To me Cleveland Show seemed all right based on an episode or two. Nothing spectacular, but all right. But then I came across this piece, where John McWhorter of The New Republic tears into it with civil criticism. His broad argument is that Cleveland Show is mostly just plugging Cleveland into his own Quahog situation, and we're asked to consider it different and fresh by virtue of its "blackness." He sees Cleveland Jr. as a substitution for Chris, the midget kid as doing nothing that Stewie hasn't done as well or better, and so on.
Money quote:
And a finishing blow:
Ouch.
My first impression is that you could take this thinking a bit too far and logically criticize a show just for not having a multicolor cast, as if indulging in sameness can never be more than a "retrogarde" pandering attempt. That just wouldn't be fair, since sitcoms on white families never get this criticism as far as I know. On the other hand Cleveland Show does feel very much like a Family Guy spinoff in a few ways, even though its humor is executed a bit differently. At first, I accepted it for the things that the writer talks about in the first 2-3 paragraphs. But when he basically says it's too much of a close spinoff to really prosper and let Cleveland do his own thing, I find it hard to argue.
Read the whole thing. Is he right? Did Cleveland need a more "interesting world" of his own? What do you think of this?
Money quote:
And a finishing blow:
Ouch.
My first impression is that you could take this thinking a bit too far and logically criticize a show just for not having a multicolor cast, as if indulging in sameness can never be more than a "retrogarde" pandering attempt. That just wouldn't be fair, since sitcoms on white families never get this criticism as far as I know. On the other hand Cleveland Show does feel very much like a Family Guy spinoff in a few ways, even though its humor is executed a bit differently. At first, I accepted it for the things that the writer talks about in the first 2-3 paragraphs. But when he basically says it's too much of a close spinoff to really prosper and let Cleveland do his own thing, I find it hard to argue.
Read the whole thing. Is he right? Did Cleveland need a more "interesting world" of his own? What do you think of this?