season of the collegiate comedy, teasing that “something sinister” is on the way.
He declined to identify the second role beyond that. The double-casting is a notable shift for a show rooted in personal autobiography — Skinner’s character Benny is a thinly veiled version of his own experience coming out as gay during his time at Georgetown University.
Season 2 also brings several new faces, including Tom Francis as Declan Bishop, Aisha Dee as Naomi, and AnnaSophia Robb as Chels, while series regular Holmes is upped to a full-time cast member as the fan-favourite party girl Hailee. Skinner also confirmed that DJ Zedd will guest star in a spring break episode, performing “Clarity” in what he described as inspired, in part, by the Fyre Festival. Composer Amber Bain of The Japanese House returns to score the season alongside Alex Summers.
Prime Video renewed the series in September 2025, with writer’s rooms beginning that July. The first season, produced with A24, arrived in May 2025 to strong critical reception — earning a 94% score on Rotten Tomatoes, with critics praising its “disarmingly sweet core” and calling Skinner “the real deal.” The show features an unusually dense Charli XCX soundtrack, with the pop star serving as executive producer and contributing more than 30 songs.
The series traces Benny through his freshman year at the fictional Yates University, where he masks his identity by performing straight masculinity around a campus fraternity culture. The show was developed from a live comedy show Skinner first performed in 2018, with the television script taking four years to write. Jonah Hill is among the executive producers, though he does not appear on screen.
The dual-role tease signals Skinner has ambitions to push the show’s tone into stranger territory for its second run — a departure that could reward the audience that stuck with the first season, and potentially bring in new viewers curious about where a creator willing to describe his own project as having “something sinister” is headed.




















































