Sisterhood, Safari & Serious Glow-Ups: Tiffany Haddish’s Goes Off Gives the Girls Trip Genre a Whole New Altitude
Streaming exclusively on Peacock
There’s girls-trip TV… and then there’s Tiffany Haddish’s version of what it can be.
The Emmy-winning comedian returns to the small screen with Goes Off, a Peacock Original reality adventure that follows her and her closest girlfriends across multiple African countries. Part travel docuseries, part heart-to-heart confessional, part comedy circus, the show gives audiences a front-row seat to a sisterhood that laughs hard, loves loud, and evolves in real time.

When Haddish and her crew—Selena, Sparkle, and her real-life sister—arrived for their press junket, they brought enough energy to light a studio lot. Jokes, side-eyes, and inside references were flying before anyone even hit “record.” This wasn’t a cast. It was a living, breathing group chat.
And when someone suggested the trip had “changed” them, a voice cut through with a grin:
“We’ve evolved, darling. We’ve evolved.”
That line could be the show’s thesis.
Africa Wasn’t Just a Backdrop—It Was a Revelation
Ask the group what surprised them most, and they all say the same thing: the people.
“Being around the people in Africa—they’re so loving,” one shared. “Not just in one place, in all the countries we visited.”
Tiffany had a mission beyond fun: she wanted to challenge assumptions about how Africa is portrayed onscreen.
“I wanted them to know there’s luxury in Africa… there’s every class of everything,” she said.
From five-star suites to the kind of coach-class journey that births lifelong jokes, the trip showed the full spectrum. And yes—every second is in the series.
A Reality Show That Actually Keeps It Real
Haddish is no stranger to the camera, but even she admits this experience stretched her.
“I live in front of the camera… but there were moments I was like, turn that camera off, because I’m cussing these people out right now.”
Translation: Goes Off doesn’t rely on manufactured drama—it captures the real moments, the raw ones, and the ridiculous ones.

Courage, Chaos, and Cliffs: The Growth Was Real
The group faced challenges that pushed them out of their comfort zones:
- One sister let go of her need to control every detail.
- Another confronted her fear of heights—“She stepped out on a limb, literally,” someone said.
- Tiffany carried the weight of planning the perfect experience. “I was excited but also stressed. I wanted to make sure we had an amazing experience.”
And when accommodations landed somewhere between “historic” and “dated,” the group spun it into comedy gold.
The Foundation of the Show? Sisterhood That’s Built to Last
Their definition of sisterhood boiled down to four words:
Love. Support. Bonding. Truth.
And they illustrated it beautifully—and hilariously:
Need someone to help clean your house? They’ll show up.
Need airport backup? “Sparkle might be like, girl, call that man!”
Need a home-cooked meal and emotional support? “If you want me to come over and cook, I’ll be there.”
Need someone to listen without judging? They consider it a love language.
This isn’t reality TV friendship—it’s real-world infrastructure.

No Kids. No Husbands. No Rules. Just Freedom.
“All girls, no husbands, no kids,” one said with a dreamy sigh.
That liberation—rare, delicious, necessary—fuelled the entire trip. And it radiates through the series.
Goes Off Is the Feel-Good Escape of the Season
The show blends adventure, vulnerability, and laugh-out-loud chaos with a sincerity rarely seen in unscripted television. It celebrates growth without forcing it, friendship without faking it, and the kind of joy that reminds viewers why sisterhood matters.
They didn’t return “changed.”
They came back evolved—and the evolution is contagious.
Where to Watch
Goes Off is streaming exclusively on Peacock, available to binge from your couch, your phone, or your next girls trip departure gate.






