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Close Enough
American adult animated sitcom From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Close Enough is an American adult animated sitcom created by J. G. Quintel. Originally intended to air on TBS in 2017, the project faced various delays and setbacks before eventually premiering on HBO Max on July 9, 2020. The series has received positive reviews, with critics comparing it favorably to Quintel's previous series, Regular Show, which aired on Cartoon Network from 2010 to 2017.[1][2][3][4]
In July 2022, HBO Max cancelled the series after three seasons,[5] and a month later, the show was removed from the service.[6] The show was available on Netflix in international countries until it was removed from the service in May 2023.[7]
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Premise
A couple in their early 30s, Josh and Emily, and their young daughter, Candice, live in a Los Angeles duplex with their divorced friends, Alexander and Bridgette. They get into what seem like normal domestic crises, which tend to escalate in surreal (often even in science fiction and fantasy-esque) ways.
Cast and characters
Main
- Joshua "Josh" Singleton (voiced by J. G. Quintel) – an aspiring video game developer who works for Plugger-Inners; a television installation company based on Geek Squad. His appearance and mannerisms are based on those of Quintel. Quintel also voices himself.
- Emily Ramirez (voiced by Gabrielle Walsh) – Josh's wife, who works as an assistant for a food corporation called FoodCorp. Emily and Bridgette play guitar and sing at local cafes hoping to become famous. She is based on Quintel's own wife, Cassia. Walsh also voices herself.
- Candice Singleton-Ramirez (voiced by Jessica DiCicco) – Josh and Emily's six-year-old (as of "Birthdaze") daughter, who can be very hyperactive and struggles with school work. She attends Chamomile Elementary School, after being transferred out of an unnamed elementary school where the children ran wild and killed a bus driver after tipping over his bus. DiCicco also voices herself.
- Alex Dorpenberger (voiced by Jason Mantzoukas) – Josh's best friend and Bridgette's ex-husband, who works as a community college professor and a struggling Viking-themed fantasy author. He is a conspiracy theorist. Following the series finale "Match Made in Valhalla", Alex and Bridgette got back together. Mantzoukas also voices himself.
- Bridgette Hashima (voiced by Kimiko Glenn) – Emily's best friend and Alex's ex-wife. She is a Japanese-American social media influencer, and a part-time comedy singer-songwriter in a band with Emily. Her middle name was revealed as "No Stress" in an episode from the first season, which also revealed that it was the result of a legal name change that she authorized while she was under the influence of drugs. Glenn also voices herself.
- Pearle Watson (voiced by Danielle Brooks) – A retired African-American LAPD police officer, and the landlady of the duplex.
- Randall "Randy" Watson (voiced by James Adomian) – Pearle's adopted white son, and the duplex's property manager. He was adopted by Pearle after his biological parents, Wyatt and Deborah Trickle, were arrested for siphoning gas from multiple cars. Randy is revealed to be gay in season 3.
Supporting
- Mr. Timothy Campbell (voiced by John Early) – Candice's hippie teacher at Chamomile Elementary.
- Mr. Salt (voiced by Fred Stoller) – Emily's boss at FoodCorp.
- Dr. Glandz (voiced by Cheri Oteri) – A physician who works at a hospital called Pretty Good Samaritan.
- Dante (voiced by Eugene Cordero) – One of Josh's coworkers at Plugger-Inners who has a prosthetic lower arm.
- Jojo (voiced by Mo Collins) – A biker woman who is the leader of the Cool Moms, and the mother of Candice's classmate, Mia.
- Trish (voiced by Kate Higgins) – A former member of the Cool Moms and the mother of Candice's best friend and classmate, Maddie.
- Ms. Hashima (voiced by Suzy Nakamura) – Bridgette's mother and a successful businesswoman.
