- Network: Comedy Central
- Series Premiere Date: Feb 1, 2007
Critic Reviews
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It's not very often that a TV show bursting with imagination, audacity, rude charm and a relentlessly funny worldview gets on the air, much less appears fully formed. But Sarah Silverman... has delivered an offbeat gem.
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Where her movie overstayed its welcome, the quick-shot format of TV works beautifully. The result is haphazard, amoral, ridiculous, wildly offensive...and, you know, totally hilarious.
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This show is so wrong. And I loved every minute of it. [5 Feb 2007, p.37]
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If the series doesn't peter out after its first two great episodes, Comedy Central may at last have on its hands a live-action comedy as funny as "Chappelle's Show."
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The Sarah Silverman Program is a welcome outlet for Silverman’s brand of outlandishness, blessedly stingy with its desire to breach mores, and much more concerned with decorating its late-night comedy turf so that it can welcome any kind of unexpected laugh: shock, parody, irony, insult humor or absurdity.
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The pilot... iis actually the least funny of the three episodes I saw; in the other two, "Sarah" and the other characters are much better developed and the stories hang together better. Still, it's an acquired tastelessness.
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The meanest sitcom in years—and one of the funniest.
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You'll love "The Sarah Silverman Program," but only if, like me, you have a healthy appetite for sick comedy.
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The show is definitely strange - and sometimes very funny. But it's so odd that it makes the "Seinfeld" format look conventionally linear.
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"The Sarah Silverman Program" is not for everyone. But if you've chuckled along to the rascals on "South Park" -- or if you thought "Borat" was one hilarious movie -- then chances are you'll get some perverse jollies with Sarah Silverman's latest venture.
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In its energy and penchant for the absurd, [it] resembles a latter-day version of "Pee-wee's Playhouse" pitched to the college-frat set.
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All series need time to discover their strengths and weaknesses, and this is no exception. However, this show starts with a foundation of solid character comedy, which bodes well for the future.
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The episodes are not as layered or intricately constructed as Mr. David’s “Curb Your Enthusiasm,” but the humor is fueled by a similar jolt of the politically incorrect.
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In the way of so many television series inspired by comedians, "The Sarah Silverman Program" fails to directly translate the insanity of Silverman's stand-up.
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The show is just silly enough -- and Silverman is just appealing enough, for once -- to cultivate at least a cult audience.
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As someone who’s on the fence about Silverman — I get what she’s doing, but I’m not sure it’s worth the adoration it often receives — I found myself chuckling more when I went through my notes on the first two shows than when I was watching them.
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I like her a lot, but the shaggy-dog nature of the storytelling... made the comedy miss about as often as it hit for me.
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Silverman reminds us how quickly the novelty can wear off while watching a pixie with a potty mouth.
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"The Sarah Silverman Program" is full of scenes that sound funny on paper... but in execution pass by without eliciting even a small chuckle.
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"The Sarah Silverman Program" has all of the charms of a joke with an audible fart as the punch line.
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The Sarah Silverman Program isn't about anything but its own supposed daring and the hyperbolic smugness of its star.
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The word "juvenile" doesn't begin to describe "The Sarah Silverman Show." It completely describes it.
Awards & Rankings
User score distribution:
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Positive: 84 out of 172
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Mixed: 7 out of 172
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Negative: 81 out of 172
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MarkTAug 6, 2009
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Aug 26, 2010
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Aug 17, 2010