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A look at the life of two best friends, a meek politically correct Caucasian ethics professor and an easy-going African American, and their families.A look at the life of two best friends, a meek politically correct Caucasian ethics professor and an easy-going African American, and their families.A look at the life of two best friends, a meek politically correct Caucasian ethics professor and an easy-going African American, and their families.
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"Truth Be Told" is a comedy series that centers on the lives of two married couples who are neighbors. One is a black couple and the other is a white guy and his so-called "ethnically ambiguous" wife. Although the show makes some observations about racial situations, that does not seem to be the focus of the show in the first two episodes. And when race is the topic, it is not so much a discussion as a lecture by the black friend who is given authority in that area.
The main topic is about gender and navigating marriage from the perspective of men vs. women. This theme is all about trust. Should women trust men (because men are probably untrustworthy)? Knowing that women distrust them, how should the men behave (because wives have insecurities and lay traps for husbands)? What is the best way for a wife to steer her husband's behavior where she wants it to go without him realizing she is driving?
To some degree, there is a war of manipulation. This could be a rich topic for humor, but the humor in "Truth Be Told" is fairly predictable and flat.
In discussions that involve both couples, I notice that the two men usually talk to each other and the two women usually discuss matters without the men. Compare this to some other comedies that are classics: In "Seinfeld", Elaine is like one of the guys and the men talk with her in the same way and as much as they talk with each other. In "Frasier", Roz and Daphne are integrated into the ensemble, not a separate gender entity. And in "Friends", the six friends may have their "gal pals" and "best buddies", but the six continuously interact in every possible combination and love equally beyond gender lines.
"Truth Be Told" is a lukewarm offering at best. Personally, I prefer "Bad Judge", which also included Tone Bell in its cast.
The main topic is about gender and navigating marriage from the perspective of men vs. women. This theme is all about trust. Should women trust men (because men are probably untrustworthy)? Knowing that women distrust them, how should the men behave (because wives have insecurities and lay traps for husbands)? What is the best way for a wife to steer her husband's behavior where she wants it to go without him realizing she is driving?
To some degree, there is a war of manipulation. This could be a rich topic for humor, but the humor in "Truth Be Told" is fairly predictable and flat.
In discussions that involve both couples, I notice that the two men usually talk to each other and the two women usually discuss matters without the men. Compare this to some other comedies that are classics: In "Seinfeld", Elaine is like one of the guys and the men talk with her in the same way and as much as they talk with each other. In "Frasier", Roz and Daphne are integrated into the ensemble, not a separate gender entity. And in "Friends", the six friends may have their "gal pals" and "best buddies", but the six continuously interact in every possible combination and love equally beyond gender lines.
"Truth Be Told" is a lukewarm offering at best. Personally, I prefer "Bad Judge", which also included Tone Bell in its cast.
Within the first five minutes of the pilot it's apparent that this series is a goner. Writers are clearly trying to seem cutting edge but end up digging a hole. Jokes (if you want to call them that) are few and far between, but the laughs are expected - awkward. The biggest flop of NBC history, and that's saying something. NBC needs to get it together in the comedy spectrum and stop producing shows based off strictly money deals and relationships. It hasn't worked for years now. Get the funny people in, and the washed up deals out. This show is a hodgepodge of an attempt to remain relevant. Which is pretty ridiculous, considering the out of touch casting choices. I'll be waiting for a good comedy to come through like the old NBC shows. It's only up from here!
Mitch (Mark-Paul Gosselaar) lives a regular suburban life with his Filipino wife Tracy (Vanessa Lachey) and their young daughter Sadie. The married neighbors Russell (Tone Bell) and Angie (Bresha Webb) are their best friends.
This is a really uneven sitcom. The pilot is flat and unfunny. The show struggles to find the comedy. The four leads' chemistry takes several episodes to establish. Gosselaar has been doing this for a long time. Lachey is not a particularly funny performer. Bell and Webb are good. Episode 7 is probably where the chemistry is solidified as the pairings get switched. The fourth episode 'Psychic Chicken' is hilarious and the first truly good episode from this show. It continues to be uneven and is unlikely to survive having its order cut down to 10 episodes.
This is a really uneven sitcom. The pilot is flat and unfunny. The show struggles to find the comedy. The four leads' chemistry takes several episodes to establish. Gosselaar has been doing this for a long time. Lachey is not a particularly funny performer. Bell and Webb are good. Episode 7 is probably where the chemistry is solidified as the pairings get switched. The fourth episode 'Psychic Chicken' is hilarious and the first truly good episode from this show. It continues to be uneven and is unlikely to survive having its order cut down to 10 episodes.
10mattph
I laughed so hard a bunch of times. This is really quite funny. I really love that it makes light of some really good polarizing issues, and that it isn't afraid to go against what is P.C. makes the jokes all that much better. I am glad to see a new show that isn't afraid to say to point out the joke in something we are all just supposed to not talk about. It's hilarious.
The chemistry between the actors is really good also. It's like the show has been on for years already. I really hope to see more episodes. I marathon watched the first season and I couldn't stop laughing especially the episode where the neighbor's daughter accidentally walks in on Russell in the shower. If I could give it 11 stars I would.
I had never heard of it until it popped up on my HULU recommendations. I want more people to see this show and I have already recommended it to several friends.
The chemistry between the actors is really good also. It's like the show has been on for years already. I really hope to see more episodes. I marathon watched the first season and I couldn't stop laughing especially the episode where the neighbor's daughter accidentally walks in on Russell in the shower. If I could give it 11 stars I would.
I had never heard of it until it popped up on my HULU recommendations. I want more people to see this show and I have already recommended it to several friends.
This an unfunny comedy with a fake laugh track starring the otherwise sympathetic Mark-Paul Gosselaar.
It's about 2 couples and neighbours that ...blah..blah..and blah.
Gosselaar is supposed to be an ...ethics professor, so as you might expect there are some ...political correctness messages in this, in a sense like Black-ish but far worst.
The dialogs are too quick and the subject often jumps from one topic to another. Add to all this the annoying fake laughs every couple of seconds and you have a total mess.
Overall: I think the show is already frozen...so avoid it.
It's about 2 couples and neighbours that ...blah..blah..and blah.
Gosselaar is supposed to be an ...ethics professor, so as you might expect there are some ...political correctness messages in this, in a sense like Black-ish but far worst.
The dialogs are too quick and the subject often jumps from one topic to another. Add to all this the annoying fake laughs every couple of seconds and you have a total mess.
Overall: I think the show is already frozen...so avoid it.
Did you know
- TriviaThis series returns star Mark-Paul Gosselaar to NBC, the network which aired his original breakout hit, Saved by the Bell (1989), 26 years before.
- How many seasons does Truth Be Told have?Powered by Alexa
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