The series spans 75 episodes (plus 8 specials) across four seasons. While mostly episodic, a loose progression exists:

Every episode is a short, fast-paced mockumentary (complete with talking-head confessional cuts). Barbie knows she’s fabulous. Her best friends—the sporty, sarcastic Nikki; the sweet, gullible Teresa; the quietly tech-genius Summer; and the hyper-enthusiastic, dolphin-obsessed Raquelle—all orbit her with a mix of admiration and gentle exasperation.

All episodes remain available on Netflix (in most regions) and YouTube, where a new generation continues to discover that the girl who has everything… also has the best comedic timing in Malibu.

In the sun-drenched, pastel-perfect hills of Malibu, there stands a structure that defies both architecture and logic: the Dreamhouse. It has a roller coaster for a staircase, a closet that generates outfits like a benevolent fashion volcano, and a pool that regularly hosts sea monsters. This is the world of Barbie: Life in the Dreamhouse , a web series that ran from 2012 to 2015 and redefined an icon.

The show goes big. “The Dreamhouse Grand Opening” (a re-opening of the house after a “slight mishap” with a giant slingshot) and “The Movie” (a feature-length special where they get trapped inside a video game). The finale, “The End (For Now),” ends with Barbie literally winking at the camera as the Dreamhouse rockets into space—a perfect, silly, self-aware conclusion.

The meta-humor deepens. “The Roof” is a bottle episode where the gang gets stuck on the Dreamhouse roof. “Spelling Bees” features a surprisingly tense spelling bee between Barbie and Raquelle. Ken gets a starring role in “Ken’s Movie: Martial Arts,” where he directs a film that is… incomprehensibly beautiful.