An Interesting Review Of The Drew Carey TV Series
Seinfeld is always regarded as the most innovative, and perhaps most important, television series of the nineties, but as far as sitcoms go, The Drew Carey Show certainly deserves to be listed right alongside Seinfeld. Most people don’t remember the show quite as clearly as Seinfeld, but it really did make a lot of changes to how people regard the modern sitcom, and definitely deserves to go on the list next time you login to the movie download service of your choice.
The show was really just meant as a vehicle to get Drew Carey’s face out there back in the era where every comedian really just wanted to be a TV star, and it could have been just another sitcom with just another comedian starring, but they managed to really take it in a different direction, starting with the subject of the show.
Like Seinfeld, it used less formulaic plots and created funnier, weirder situations, but unlike Seinfeld, really applied a degree of surrealism and absurdity to the proceedings. The cast was never afraid to break into song and do a musical episode, or just a musical number in a non-musical episode, and the rivalry between Drew and Mimi was really a fun, quirky driving force for the show.
The show also made a lot of artistic strides as a sitcom, such as the “World Keeps Turning” intro, the live episodes and various other tricks they used to keep the show fresh.
By the final season, Carey was making somewhere around a million bones an episode, but… The ratings started to slip. Drew Carey had a strong and loyal following, but it just wasn’t enough to keep the show on the air any longer. Sadly, the show is not syndicated anywhere in the US right now, nor have they ever released anything beyond the first season on DVD, so watching online is probably the only way to enjoy it anymore.
The show was refreshing in that it focused not on a family, but on a single guy who’s not all that attractive or in shape and hasn’t risen to anything above mid-level department store management in his career. The show focuses on a man who seems to be perpetually on the verge of a mid-life crisis. He’s around forty and hasn’t really done anything with his life yet. It’s really an interesting premise with a lot of room to explore different story ideas without always falling back on the “Son borrows the car without asking” story like so many family based sitcoms.
The show also feels refreshing in that it acknowledges that mom, dad and the kids are not, in fact, the only form a family can take, nor are mom, dad and the kids the only people in the US who matter. The show is, again, focused on single people, and the result is a show that really validates you no matter who you are in life and what you’ve accomplished so far.
And of course, Lewis and Oswald are two of the funniest sitcom characters of all time. It’s always funny when a show that’s already a comedy has comic relief characters.
Folks are sitting on the front porch trying to beat the heat. laurel and hardy movies 3) Scrooge(1951): Alastair Sim, Mervyn Jones, Michael HordernEverybody knows the story of Ebenezer Scrooge. Approximately 8,500 dentists use Lumineers, made from Cerinate, a porcelain developed by Santa Maria, Calif.
categories: movies,entertainment,arts,downloads,reviews,recreation,leisure