Cougar Town: Season One
DVD Released August 17th, 2010
Wednesdays at 9:30 PM on ABC
Both the premise and the title of the show, Cougar Town originally turned me off. The show's target audience is older women. Nothing about the show's title or description was interesting to me in the least. However it was on before Eastwick last fall, so i often caught the episodes, and i found that they were surprisingly funny, and not nearly as focused on the cougar aspect as I would have expected.
Cougar is a slang term for a woman over fourty who persues younger men.
In fact, the show really isn't as much about cougars as it is about a divorced woman who is trying to re-enter the dating world and keep up with her younger assistant Laurie. In fact, the show strayed so far from its cougar roots that in May 2010, the shows producers were considering a name change, but were unable to come up with a better name.
So the name stuck, and while it isn't necesarily what the show is about, it certainly is a name that stands out. I gave the show a chance, and watched the entire thing, and I found it to be amusing. The humor was often vulgar and in your face, but I enjoyed it. I found the characters to be interesting and likeable, even the screw-up ex husband Bobby.
Jules Cobb (Courtney Cox) is pitch perfect as the divorced mother of a teenage son, Travis (Dan Byrd), trying to get into the dating scene again while still being a mother to her son. Bobby (Brian Van Holt) is her ex-husband and Travis' father who still cares about Jules so much that she can't get rid of him. Ellie (Christa Miller) and Andy (Ian Gomez) Torres are Jules next door neighbors, and Jules and Bobby's best friends (respectively). Ellie is the married, 40-something voice of reason in Jules quest to recapture her youth, in part to keep up with her 20-something assistant Laurie (Busy Phillips). Jules identifies early on with the neighbor that lives across from the street from her who is also recently divorced, Grayson Ellis (Josh Hopkins). At first Grayson is resistant, but eventually becomes a permanent part of Jules social circle.
The show starts off with Jules dating younger men, but eventually she gets into some more mature relationships, and it seems as though that is likely a more permanent direction that the show is going to go in.
The one weak point in my view is the character of Laurie, who often times is entertaining, but just as often is shallow and annoying. She sems to have made steps later in the season towards being less a self-involved bimbo, but is still the most annoying character in the show.
Still, the humor is there, and most of the characters are likable and real. When the season was ove,r i found myself wishing there were more. I have yet to see Modern Family but Cougar Town looks to be the best freshmen sitcom of the 2009-2010 season. I'll re-evaulate after having seen Modern Family but this show is miles ahead of the other freshman sitcom The Middle, perhaps not in originality but certainly in entertainment value and humor.
Ignore the show's description and it's title, and give Cougar Town a chance - you're likely to be pleasantly surprised. I know I was.
4 out of 5 stars
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