A gay high school English teacher and his co-workers try to balance the demands of the students and their parents.A gay high school English teacher and his co-workers try to balance the demands of the students and their parents.A gay high school English teacher and his co-workers try to balance the demands of the students and their parents.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 18 nominations total
Browse episodes
Featured reviews
This show is absolutely hilarious. I'm also a mother with 2 gen z's and one gen alpha. It's fairly accurate and my daughter can relate. I love how Jordan is showing all sides, including all the contradictions, when it comes to schools and lgbtq related issues. And to the reviewer that gave 1 star, based on your other only 1 star reviews, you could seriously benefit from a spelling and grammar lesson with Mr. Marquez. And side note, having lgbtq representation doesn't make it an agenda. It's reality. They exist. It may be exaggerated for comedy, but there's no evil agenda. Relax. Have fun. It's damn funny.
Instead of the stale sitcom premise constantly offered up by most of the major networks, this is a fresh take on school life in the early to mid 2000's, much in the same vein as Abbott Elementary. Kudos to FX for tackling important issues head on, and presenting it in a real, palatable light.
This show has started off showing real grit and common sense on telling its story. Not shying away from the very real issues that are common place in an ever changing world. Nor are they playing to the hackish stereotypes of the LGBTQIA community, teachers or students.
The writing is smart, the storylines solid, the characters are believable and relatable. Really hope FX gives this show the legs to really run.
This show has started off showing real grit and common sense on telling its story. Not shying away from the very real issues that are common place in an ever changing world. Nor are they playing to the hackish stereotypes of the LGBTQIA community, teachers or students.
The writing is smart, the storylines solid, the characters are believable and relatable. Really hope FX gives this show the legs to really run.
This is what good writing looks like.
I consume a lot of comedy -- A LOT -- and this was the best pilot I've seen in a very long time. The cast is strong and the relationships between every character feel incredibly natural. The dialogue is on point as well. I've seen too many school based shows where the students just don't sound natural. These ones do.
I'm only two episodes in, but I can already tell this is a show I'll be rewatching many times --- the world feels real and I'm immediately immersed.
Give it a chance, especially if you love workplace comedies like I do. You won't regret it.
I consume a lot of comedy -- A LOT -- and this was the best pilot I've seen in a very long time. The cast is strong and the relationships between every character feel incredibly natural. The dialogue is on point as well. I've seen too many school based shows where the students just don't sound natural. These ones do.
I'm only two episodes in, but I can already tell this is a show I'll be rewatching many times --- the world feels real and I'm immediately immersed.
Give it a chance, especially if you love workplace comedies like I do. You won't regret it.
Nailed it. Haha. So I wasn't impressed with the promos, but this is a clever satire of teaching at high school in 2024. This isn't for everyone, but they hit the multifaceted influences of politics on education and every changing Zoomer / Alpha generation. The obsession with phones and recording teachers is real. The high schoolers saying they feel targeted, bullied, and triggered while exchanging insults is spot on. The teachers are obvious caricatures of very familiar teacher stereotypes. The only thing not believable is how small the football stadium is at a high school in Texas, and the students look like they're in their early 20s. If you like silly sitcoms that are spoofs of teaching high school, you'll like this. If you don't like it, then don't watch it.
A very funny and Fresh take on the high school sitcom genre. We follow an english teacher who happens to be gay. The dialog is smart and witty, the protagonists are likeable, the storyline gives plenty of possibilities to develop over time.
A lot of negative reviews focus on the LGBT+ part of the show. Of course, being gay is as much the main protagonist identity as being straight is part of my identity, but the show doesn't feel preachy. Instead the show focuses on the daily small things that sometimes feels very important, but usually aten't.
I hope the show gets the opportunity to develop, given time it could reach the level of Modern family or The office.
A lot of negative reviews focus on the LGBT+ part of the show. Of course, being gay is as much the main protagonist identity as being straight is part of my identity, but the show doesn't feel preachy. Instead the show focuses on the daily small things that sometimes feels very important, but usually aten't.
I hope the show gets the opportunity to develop, given time it could reach the level of Modern family or The office.
Did you know
- TriviaBrian Jordan Alvarez, who plays the lead role of teacher Evan Marquez, also has creator, producer (8 episodes), writer (5 episodes), and director (3 episodes) credits for the first season. Co-star Stephanie Koenig, who plays fellow teacher and friend Gwen Sanders, has story editor (7 episodes) and writer (2 episodes) credits.
- ConnectionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 24 Best TV Shows of 2024 (2024)
Details
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content