A lawyer is forced to take care of one of New York City's wealthiest families.A lawyer is forced to take care of one of New York City's wealthiest families.A lawyer is forced to take care of one of New York City's wealthiest families.
- Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
- 7 nominations total
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Did you know
- TriviaPeter Krause would later publicly voice his displeasure that the tone of the show was changed during the editing process, and he vowed to never work at ABC again.
- ConnectionsFeatured in MsMojo: Top 10 Groundbreaking Moments for LGBTQ Characters on TV (2017)
Featured review
Nick George (Peter Krause) follows his late father's footstep as the legal fixer for the scandal ridden New York Darling family. Tripp (Donald Sutherland) and Tish (Jill Clayburgh) are the heads of the family. Their son Patrick (William Baldwin) is the reluctant politician with closeted secrets. Karen (Natalie Zea) is the jet setting daughter who has a lifelong crush on Nick despite his marriage to Lisa (Zoe McLellan). Juliet (Samaire Armstrong) is struggling with issues (including real-life ones) along with twin Jeremy. Brian has an illegitimate son. Simon Elder (Blair Underwood) is Tripp's rival.
The concept is promising but it's reliant on the likability of the characters. They can't be all be douches and mostly they're not. Mostly they're just damaged by the secrets they're keeping. There are probably a few too many characters. The show lasted two seasons. The first season does well. It has a nice balance of comedy and darker revelations. The second season gets weighted down by too much revelations. Sadly it's the usual way for a failing TV show to ramp up the drama.
The concept is promising but it's reliant on the likability of the characters. They can't be all be douches and mostly they're not. Mostly they're just damaged by the secrets they're keeping. There are probably a few too many characters. The show lasted two seasons. The first season does well. It has a nice balance of comedy and darker revelations. The second season gets weighted down by too much revelations. Sadly it's the usual way for a failing TV show to ramp up the drama.
- SnoopyStyle
- Aug 22, 2013
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