After eight seasons, it’s started to become too easy to spot Curb Your Enthusiasm’s patented ironic twists and callback gags coming a mile away.
Considering its tepid ratings and poisonous critical reception last winter, that a second season of The Marriage Ref exists is bewildering.
Louie is smart, cinematic, and bitterly honest.
The show never really succeeds at being anything other than a fitfully amusing imitation of Curb Your Enthusiasm.
The Pee-Wee Herman Show is manic, crazy, and ,most of all, a whole lot of, ahem, “fun.”
In season two, the show delves more into the characters’ pasts, finding out how they all got to be such emotional train wrecks.
Perfect Couples is as Wonder bread as they come,
It’s hard to be shocked by a television show when you live in a world where you feel as if you’ve seen everything.
Outsiders are at the heart of the fifth and final season of Friday Night Lights, a show whose tepid ratings have made it a bit of an outsider itself.
Modern Family manages to be warm and heartfelt without making you sick to your stomach.
If countless comic books and superhero movies haven’t made it clear enough for you yet: Having super powers can be kind of a drag.
Justin Halpern’s life must be awful.
The duo has a refreshingly frank take on the world and neither cares if their beliefs offend anyone’s precious sensibilities.
There are three flavors of Gordon Ramsay, and it’s a matter of taste which of his shows you’ll enjoy the most.
This intensely amusing show outlines the struggles we face as we try to shape ourselves into some abstract idea of adulthood.
Ugly Americans’s interesting setting is just sort of there for the sake of being weird.
It’s everyday childlike things mixed with perverse absurdities that keeps South Park grounded and funny.
This is a good excuse for those late to the party to familiarize themselves with the show.
Caprica seems vaguely ashamed of its sci-fi roots.
It’s hard to believe that the spy comedy Chuck came so close to cancellation just a few short months ago.