• Network: HBO
  • Series Premiere Date: Mar 8, 2026
Metascore
68

Generally favorable reviews - based on 28 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 18 out of 28
  2. Negative: 0 out of 28

Critic Reviews

  1. Reviewed by: Michael Peyton
    Mar 5, 2026
    100
    HBO’s Rooster is an acting masterclass, with tour-de-force performances from Steve Carrell, Phil Dunster, Danielle Deadwyler, John C. McGinley, and more. It’s at once charming, incisive, and laugh-out-loud funny.
  2. Reviewed by: Tania Hussain
    Mar 5, 2026
    90
    As a show that keeps getting better as it goes and an ensemble that is nailing every scene, Rooster belongs at the top of your must-watch list this season.
  3. Reviewed by: Keith Phipps
    Mar 5, 2026
    84
    It's already become a charming comedy filled with the warmth and clever banter of past Lawrence productions and ambitions to explore some thematic territory all its own.
  4. Reviewed by: Alan Sepinwall
    May 4, 2026
    81
    Rooster stumbles at times in depicting the clash of generations, ideologies, and sexual urges on a college campus... It sets up various story and character ideas that it doesn't always have interest in following, and going back and forth on how ridiculous it finds both its setting and people on different sides of the student/faculty divide. But it also has a generosity of spirit, a warmth, and a trust in its performers, that evokes the charms of much of Lawrence's other work.
  5. Reviewed by: Lucy Mangan
    Mar 9, 2026
    80
    This is television for grownups. Younger viewers will roll their eyes at the lazier jokes about the generational divide (usually involving students’ hypersensitivities and mental health diagnoses) and it would indeed have been better if these could have been more focused. On the other hand, theirs is the world, so let us have these 10 half-hours, eh? Carell may not be the hero you need, but he is ours.
  6. Reviewed by: James Jackson
    Mar 9, 2026
    80
    It’s the kind of show that doesn’t knock your socks off​, but its amiable wit is more than welcome.
  7. Reviewed by: Robert Lloyd
    Mar 9, 2026
    80
    It’s low stakes, soft-edged, humane, basically gentle, a little fantastic, a little farcical, well cast and well played in every instance — qualities I happen to like, and maybe you do, too.
  8. Reviewed by: Rob Owen
    Mar 6, 2026
    80
    Fast-paced and funny with an undercurrent of authentic emotion, “Rooster” is a half-hour comedy worth crowing about.
  9. Reviewed by: William Goodman
    Mar 5, 2026
    80
    If the series can build on the momentum it builds here, “Rooster” may hit a rarified air typically reserved for the best shows, one which feels like an accurate portrait of the ups and downs of life, rendered in both comedic and tragic clarity. That, combined with a tremendously compelling central dynamic thanks to the charm and charisma of Carell and Clive, makes the trip back to school well worth it.
  10. Reviewed by: Nicole Gallucci
    Mar 5, 2026
    80
    Though the series strikes the creator’s signature balance of humor and emotional depth, Rooster has yet to rival Shrinking, Ted Lasso, or The Office. That’s not to say the six of ten episodes made available for review weren’t a genuinely fun ride; rather, it’s a testament to the incredible heights we’ve seen both men reach.
  11. Reviewed by: Grant Hermanns
    Mar 5, 2026
    80
    With Lawrence vets John C. McGinley and Phil Dunster also turning out reliably bizarre and antagonistic performances, Rooster has more working parts than broken ones to keep the HBO Max comedy moving.
  12. Reviewed by: Randy Myers
    Mar 12, 2026
    75
    This is an extra-busy series that hopscotches too often. Carrel and company are all stellar and worth crowing about but plucking out a few side stories might well make this a smoother, more tonally consistent show.
  13. Reviewed by: Kelly Lawler
    Mar 9, 2026
    75
    You can (mostly) forgive those moments of unease as the cast gels together, and Carell yucks it up so charmingly in his tweed blazers and too-slippery shoes. When the show turns on the charm it can hook you.
  14. Reviewed by: Bill Goodykoontz
    Mar 25, 2026
    70
    Maybe just hanging out for a half-hour with characters that are fun to be around is enough. I’m not sure it always is. But “Rooster” is at least making me think that sometimes, it might be.
  15. Reviewed by: Chris Vognar
    Mar 5, 2026
    70
    “Rooster” thrives on the tension between Carell’s self-deprecating likability and Greg’s relative boorishness.
  16. Reviewed by: Judy Berman
    Mar 5, 2026
    70
    Mostly, though, Archie’s indiscretion serves as a conduit to character comedy about well-meaning screw-ups trying to make good. The ensemble is large and charming. .... The only remarkable thing about Rooster, really, is that it treats a campus rocked by teacher-student sex as just another backdrop.
  17. Reviewed by: Saloni Gajjar
    Mar 9, 2026
    67
    HBO’s Rooster, which he co-created with frequent collaborator Matt Tarses, has all the ingredients familiar to fans of both dramedies. It’s comforting, as well as a detriment, as we’ve kind of seen this before. But it’s not like Rooster doesn’t have promise.
  18. Reviewed by: Ben Travers
    Mar 5, 2026
    67
    The first six episodes feel overstuffed (with plot, characters, and jokes), but a lot of it works. The premiere is rock solid, without a wasted word and showing a strong grip on its tone, and the cast is exceptional.