Rijndri
Load of rubbish!!
Tayloriona
Although I seem to have had higher expectations than I thought, the movie is super entertaining.
Mabel Munoz
Just intense enough to provide a much-needed diversion, just lightweight enough to make you forget about it soon after it’s over. It’s not exactly “good,” per se, but it does what it sets out to do in terms of putting us on edge, which makes it … successful?
Janae Milner
Easily the biggest piece of Right wing non sense propaganda I ever saw.
jDriftyx82
Since Unhitched was only given 6 released episodes. It only took me a day to watch them.Unhitched may have some clichéd characters (what sitcoms don't?), and some Seinfeld like story lines, but I still enjoyed the show very much.The first two or three episodes weren't anything special. They were sort of funny, but the story lines weren't too fantastic.The last three episodes where very funny. I laughed about 2-3 times an episode.Needless to say, I think this show deserved more time on the air. It was funny, had good characters, and had a lot of similarities to Seinfeld.Seriously, Meet the Browns will probably have 6 seasons and I don't think this show even got a DVD release.
kfrankola
named Kate Frankola--that is actually my name! People I know told me about Unhitched for that reason before I even heard of the show. I know Kate is a common name, but I am wondering who came up with Frankola and why. Probably no one here knows, oh well, still cool. Anyone know how I can contact anyone in charge of naming characters on the show?I wish I didn't have to write something worth ten lines. I'll leave ya'll with a poem, In Memoriam Mae Noblitt by AR Ammons:This is just a place: we go around, distanced, yearly in a star'satmosphere, turning daily into and out of direct light andslanting through the quadrant seasons: deep space begins at ourheels, nearly rousing us loose: we look up or out so high, sight'ssilk almost draws us away: this is just a place: currents worry themselvescoiled and free in airs and oceans: water picks up mineral shadow andplasm into billions of designs, frames: trees, grains, bacteria: butis love a reality we made here ourselves-- and grief--did we designthat--or do these, like currents, whine in and out among us merelyas we arrive and go: this is just a place: the reality we agree with,that agrees with us, outbounding this, arrives to touch, joining withus from far away: our home which defines us is elsewhere but notso far away we have forgotten it: this is just a place.
lonewolf316-1
What is it about the Farrelly brothers that people enjoy? No matter what they make, I just can't find any decent entertainment out of it. The jokes suck, the humor is almost non-existent, and the whole experience is tedious and painful.And, that about sums up Fox's latest supposed sitcom.What equates to an unfunny "Seinfeld" knock-off, this show tries to be edgy and funny and fails on both counts about 98% of the time. When you don't even find yourself smiling (much less laughing) at a sitcom, then something is wrong with the show.To quickly sum up this mess, four single friends (on of them recently divorced) jump back into the dating circuit, with supposed hilarity ensuing. But, if things like worn out sex jokes and "kid in the helmet" jokes are the best these writers can do, then this show is in desperate need of help.Honestly, there are much better things you can do with your Sunday night. Slamming your head against a brick wall comes to mind.In closing, this show just sucks. There is no other way to really say it.
austinc-7
I felt compelled to make this posting after reading a couple pretty visceral postings which seemed inexplicably hateful about this rather light and funny show. Lighten up, geez! It's a brand new 30-minute sitcom on Fox that follows a cartoon! Go watch some tired old Seinfeld reruns and give the rest of us a break.Part of why I like the show so far is that it doesn't take itself seriously, it feels playful and not so staged or forced. These people look and sound like they're having fun, and so the funny lines flow and don't feel so much like punchlines. The writing isn't afraid to go after the less-tame quirks that come with bad dates and I'm-conspicuously-over-30-and uncomfortably-single insecurity. The characters aren't as hopelessly selfish and dysfunctional as the Seinfeld quartet, and (gratefuly) they're not running around with quizzical "I'm perfect and surrounded by morons" expressions like the cast of Friends' characters always were, which frankly annoyed the hell out of me after awhile. (I still shake my head in amazement that Jennifer Anniston has since been able to redeem herself to me as a fine actor...unlike the rest of them.) So give this kid some air, will-ya? At least the show truly comes from Boston - the writer/creators AND those famous directors are all from New England - and uptight Boston should be ready for something more contemporary than "Cheers" to see its untidy reflection in.