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34 votes
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Seinfeld's gay crisis: not that there's anything wrong with that
7 votes -
The Office (Australia) | Official trailer
20 votes -
How TV went from bad to great
9 votes -
Style and flair: a retrospective of The Nanny
5 votes -
The history of Father Ted
8 votes -
A history of Frasier on Cheers
10 votes -
Why Frasier needs longer seasons (and a network home)
8 votes -
A guide to the running gags on Arrested Development
20 votes -
Writing for Friends was no dream job
45 votes -
Ferris Bueller: The sitcom | Forgotten Failures
9 votes -
Witchy women: A Sabrina the Teenage Witch retrospective
10 votes -
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia Season 16, Episodes 1 & 2 Discussion
The 16th season of It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia started airing last night and is now available for streaming on Hulu too! What did y'all think about the new episodes? Please make sure to...
The 16th season of It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia started airing last night and is now available for streaming on Hulu too! What did y'all think about the new episodes?
Please make sure to provide warnings for any spoilers you may post! If you want to hide your spoilers, please follow the formatting tips at https://docs.tildes.net/instructions/text-formatting#expandable-sections to hide them under expandable sections. Thank you!
Episode 1 & 2
After watching all the teasers they showed over the last few weeks, I wasn't expecting literally all the teaser material to show up in the first episode. However, I still enjoyed the first episode! This felt a bit more like a classic Always Sunny episode and I found it funny for the most part. I definitely think that the show has lost a bit of its old charm, it now looks like a proper TV show with properly lit up sets and whatnot. Despite this, I think this episode was a solid start to the season!I really enjoyed the second episode too! It was cool seeing Charlie's sisters show up in this episode. I remember in the season they mentioned Charlie's sister and then she was never mentioned again. In the podcast, they mentioned that they'd simply forgotten about Charlie's sister as a character. So it was cool seeing them finally show Charlie's sister(s) in an episode now. Also was not expecting an OnlyFans name drop haha.
31 votes -
How "Will & Grace" beat "Ellen's" gay curse
3 votes -
‘M*A*S*H’ said goodbye forty years ago, with a finale for the ages
5 votes -
Emeril's Sitcom | Forgotten Failures
3 votes -
Fawlty Towers: John Cleese to reboot series with daughter
5 votes -
Father Ted - Ireland's most essential comedy
9 votes -
John Waters meets The Simpsons on "Homer's Phobia"
4 votes -
HD TVs ruined sitcoms
7 votes -
That '90s Show | Official trailer
4 votes -
That ‘90s Show | Official teaser
11 votes -
Mindy Kaling says ‘The Office’ is ‘so inappropriate now’ and couldn’t be made today: Most characters ‘would be canceled’
8 votes -
The new Simpsons
6 votes -
After six seasons, Community will get its movie
12 votes -
The straightening of Chandler Bing
9 votes -
Where everybody knows your name, a Cheers retrospective
2 votes -
What are good British TV comedies that are not too specific to the UK?
By "not too specific to the UK", I mean something that can be enjoyed and understood (on a cultural level, not the language - subtitles take care of that) by someone who is not part of that...
By "not too specific to the UK", I mean something that can be enjoyed and understood (on a cultural level, not the language - subtitles take care of that) by someone who is not part of that culture. For reference, I really enjoyed The IT Crowd and Peep Show. Thanks!
8 votes -
Soap or Scum? Inside the fight over history's most controversial sitcom
1 vote -
The history of Sanford & Son
3 votes -
List of Seinfeld fictional films
10 votes -
What’s the deal with Seinfeld’s aspect ratio on Netflix?
