Newark Star-Ledger's Scores
- TV
For 511 reviews, this publication has graded:
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50% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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48% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 4.2 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average TV Show review score: 63
| Highest review score: | The Handmaid's Tale: Season 1 | |
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| Lowest review score: | In the Motherhood: Season 1 |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 270 out of 270
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Mixed: 0 out of 270
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Negative: 0 out of 270
270
tv
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Alan Sepinwall
Doherty and Milano, together with some silly dialogue and plots, promise some good campy fun. The problems come whenever their third sibling, played by Holly Marie Combs ("Picket Fences"), is on screen. You see, Combs can actually act, and whenever she starts to emote, she gives the trashy proceedings a bit more reality than they can handle. [7 Oct 1998, p.39]- Newark Star-Ledger
Posted Jun 18, 2013 -
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Matt Zoller Seitz
NBC's half-hour slice of small-town life isn't perfect right out of the gate; few shows are. But it's so sure-footed and engaging that it would be a pleasure to see how it turns out. [7 Oct 2000, p.43]- Newark Star-Ledger
Posted Jun 13, 2013 -
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Alan Sepinwall
Nothing short of a TV miracle: a family show that's sweet, but not too syrupy, bitingly funny, but not mean-spirited and fun for viewers of all ages, without appealing to the blandest common denominator. [5 Oct 2000, p.37]- Newark Star-Ledger
Posted Jun 10, 2013 -
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Alan Sepinwall
If you enjoy seeing wealthy, petty people get their deserved comeuppance, this is the show for you. If you enjoy laughing, this is definitely the show for you - the funniest new comedy of the season by a wide margin...For a show about dumb, unfocused people, Arrested Development is wickedly smart and quick, willing to go anywhere for a good gag. [31 Oct 2003, p.49]- Newark Star-Ledger
Posted May 26, 2013 -
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Matt Zoller Seitz
For the most part, Oz is an awesome achievement - an alternately crude and elegant attempt to expand the boundaries of the one-hour drama. If it can avoid an over reliance on prison movie clichs, stay focused on the redemption theme and give its powerhouse cast more room to breathe, it could be one of the most important works ever aired on American television. [12 July 1997, p.29]- Newark Star-Ledger
Posted May 15, 2013 -
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Alan Sepinwall
The show's aura of jungle mysticism is so overblown it's hilarious. I love how the castaways have to kill rats for food and make fire with sticks, but the tribal council meetings take place on a lavish, obviously prefab jungle village set that looks like the Ewok treehouse city in "Return of the Jedi." (The million-dollar grand prize is sitting over in one corner of the set - a pile of cash in an open treasure chest. Very Scrooge McDuck.)...Asinine stuff - and intensely addictive. [2 June 2000, p.37]- Newark Star-Ledger
Posted May 7, 2013 -
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Alan Sepinwall
At a time when every TV comedy seems content to look and sound like every other TV comedy, any show that tries to break the mold deserves to be applauded. And a show like Sports Night that's snappy, well written, thought-provoking, and sometimes funny and moving at the same time deserves no less than a standing ovation. [22 Sept 1998, p.59]- Newark Star-Ledger
Posted May 5, 2013 -
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Alan Sepinwall
Can someone please wake up Charlie Sheen? I know he's tried to build an entire career, Dean Martin-style, on half-lidded apathy, but as one-third of the new CBS sitcom Two and a Half Men, he's practically comatose. [22 Sept 2003, p.T35]- Newark Star-Ledger
Posted Apr 2, 2013 -
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Matt Zoller Seitz
It's an absurdist comedy about criminal behavior and suburban life that gently mocks its targets while taking its characters and their emotions seriously. [9 Jan 1999, p.23]- Newark Star-Ledger
Posted Apr 1, 2013 -
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Matt Zoller Seitz
Hipsters will roll their eyes at the show's many cliches - decent small-town folk, cynical city slickers, the healing power of the great outdoors, etc. - but everyone else will be grateful. And fortunately, some of the performances are just odd and striking enough to reduce the sugar quotient. [16 Sept 2002, p.23]- Newark Star-Ledger
Posted Mar 20, 2013 -
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Alan Sepinwall
In a season overstuffed with crime dramas, Boomtown is one of the two or three best, alongside CBS' "Without a Trace" and "Robbery Homicide Division." It has complex, compelling characters, a terrific cast of actors and a beautiful feature film look. But it would have all those things even if the stories were told in strict chronological order. [27 Sept 2002, p.53]- Newark Star-Ledger
Posted Mar 18, 2013 -
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Alan Sepinwall
