Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The good news it that it celebrates mother/ daughter relationships. I’m sure that will have a positive impact on your own daughter.
The mom was a hot mess, her daughter had everything going for her and blew it all up... just like her mother. I wouldn't say this was a positive impact type show.
Lorelei was NOT a hot mess. She did pretty well for herself.
Anonymous wrote:DD12 just asked me to start watching with her. I never watched in real time, though I know it has a cult-like following. We are one episode in and man, what a quirky show. What’s the mass appeal? Is it just nostalgia over a coming of age show?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like how Lauren Graham grew up in this area and went to Langley hs. She also had an upbringing not too dissimilar (I imagine) from Lorelai’s and is very charming in interviews.
Hmm, her mother left the family to be an actress in London and dad raised her. He re-married and she has step siblings. I wouldn't say the lives are too similar.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The good news it that it celebrates mother/ daughter relationships. I’m sure that will have a positive impact on your own daughter.
The mom was a hot mess, her daughter had everything going for her and blew it all up... just like her mother. I wouldn't say this was a positive impact type show.
Anonymous wrote:I like how Lauren Graham grew up in this area and went to Langley hs. She also had an upbringing not too dissimilar (I imagine) from Lorelai’s and is very charming in interviews.
Anonymous wrote:The good news it that it celebrates mother/ daughter relationships. I’m sure that will have a positive impact on your own daughter.
Anonymous wrote:The rapid-fire quip, quip, quippiness of the lines is borderline exhausting.
Anonymous wrote:Watch the whole thing and come back.
A lot of people have an agenda against the show today
Not sure who has an "agenda" but if OP is already not feeling it, time to leave this gimmicky mess of a show behind and choose something better.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was on for years and years, and it was comfort food TV. I started watching with my mom, and I watched when I was out of school and working my first job, and I introduced my boyfriend to it, and then watched it after we got married and had a baby. It was just about little stuff, with happy resolutions, without being dramatic or sensational or shocking or upsetting. There weren't many shows that were like that then, or shows that were so centered on an idealized version of mom/daughter life.
It's not that it is a great show in the "great TV" sense, but I can't think of another show that was so..female?
Eh, I think Charmed was super feminine without the annoying bits in. That being said, you're totally entitled to your comfort TV. Whatever that is to you is fine.[/quote
I loved Charmed and Gilmore Girls. The difference though is that Charmed did try to bring in the male audience with the sexy skimpy outfits they had the sisters wear. Gilmore Girls was purely a women's show about women.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Clever writing, chock full of pop references that are very entertaining. Heartwarming stories, humor, (mostly) charismatic cast. I recently watched with my 11 yo daughter and we both loved it, and it was a great opportunity to discuss an array of life lessons. But in my experience people either adore Amy Sherman-Palladino projects or dislike them, not much middle ground.
+1
My tween daughter and I spent an entire summer watching all seasons - it was quite the bonding experience. There are annoying moments and it's not "high art," but it's certainly entertaining and often quite hilarious. However, I found that I *hated* The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (except for the clothes) because that same stagey, rat-a-tat-tat Amy Sherman-Palladino dialogue was so incredibly grating. And there were definitely some later GG seasons that were pretty bad, compared to the great first ones.