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Freakshow
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Forum Icon Join Date: Feb 01, 2008
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 57,117
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FX Sets "Better Things" Season 4 Launch for March 5th
FX Sets Premiere Date for "Better Things" – TCA
by Denise Petski January 9, 2020 The 10-episode fourth season of Pamela Adlon’s Emmy-nominated comedy "Better Things" will premiere at 10 p.m. Thursday, March 5 on FX and the next day on FX on Hulu. The premiere will include the first two episodes, followed by a new episode each subsequent week. https://deadline.com/2020/01/fx-sets...ca-1202825595/ |
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#2 |
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Freakshow
Moderator
Forum Icon Join Date: Feb 01, 2008
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 57,117
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Member
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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 126,009
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Pamela Adlon doesn't know if her upcoming Better Things C-word scene will make it past FX censors
In a Season 4 scene, Adlon's character and her daughters have a fight where they call each other the C-word. But Adlon said at the TV press tour that she hasn't run the scene by FX's Standards & Practices. “I hope that we can keep it because it’s not gratuitous — I don’t believe so. I believe it’s massively important and layered,” Adlon said. “It’s not about the sensationalistic aspect of this word. It’s about who’s saying it and the levels they go through.” Adlon also pointed out that having Disney as FX's new parent company may impact whether the C-word scene airs. Pamela Adlon's Better Things Season 4 boasts four episodes that are stone-cold classics These four episodes are "endlessly rewatchable and rewarding," says Matt Zoller Seitz. "The rest of the season is pretty good too — so nervy yet exact that it makes almost every other American TV show, even excellent ones, seem formulaic and timid in comparison. The series is filled with believably awkward, occasionally volatile, but always humane moments among Adlon’s Sam Fox and her daughters (Mikey Madison, Hannah Alligood, and Olivia Edward) and her friends, colleagues, and exes (including her deadbeat ex-husband, Xander, played by Matthew Glave). It’s about the sisterhood of all women, particularly mothers and daughters of one kind or another; variants of the observation 'All mothers are single mothers' are spoken twice this season. But it’s also about mortality, disappointment, the necessity of letting go of grudges, the difficulty of keeping hope’s embers burning, and the possibility of finding beauty and meaning in the parts of life that so many screenwriting manuals insist are inherently dull and should be avoided in favor of action, conflict, and jeopardy. The sneaky power of this series lies in Adlon’s determination to do what she’s been told not to do and point her camera at parts of the world that commercial television rarely notices." ALSO:
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Last edited by TMC; 03-06-2020 at 08:50 PM. |
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