Ein Amerikaner verliebt sich in seine nigerianische Krankenschwester.Ein Amerikaner verliebt sich in seine nigerianische Krankenschwester.Ein Amerikaner verliebt sich in seine nigerianische Krankenschwester.
- Für 3 Primetime Emmys nominiert
- 1 Gewinn & 15 Nominierungen insgesamt
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Handlung
WUSSTEST DU SCHON:
- WissenswertesThe first American sitcom to feature a Nigerian family.
- PatzerThe opening montage shows a subway station and train. Detroit has no subway. The montage actually shows the monorail system that runs around downtown Detroit.
- VerbindungenFeatured in History of the Sitcom: Freaks, Geeks & Outsiders (2021)
Ausgewählte Rezension
I love Chuck Lorre, but as a Nigerian I feel like this show tries too hard. There are several laugh out loud moments and yet there are nod-off moments too. Basically, you don't produce a show about Nigeria with only 2% actual Nigerian cast. Even without checking their names, I can tell that most of these characters aren't Nigerian. Their accent is nothing close to what Nigerians sound like. The one person who has a proper Nigerian accent (Abishola) isn't quite a stellar actress. I cringe sometimes watching her. Like the scene when her ex-husband holds back her son in Nigeria; her anger was laughable. Kofo and Goodwin are the only other people who actually sound Nigerian (to some extent). Also, how do you have 'Nigerian' characters who can't even sy Nigerian names? Bad. Just bad. I can understand if it's coming from Dottie or Bob, not Abishola's aunt and uncle, or the new girl.
I feel like the bad acting in this show is mainly from the Nigerian cast. Maybe a Nigerian director would have helped. Also some things are either exaggerated or not well-thought-out. Like the wedding scene where the lights go out. Yes, Nigerians say UP NEPA every time power is restored, but not well-off Nigerians, and especially not at weddings or high class functions. Typical Nigerians would comport themselves in that situation, and if by some one-in-a-million chance they decide to forgo their pride, they most certainly wouldn't chorus UP NEPA in unison like it's an anthem.
For a show about Nigeria, it's funny I prefer the Americans to the Nigerians, with Uncle Tunde being the only exception. I love this show but for it to work: improve acting, tone down exaggeration, research Nigeria, teach characters to pronounce with the right accent when they say a Nigerian name or speak Yoruba. And finally, not every Nigerian mother or aunt on the show has to be obnoxious.
I feel like the bad acting in this show is mainly from the Nigerian cast. Maybe a Nigerian director would have helped. Also some things are either exaggerated or not well-thought-out. Like the wedding scene where the lights go out. Yes, Nigerians say UP NEPA every time power is restored, but not well-off Nigerians, and especially not at weddings or high class functions. Typical Nigerians would comport themselves in that situation, and if by some one-in-a-million chance they decide to forgo their pride, they most certainly wouldn't chorus UP NEPA in unison like it's an anthem.
For a show about Nigeria, it's funny I prefer the Americans to the Nigerians, with Uncle Tunde being the only exception. I love this show but for it to work: improve acting, tone down exaggeration, research Nigeria, teach characters to pronounce with the right accent when they say a Nigerian name or speak Yoruba. And finally, not every Nigerian mother or aunt on the show has to be obnoxious.
- kadiri_alex
- 18. Feb. 2020
- Permalink
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