Pittsburgh Post-Gazette's Scores
- TV
For 1,785 reviews, this publication has graded:
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42% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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54% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 7.3 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average TV Show review score: 60
| Highest review score: | Mrs. America: Season 1 | |
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| Lowest review score: | Killer Instinct: Season 1 |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 868 out of 868
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Mixed: 0 out of 868
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Negative: 0 out of 868
868
tv
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Rob Owen
With the passage of time — all the characters look older, some more world-weary than others — there’s an elegiac quality to the tone of the whole piece as we see in the eyes of some characters the contemplation of what might have been and the quiet acceptance in some that their lives are drawing to a close. Knowing that series creator and the film’s writer, David Milch, 74, now suffers from Alzheimer’s disease, makes the whole endeavor feel even more personal and acute.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Jun 3, 2019
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Rob Owen
The new season, written by series creator Neil Cross, has multiple callbacks to season one (the denouement brings things full circle) and fills in the blanks on where Alice has been and on her relationship with Luther, perhaps with too much information at times (allusion and mystery works better for their relationship than flat-out explanation).- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Jun 3, 2019
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Rob Owen
Mr. Quinto is creepy from the get-go. As Manx ages backward, he remains disturbing even as he comes to resemble a contemporary Quinto. ... But all that effort does little to make “NOS4A2” compelling television. The stories are disconnected at the outset and Vic’s home life is one-note rote.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted May 30, 2019
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Rob Owen
American Princess” feels like it wants to be a “My Name is Earl”-style coterie of oddball characters but once it introduces the main cast over the first two episodes it does little with them that’s funny.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted May 28, 2019
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Rob Owen
Showrunners Kelly Souders and Brian Peterson, veterans of “Under the Dome” and “Smallville,” sprinkle in enough science to balance the crazier elements of “The Hot Zone,” Peak TV’s version of a summer disaster flick.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted May 23, 2019
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Rob Owen
Six hours may be an hour too many given the repetitive nature of the plot (the required mission count rises, then rises again and again) but star Christopher Abbott makes for a likeable, relatable Yossarian. It’s sometimes difficult to tell the supporting flyers apart but as the episodes unroll their personalities come through a bit more.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted May 13, 2019
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Rob Owen
OK-not-great Indiana Jones-inspired series that adds terrorists — who blow up a pyramid in the first five minutes of the premiere. Tonally, it’s very similar to ABC’s “Whiskey Cavalier.”- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted May 9, 2019
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Rob Owen
Episodes improve after the pilot with a shift in focus to the characters and their relationships, but the season finale shifts tones again into a gear that seems like blatant begging for a second season.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted May 6, 2019
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Rob Owen
The 15-minute episodes are an easy binge and the two lead characters — Ryan and work friend Kim (Punam Patel) — are often a hoot even if some of the secondary characters (a witch-on-wheels boss, in particular) and situations undercut the show’s attempts at realism.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted May 2, 2019
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Rob Owen
Fans of dialogue-heavy, character-driven storytelling will be intrigued, but the redundancy of the setting renders “State of the Union” less bingeable.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted May 2, 2019
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Rob Owen
At times overly earnest, “The Red Line,” written by Chicago playwrights Caitlin Parrish and Erica Weiss and executive produced by Ava DuVernay (“Selma”) and Greg Berlanti (“The Flash”), is imperfect, but its existence demonstrates broadcasters haven’t completely thrown in the towel on quality drama and for that viewers can be grateful.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Apr 24, 2019
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Rob Owen
Much of the humor is of the predictable, fish out of water variety ... but “Bless This Mess” is at its funniest when it gets weird with characters like Rudy (Ed Begley Jr.), who lives in the couple’s barn, and Jacob (JT Neal), the dim-witted son of the neighbors.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Apr 15, 2019
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Rob Owen