5 votes -
NBC still really wants a reboot of The Office
8 votes -
Why Kim’s Convenience matters
13 votes -
How Arrested Development does running gags
8 votes -
‘The Office’ piracy skyrocketed in the US after leaving Netflix
22 votes -
Why sitcoms stopped using laugh tracks - Short history of the laff box
8 votes -
Graham Linehan says he won’t work with Channel 4 again unless transphobic IT Crowd episode is reinstated
18 votes -
'The Simpsons' producers will 'no longer have white actors voice non-white characters'
9 votes -
To deliver ‘The Simpsons’ in 4:3 aspect ratio, Disney+ had to rearchitect its content-delivery system
12 votes -
How we fell in and out of love with the laff box, the laugh track machine that changed sitcoms forever
9 votes -
The constant agony of Hans Moleman
2 votes -
Lucie Arnaz on ‘Will and Grace’ tribute: ‘We Love Lucy’ proves ‘healing power of laughter’
4 votes -
Interactive graph of Simpsons episodes according to IMDB score
5 votes -
‘Friends’ cast to reunite for exclusive panel discussion on HBO Max
7 votes -
Spaced at 21 - Interview with cast
5 votes -
Haters are always going to hate... with The Simpsons running for too long now, what kind of dramatic change should take place for it to be great once again?
15 votes -
Peter Kay's Car Share
This is another British comedy that I think people will enjoy. The title is weird: Peter Kay is the stand up comedian, but he's playing a character in this sitcom. IMDB calls it "Car Share", but...
This is another British comedy that I think people will enjoy. The title is weird: Peter Kay is the stand up comedian, but he's playing a character in this sitcom. IMDB calls it "Car Share", but BBC calls it "Peter Kay's Car Share". It's British, so weirdly small number of episodes: only 12 (and this includes all the specials).
The setup sounds like it's going to be unbearably claustrophobic, a series long bottle episode. A supermarket sets up a car sharing scheme, and we watch John and Kayleigh share a car as they drive to work everyday. But this creates intimacy and we get to learn about the characters. It's heartfelt and lovely. It's well acted, and I think it's very funny.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt4635922/
4 votes -
Detectorists - "unremarkable lives gone slightly awry"
I'm currently re-watching all episodes of Detectorists and it's one of my favourite tv things ever, so I thought maybe Tildes would be interested. Detectorists is a single camera sitcom about two...
I'm currently re-watching all episodes of Detectorists and it's one of my favourite tv things ever, so I thought maybe Tildes would be interested. Detectorists is a single camera sitcom about two men and their friendship around their metal detecting hobby.
Here's the link to the BBC Four webpage for it: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b06l51nr
Some review sites -
Rotten Tomatoes 100% (few reviews), 99% audience score: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/detectorists
IMDB 8.6 : https://www.imdb.com/title/tt4082744/
Guardian review (because she writes about it far better than I can): https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2017/dec/09/detectorists-rich-portrait-unremarkable-lives-gone-slightly-awry-mackenzie-crook
Detectorists is about nothing and everything. Made with palpable love, it’s about people and their passions; camaraderie and community. As a portrait of male friendship, it is closer to documentary than drama, delving beneath the topsoil of mid-life ennui via the sparsest of exchanges. You won’t find a laughter track, or smart-arse punchlines or an oh-so-subtle veil of irony here; instead of begging for your attention, Detectorists is notable for its avoidance of snark. It’s the drama least likely to culminate in alpha plonkers blowing up cars, taking down baddies or ravishing beautiful women.
Instead, it lingers lovingly over dewdrops on grass, magpies on gateposts, scudding clouds and gently fluttering leaves. Even an alfresco wee takes on a painterly aspect, viewed solely through the steam cloud billowing from behind a sunlit tree. Meanwhile, the camera makes high art out of Lance’s face in closeup, crestfallen as he unearths a scaffolding bracket instead of an Anglo-Saxon nugget, and from Andy’s silent incredulity when a colleague jokes about Richard Attenborough when he means David.
Radio Times review https://www.radiotimes.com/news/tv/2017-12-13/detectorists-series-3-review/
If all British programmes took this much care over their tone, look and overall distinctiveness, the golden age of television would never go away.
Modern comedies are often predicated on cruelty: laughs are hard, clanging or sharp as barbed wire. In its quiet, undemonstrative way, Detectorists has ploughed its own furrow. Buried in its field of fun are evergreen truths about life, and the things we don’t say but should. So if kindness and companionship are unfashionable, I know which side of the hedge I’d rather stand.
13 votes -
Experts say the enormous amounts spent on old shows like Seinfeld and The Big Bang Theory ignore a key point: we have no way of knowing how much shows are worth
9 votes