Too broad sitcom squanderers

Image of David Alan Grier, Kyla-Drew and Jamie Foxx in Netflix's Dad Stops Shame on Me!

David Alan Grier, Kyla-Drew and Jamie Foxx play in Dad Stop Me embarrassing Me!
Photo: Saeed Adyani / Netflix

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Before becoming an Oscar-winning actor and Grammy-winning artist, Jamie Foxx had already used his work as a popular actor in the groundbreaking sketch comedy show. In vivid color in his own self-title series. The Jamie Foxx Show, co-created and produced by Foxx with Bentley Kyle Evans, was an amazing as unobtrusive sitcom that lasted five seasons on The WB. But the series was a starting point for Foxx, which continued to be praised for its dramatic roles in Collateral, Dream girls, en Not mercy, also as his Oscar-winning turn as Ray Charles in the movie Ray.

Foxx tries to harness its multi-punctuation capabilities in its return to sitcoms, but no musical interplay or foreign characters can match Bentley Kyle Evans’ generic comedy Dad stop embarrassing me!. In the Netflix series, Foxx plays Brian Dixon, a single father trying to reconnect with his 15-year-old daughter while also running his mother’s cosmetics company and his own dating life. Kyla-Drew stars as Brian’s daughter Sasha, who also carries a heavy load. She is saddened by the recent death of her mother, and is adjusting to life in Atlanta, and is most urgent for the program, citing the ways her father embarrassed her.

Dad stop embarrassing me! starts in media rest as Brian and Sasha meet with a therapist (Luenell) who thinks they are a couple rather than father and daughter. The confusion is laughed at, but it does speak to the central conflict of the program. Brian and Sasha do not really know each other; For the past 15 years, she has spent three weeks of each summer and the odd weekend with her father, but he might as well be a family friend. The series occasionally grapples with this awkward truth, but prefers to place Brian in rather ridiculous situations that only require Sasha to regularly express a little variation on the title.

The tendency to be ridiculous is often at odds with the show’s offerings in earnest, an irregularity that extends to the strange layout of Brian’s home in Atlanta. The foyer / living area is furnished like a pool room, complete with pool table and limited furniture, while the TV and sofa are in the kitchen-dining room combination. It feels anything but homely, and is reminiscent of the increased rentals in the reality series more than staying in similar family sitcom. We can consider the random setup as a reflection of this merger household, which includes Brian’s father Fox (David Alan Grier), three-time divorced sister Chelsea (Porscha Coleman), and a close-knit police friend Johnny (Jonathan Kite). But Dad stop embarrassing me! does not incorporate the idea more smoothly into his story, but neither does the financial reality of raising a teenager while your business is struggling. These are all elements shared via a mere exposition of dialogue, rather than forming the basis of a multigenerational family comedy.

Like the Dixon House, which Dad stop embarrassing me! shortcomings are character. The series contains everything from issue-based humor, to heartfelt comedy, to farce without ever finding a clue. The shifts in tone and subject are telegraphed; the second episode, “Godastamaste”, announces Sasha’s conflicting feelings about religion so clearly that it can just as well be called “Crisis Of Faith”. Similarly, Foxx pulls several wigs and bare caps to lighten his sketch comedy muscles again, but does not really create something memorable. The series is not entirely without its charm; Foxx and Grier is a game for everything the roulette wheel of the premises needs at any given moment. Nickelodeon TV alum Kyla-Drew is a little more self-conscious, but she manages to capture the teenage combination of naivety and world fatigue. The Brian Sasha Cushionmicrophone recalls the central relationship in UPNs Face to face, which ran from 2001 to 2006, which is also the period from which Dad stop embarrassing me! seems to draw his humor.

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Photo: Saeed Adyani / Netflix

Ddespite the debut just six months after it was ordered to series, Dad stop embarrassing me! already feeling incredibly outdated. There’s a joke about skinny jeans in the premiere that is as flimsy as it is sticky, which is the case for many of the recurring pieces on the show. The majority of characters break the fourth wall and sometimes break down at each other’s instant moments. At one point, Sasha literally spells out the homophone (‘thot’ / ‘thought’) that causes all sorts of tension in what appears to be a couple’s therapy sessions. And virtually everyone makes an impression, sometimes while breaking the fourth wall.

It’s too much and not enough, just like Dad stop embarrassing me! is ultimately too self-conscious and unconscious. The series does not trust its laugh track to tell the jokes to viewers; it expands the claws or finds another way to double. Similarly, in which social comments can be found Dad stop embarrassing me! is underlined, but ultimately inadequate. The season finale takes on the police handover and racial profiling, when just one episode or another preceded Johnny overusing his power. The least of this series’ problems is a silly father whose wrong attempts to win his daughter sometimes embarrass her.

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