Additional voices
- William Salyers
- Max Mittelman
- Roger Craig Smith
- Erica Lindbeck
- Fred Tatasciore
- Kevin Michael Richardson
- Matthew Mercer
- Grey Griffin
- Scott Menville
- Ali Hillis
- Eric Bauza
- Kate Micucci
- Marc Evan Jackson
- Sam Marin
- Eden Riegel
- Ashley Johnson
- Courtenay Taylor
- Chris Cox
- Susanne Blakeslee
- Travis Willingham
- Scott Whyte
- Troy Baker
- Lauren Lapkus
- Nancy Linari
- Vanessa Marshall
- Laura Bailey
Guest stars
- "Weird Al" Yankovic as himself
- David Hasselhoff as himself
- Noel Fielding as Snailathan Gold
- Dave Foley as Dr. Ferguson
- George Lopez as Wurst Bros. leader
- Matt Besser as Bush Guy
- Rachel Dratch as Meredith Breedmore
- Seth Morris as Robot guards/Anders
- Eugene Cordero as Dante
- Jane Lynch as Barb
- Chris Parnell as Ron
- Jessica St. Clair as Joy
- Rich Sommer as Keith Nash
- Brent Weinbach as Lee
- Steve Agee as Davey Wegman
- Judy Greer as Nikki
- Diamond White as Caitlin Olsman/Young Pearle
- Kate Berlant as River Lake
- Paul F. Tompkins as The Amazing Sardini
- Lea DeLaria as Prisoner
- Horatio Sanz as Raoul
- Lennon Parham as Toluca Lake
- James Urbaniak as Commercial Bot
- Whitmer Thomas as The Goosh
- Jordan Black as Pterodactyl
- Skyler Gisondo as Cameron
- Rachel Bloom as Kira
- Michaela Watkins as Brienne Bishop
- Nicole Byer as Ophira
- Heidi Gardner as Becca
- Beck Bennett as Luc
- David Koechner as Wyatt Trickle
- Wendie Malick as Deborah Trickle
- Keith David as "World's Greatest Teacher" mug
- Thomas Lennon as Henri
- Ken Marino as Dave Colider
- Laraine Newman as Frederica
- Monét X Change as Margo
- Anjelika Washington as Rikki
- Leonardo Nam as Ty
- Nikki Glaser as Ranessa
- Henry Winkler as Alex’s Dad
- George Newbern as Sam Snood
- Brian Blessed as Jack Kleghorn
- Andy Daly as Obo
- Keith Szarabajka as Sam "The Sandman" Sanders
- Danny Cooksey as Little Sandy
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Episodes
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Season 1 (2020)
The first season was originally set to run for 10 episodes, but only 8 episodes were released when the series launched.[8][9]
Season 2 (2021)
Every episode in this season was directed by J. G. Quintel and Calvin Wong.
Season 3 (2022)
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Release
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The series was announced in May 2017, four months after Quintel's previous series, Regular Show, concluded its run on the sibling Cartoon Network. The series was originally announced to air on TBS,[12] but was delayed several times. It would later be revealed that TBS had planned to premiere the show as part of its own animation block, but those plans fell through when production on lead-in program The Cops was shut down after its co-creator Louis C.K. admitted to several instances of sexual misconduct.[13] On October 29, 2019, it was announced that the series would instead move to HBO Max.[14] The second half of the third episode was premiered at the Annecy International Animated Film Festival on June 15, 2020.[15]
On August 6, 2020, the series was renewed for a second season.[16] The following month, the series was distributed internationally through Netflix as a Netflix Original, beginning September 14, 2020 in Latin America.[17][18]
The second season premiered on February 25, 2021 on HBO Max.[19] Prior to the season premiere, a third season was announced on February 10, 2021.[20] The second season was released internationally on Netflix on May 26, 2021.[21] The series altogether was removed from Netflix globally in May 2023.[22]
On October 24, 2021, the first two seasons became available to buy digitally on iTunes.[23][24] The third season was released digitally on May 8, 2022.[25]
With the announcement of TBS and TNT's Front Row blocks, the series debuted on the former network on October 25, 2021.[26][11]
The third season premiered on April 7, 2022 on HBO Max.[27] On July 15, 2022, HBO Max cancelled the series after three seasons.[5]
On August 17, 2022, the service announced the removal of several shows, including Close Enough.[6] The show was removed from digital purchase in October 2023 alongside all other shows that used to be off Max.[28]
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Reception
Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported an approval rating of 100% based on 19 reviews, with an average rating of 8/10, for the first season. The website's critical consensus reads, "Completely absurd and yet, utterly relatable, Close Enough captures the strange experience that is being an adult."[29] On Metacritic, it has a weighted average score of 74 out of 100 based on 6 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[30]
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See also
References
External links
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