Fosse/Verdon proves to be a darker, more sorrowful meditation on the personal and professional lives of artists, but the eight-episode series benefits from Broadway tunes and re-created dance numbers from the pair’s many successful productions.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Apr 4, 2019
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Rob Owen
There’s not much to cracking “The Code,” which is a paint-by-numbers show if ever there was one.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Apr 3, 2019
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Rob Owen
Ms. Wilson delivers an Emmy-worthy performance that’s equal measures vulnerable and determined as Alison seeks the truth of her husband’s infidelities.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Apr 2, 2019
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Rob Owen
In episode two the tone lightens up a good bit – you can see network notes at work – and more typical CW storylines set in, including a romance with a bearded hunk (Casey Deidrick). This makes “In the Dark” more bearable but less unique.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Apr 1, 2019
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Rob Owen
When “WWDITS” hits a comedy vein, it can be extremely funny. It would be improved if viewers had the opportunity to dine out on the humor of its continuing storylines with greater frequency.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Mar 21, 2019
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Rob Owen
The Fix is not sophisticated drama, but it is smarter-than-average melodrama and Ms. Clark’s involvement adds an opportunity for viewers to play armchair psychologist.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Mar 18, 2019
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Rob Owen
The Act sags a bit near the middle of five episodes made available for review--perhaps fewer episodes would have made for a tighter run--but Ms. Arquette’s nuanced performance remains top-notch, and Ms. King proves a talented newcomer with a bright acting future.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Mar 18, 2019
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Rob Owen
Ms. Bryant is not as zany as she’s called to be on “SNL,” instead giving a down-to-earth performance in a grounded roll that’s sometimes searing in its emotional honesty.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Mar 14, 2019
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Rob Owen
“The Village” is certainly better and more ambitious than “Rise,” but it’s no “This Is Us.” Often, “This Is Us” comes by its emotional moments believably and naturally. For its lack of subtlety, “The Village” would be more aptly titled “All! The! Feels!”- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Mar 14, 2019
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Rob Owen
In these new episodes, The Good Fight is at its best when the characters get honest about race within the majority black law firm in ways that feel startlingly real and, frankly, unique for a TV show.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Mar 11, 2019
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Rob Owen
Now Apocalypse is bizarre and will certainly be off-putting to many. For others, surely a smaller audience, there’s some titillating fun to be had in this guilty pleasure’s kinky weirdness.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Mar 6, 2019
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Rob Owen
Fans of CBS crime dramas will probably find “Gone” perfectly acceptable. Viewers who gravitate toward more complex, character-driven cable/streaming dramas will be unimpressed with the plots but may enjoy the local scenery.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Feb 25, 2019
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Rob Owen
Viewers have seen all these elements before, but in “Whiskey Cavalier” they’re deployed in a fun, fast-moving way that the show and the charm of its leads is hard to resist.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Feb 20, 2019
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Rob Owen
It turns out Erica’s betrayal was not diabolical, but the excuse she offers is weak and only proves the whole series is based on a preposterous contrivance.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Feb 20, 2019
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Rob Owen
Fast, frothy and fun, “Flack” only falters when it slows down and tries to get serious about Robyn’s issues – her mentally ill mother committed suicide; Robyn may have some mental health challenges, too – but when it sticks to its soapier agenda, “Flack” moves like a runaway train.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Feb 19, 2019
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Rob Owen
Doom Patrol offers an entertaining, illuminating pilot episode that distinguishes itself by doing a deep dive into the backstories of its characters.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Feb 12, 2019
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Rob Owen
Sure, there are moments of winning courtroom drama — mostly of sub-“The Good Wife” variety — but the show packs in a lot more. Early in Friday’s pilot, that pace works, but, eventually, it bogs down after the show piles one too many bits of ridiculousness on top of the last.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Feb 12, 2019
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Rob Owen
This seven-episode limited series is both cynical (about God as CEO) and full of hope (about the potential for humanity). It’s also consistently clever and funny.- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- Posted Feb 11, 2019
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