You may get the feeling, watching Netflix’s “Tuca & Bertie,” that you’ve seen these two birds somewhere before. How could you not? The series, which arrives Friday, is created by the “BoJack Horseman” producer and artist Lisa Hanawalt. It shares with “BoJack” a similar look and a roster of talking, paycheck-earning, occasionally depression-spiraling anthropomorphic animals.

But there’s another similarity to a recent TV great. This buddy/birdie comedy, pairing an extroverted, body-positive toucan and an introverted, ambitious song thrush, brings back a kind of yin-yang feminist friendship that departed when Abbi Jacobson and Ilana Glazer left Comedy Central earlier this spring.

Farewell, “Broad City”; hello, bird city. Or rather, Bird Town, the kaleidoscopic metropolis where Tuca (Tiffany Haddish) is moving upstairs from her former roomie Bertie (Ali Wong), as Bertie moves in with Speckle (Steven Yeun), an architect so chipper and straight-arrow he has an “I Actually Like Mondays” mug.

The two pals are 30 years old, the crux age for asking, or avoiding, what-am-I-doing-with-my-life questions. (The last season of “Broad City” kicked off its final, moving-on phase with Abbi’s thirtieth birthday.) Tuca’s more of an avoider, working temp gigs, cashing checks from a wealthy aunt (Jenifer Lewis) and living by the philosophy, “Nothing belongs to anyone.”