|
CRITIC SCORE DISTRIBUTION | ||
|
Positive:
12
Mixed:
6
Negative:
1
|
Critic Reviews
Season 1 Review:
The show is tremendously likable. Credit for the fresh, off-kilter viewpoint goes to Diane Ruggiero, a former New Jersey waitress selected by CBS to create the autobiographical show. She gives her characters sharp dialogue, puts them in identifiable situations and depicts poignancy without going mushy. [1 Oct 2000, p.F1]
Season 1 Review:
The pilot is full of feel-good bounce, but it's more than froth. This is good American television drama. Lacking the clockwork precision of the contemporary American movie, it has nuance and allows for an emotional richness. Better, it does the audience a favour by introducing a sly sense of fun. [30 Sept 2000, p.10]
Season 1 Review:
The soul of the show is 30-something daughter Lydia (Heather Paige Kent), who dumps her loutish, lay-about fiance and decides to go to college. Written by waitress-turned-screenwriter Diane Ruggiero and based on her own life. The supporting cast, which includes Paul Sorvino, Kevin Dillon, Debi Mazar and Ellen Burstyn, is a standout. [1 Oct 2000, p.6]
Season 1 Review:
If the show manages to settle on a consistent tone, much still rides on the slender shoulders of Ms. Kent. The first episode is staged as a long monologue, with the bartender-coed unloading her story on one of her regular customers. Ms. Kent is game but not always steady as she begins to negotiate the tough-but-tender course the show's producers and writers have set for Lydia. [30 Sept 2000, p.B17]
Current TV Shows
By MetascoreBy User Score



















