Off Campus series creator Louisa Levy has strongly refuted claims of gender pay disparity on the hit Prime Video sports romance series. Based on Elle Kennedy’s Off-Campus book series, the show premiered on May 13, 2026, and was a huge success for Prime Video. It even replaced The Boys at the top spot on the streamer’s TV show charts.
Louisa Levy fires back at gender pay disparity allegations in Off Campus
Levy has publicly dismissed the claims of pay disparity between the show’s two leads. In the comment section of a clip shared on the Instagram page of In the Vault podcast, Levy responded that the above-mentioned claims were “far from correct.”
“Check your sources,” Levy wrote. “These numbers are far from correct. While this is absolutely an issue in the industry, as a female showrunner, I fight for gender pay parity in my cast.”
In the video, co-hosts Ali Gray and Shane Sutherland discussed the alleged pay disparity on Off Campus. The former claimed that Ella Bright was receiving $20 thousand per episode, while her Season 1 co-lead, Belmont Cameli, got $30 thousand per episode. Notably, Bright plays Hannah Wells in the show, and Cameli essays the role of Garrett Graham.
Besides creating the series, Levy serves as a co-showrunner on it alongside Gina Fattore. The plot of the inaugural season revolves around Hannah and Garrett. The former is a music major, and the latter a student-athlete. They meet, fall in love, and learn to navigate the complexities of adulthood together.
Prime Video renewed Off Campus for Season 2 in February 2026 even before its premiere. While Hannah and Garrett will appear in the sophomore season, they will not serve as the main characters. Instead, the focus will shift to the relationship between Stephen Kalyn’s Dean Di Laurentis and Mika Abdalla’s Allie Hayes. Off Campus Season 2 currently doesn’t have a release date.
Originally reported by Tamal Kundu on ComingSoon.net.
