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Single Parents (TV series)

American sitcom From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Single Parents (TV series)
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Single Parents is an American television sitcom that stars Taran Killam, Leighton Meester, Kimrie Lewis, Brad Garrett, and Jake Choi. It follows a group of adults who must venture through single parenthood with their young kids. The series premiered on ABC on September 26, 2018, and had a full 23-episode first season. ABC renewed the series for a second season, which premiered on September 25, 2019. In May 2020, the series was canceled after two seasons.

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Premise

The series begins when the group meets Will, a divorced man in his 30s who is so focused on raising his daughter that he has lost sight of who he is as a man. When the other single parents see just how invested Will has become with PTA, parenting, and princesses, they band together to get him out in the dating world and make him realize that parenthood does not mean sacrificing everything about one's own identity.[1]

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Cast

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Main

  • Taran Killam as Will Cooper,[2] a 30-something single father with a daughter. He is a local weatherman.
  • Leighton Meester as Angie D'Amato,[2] a single mother with a needy son and a love for punk rock music. She is a paralegal.
  • Brad Garrett as Dr Douglas Fogerty,[2] an older widowed single father with identical twin daughters who often puts them to work and an adult son.
  • Kimrie Lewis as Poppy Banks,[1] a single mother with a son. She owns the winebary - a feminist wine bar and book shop.
  • Jake Choi as Miggy Park,[1] a young single father with a baby son named Jack.
  • Marlow Barkley as Sophie Cooper,[1] Will's daughter who is very smart and sensible.
  • Tyler Wladis as Graham D'Amato,[1] Angie's needy and emotional son, who is named for the craps dealer in Las Vegas who helped Angie when she went into labor. He is known for dating most of his class. He is easily afraid. [3]
  • Devin Trey Campbell as Rory Banks,[1] Poppy's son who has a knack for fashion and love for musical theatre.
  • Mia and Ella Allan as Emma and Amy Fogerty,[4] Douglas' genius identical twin daughters who have a superb skill for building and home renovation.

Recurring

  • Adam Brody as Derek, Angie's ex-boyfriend and Graham's father, who was in a punk rock band.
  • Hannah Simone (season 1) the kids' pediatrician and Will's love interest
  • Andy Favreau (season 1) as Owen, Angie's boyfriend
  • Vannessa Bayer as Mia, Sophie's mom and Will's ex-wife
  • Bashir Salahuddin as Ron, Rory's dad and Poppy's ex-husband
  • Jama Williamson as Tracy Freeze, Will's boss and love interest
  • Quinta Brunson as Bess, a regular at the winebary
  • Rebecca Creskoff as Big Red, Douglas's love interest
  • Jackie Seiden (season 1) as Jackie, a mom at the school
  • Steve Zissis (season 1) as Mark, dad at the school who briefly dates Poppy, and is an ex-colleague of Douglas'
  • Patrick Birkett as Tony, Douglas's butler
  • Lamar Woods as Dwayne, Miggy's best friend
  • Sarah Yarkin as Homily Pronstroller, the kid's second grade teacher, and part of Miggy's throuple
  • Steve Tom as Guy McCormick, Will's weatherman co-worker who is an alcoholic
  • Chloe Perrin (season 1) as Zoe/Bunny ears, a kid in the school who briefly dates Graham
  • Chris Geere (season 2) as Colin, a new single parent in the school who Angie is romantically interested in
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Production

The series initially received a put pilot commitment from ABC in October 2017, written by Liz Meriwether and J.J. Philbin,[5] which later evolved to a series order with Jason Winer directing the pilot.[1][6] In March 2018, Taran Killam, Leighton Meester, and Brad Garrett were announced to star in the series.[2]

The first season premiered on September 26, 2018[7] and a full season was ordered in October, plus an additional episode, for a total of 23 episodes.[8][9] Single Parents was renewed for a second season by ABC[10] which premiered on September 25, 2019.[11] On May 21, 2020, ABC canceled the series after two seasons.[12]

Episodes

Series overview

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Season 1 (2018–19)

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Season 2 (2019–20)

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Reception

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Critical response

On review aggregation Rotten Tomatoes, the series holds an approval rating of 75% with an average rating of 7.14/10, based on 16 reviews. The site's critic consensus states: "While the jokes can be a little juvenile, Single Parents earns brownie points for a likable cast and a funny focus on parental struggles."[57] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the series a score of 67 out of 100 based on 10 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[58] Giving the show a B+, TVLine called it "hands down the fall's funniest new sitcom."[59] Caroline Framke with Variety says "even when Single Parents stumbles, it's refreshing to see a comedy that acknowledges a different experience than most hangout sitcoms do," and that "hopefully, with a strong cast and writing team behind it, Single Parents can tap into [plenty of material there] and find a specific groove all its own."[60]

In a TV Guide review, Malcolm Venable said the show "has an insightful goofiness about it that's absolutely endearing, and will likely be a balm for exhausted single parents keen to see a show that knows their struggle is real," but added, "It needs just a little more finesse to find its true north in terms of tone, and how to best employ the marquee talents Meester and Garrett, who sometimes feel underused as Killam's adorkable dad thing hogs most of the spotlight." He also noted that "what really makes Single Parents sparkle are the kids who are "legit funny, deft actors who steal pretty much every scene they're in."[61] The Hollywood Reporter said "Single Parents feels like a comedy that goes for simple snark and believes it's a little more clever than it really is, but then had a bunch of network notes stuck to it about softening those right angles," with "a kind of paint-by-numbers approach."[62] Along the same lines, the Los Angeles Times said the show "takes its cues from the network's other family comedies, such as black-ish, but the jokes are too sophomoric to come close to the brilliance and humor of that award-winning show or the Emmy-amassing Modern Family."[63]

Ratings

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References

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