Felicity is very clearly targeted at the Clearasil set that worships at the altar of the WB's "Dawson's Creek," but if the show can maintain the charm and poignancy of the pilot, adults may also want to pay homage to television's newest star. [29 Sept 1998, p.47]- Newark Star-Ledger
Posted Mar 16, 2013 -
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Alan Sepinwall
At turns funny, terrifying and moving. [16 Nov 2004, p.73]- Newark Star-Ledger
Posted Mar 11, 2013 -
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Alan Sepinwall
Whedon tries to blend comedy, horror and action, a very combustible mixture - as evidenced by the wildly uneven "Buffy" movie - but he seems close to perfecting the formula here. [10 Mar 1997, p.31]- Newark Star-Ledger
Posted Feb 25, 2013 -
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Alan Sepinwall
The whole space cowboy gimmick shouldn't work, but Whedon and co-creator Tim Minear have managed to create a world where space stations and men on horseback can plausibly co-exist. Little touches like deliberately old-fashioned dialogue - one character describes the bar fight as "just an honest brawl between folk" - help immensely. [19 Sept 2002]- Newark Star-Ledger
Posted Feb 24, 2013 -
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Alan Sepinwall
When Doe is just exploring the depth and breadth of his great brain - playing a virtuoso rendition of "My Funny Valentine," showing off for a crowd of library patrons - John Doe feels like a show that a lot of people may want to get to know. [19 Sept 2002]- Newark Star-Ledger
Posted Feb 24, 2013 -
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Reviewed by
Alan Sepinwall
It's not a finished product yet, and Poehler and the writers need to find more ways to distinguish Leslie from Michael Scott, but funny forgives an awful lot.- Newark Star-Ledger
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Reviewed by
Alan Sepinwall
The show is so self-conscious of everything it’s doing that nothing has quite the effect its creators want it to have.- Newark Star-Ledger
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Reviewed by
Alan Sepinwall
It's not funny, it's not engaging, it's not in any way, shape or form a good match with "Party Down," and I would advise those of you watching that show tonight to change the channel abruptly as soon as the end credits are done rolling.- Newark Star-Ledger
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Reviewed by
Alan Sepinwall
It's at once a simple, R-rated office comedy about a bunch of people who would have nothing to do with each other if they didn't work together, and a pretty wicked satire of the quest for fame at all costs.- Newark Star-Ledger
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Alan Sepinwall
Treme may lack the obvious narrative engine that the cops vs. drug dealers narrative gave "The Wire," but it's already a smart, engaging, moving and funny series, one that in many ways is more accessible than its predecessor.- Newark Star-Ledger
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Alan Sepinwall
Smith's work in "The Eleventh Hour" showed us exactly what Moffat saw in that audition...."Eleventh Hour" is also a great build-up for Karen Gillan's immensely likable Amy Pond, who has by far the most interesting, emotionally resonant backstory of the modern companions.- Newark Star-Ledger
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Alan Sepinwall
Whether Tara is herself or someone else (including a new alter), "Tara" works as both a character drama and an absurdist family comedy because the characters are so well-drawn, and because what happened before isn't forgotten as the show moves forward.- Newark Star-Ledger
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Alan Sepinwall
Jackie remains watchable because of Falco's no-nonsense, weary performance, and because of the off-kilter comic brilliance of Merritt Wever as Jackie's bubbly, spastic protégé Zoey.- Newark Star-Ledger
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Alan Sepinwall
AMC’s "Breaking Bad" [is] still the best drama you’re not watching.- Newark Star-Ledger
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Alan Sepinwall
The pilot, in which Yost liberally borrows Leonard’s trademark lean dialogue from "Fire in the Hole," has a swagger to it, and also a sly sense of humor....Without Leonard’s writing to directly adapt, the later episodes are a mixed bag.- Newark Star-Ledger
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Alan Sepinwall
There’s no performance quite on par with Damian Lewis’s star turn as the quiet, decent company leader in "Band," but the three leads all take advantage of their showcase roles to craft characters that transcend both war movie cliches and the actors’ own mixed backgrounds.- Newark Star-Ledger
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Alan Sepinwall
Like the movie that inspired it, Parenthood isn’t an instant classic, but it’s smart and warm and knowing, and it casts its net so wide that at least part of it should connect with you.- Newark Star-Ledger
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Reviewed by
Alan Sepinwall
It’s a bland, interchangeable bunch, with most of them having a single identifiable trait.- Newark Star-Ledger
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Reviewed by
Alan Sepinwall
It was the usual schtick from Leno--which is probably just what his fans wanted to hear after he'd been out of late night for a year and off TV altogether for weeks--with jokes about the Olympics, Dick Cheney, and, of course, the flagging fortunes of the network he's on.- Newark Star-Ledger
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