Too rich to go back to his working-class Latino roots, too "brown" to feel comfortable in his affluent celebrity life--being George Lopez comes with many problems.Too rich to go back to his working-class Latino roots, too "brown" to feel comfortable in his affluent celebrity life--being George Lopez comes with many problems.Too rich to go back to his working-class Latino roots, too "brown" to feel comfortable in his affluent celebrity life--being George Lopez comes with many problems.
- Awards
- 2 nominations total
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Why would you use very bad supporting cast members like Kathy Griffin? This show had so much potential, but you need the right people to make this show.
If you like lazy writing and bad acting then George Lopez is the right actor for you.
George Lopez is a comic genius. He can turn the weird that happens every day into a laughable moment. He reminds me of so many Mexicans in my life including my dad and is a perfect, comic blend of them all. I highly recommend. Hang in there on the "spanglish", play it back to catch some really funny one liners. :) Kudos George Lopez!
George Lopez as a stand-up comic has made me laugh harder than any other, ever. Mucus-expelling, gasping for breath stuff. His family sitcom "George Lopez" (2002-2007) was hilarious, terrifically written, had a great cast, and was largely ignored by Emmy.
Now we have "Lopez", a far superior and more snot-inducing successor, with no laugh track provided or needed. George is now looking for "relevance" as an older entertainer and Vegas escapee in a world of Los Angeles Twits. He's surrounded in his rented mansion by a new family of fringe-dwelling friends and ex-cons (led by Manolo, beautifully played by Anthony 'Citric' Campos), a creepy landlord, and George's manager, an earnest, WASPish woman-child (Hayley Huntley).
Quote of the series so far: "...there's no sliding scale of racism..."
Watch and repeat.
Now we have "Lopez", a far superior and more snot-inducing successor, with no laugh track provided or needed. George is now looking for "relevance" as an older entertainer and Vegas escapee in a world of Los Angeles Twits. He's surrounded in his rented mansion by a new family of fringe-dwelling friends and ex-cons (led by Manolo, beautifully played by Anthony 'Citric' Campos), a creepy landlord, and George's manager, an earnest, WASPish woman-child (Hayley Huntley).
Quote of the series so far: "...there's no sliding scale of racism..."
Watch and repeat.
George Lopez has had several tv shows before this one. On his first attempt, he had a good run playing a family man in the George Lopez Show, but here Lopez plays himself. I was surprised to find a good written show and a fresh take on having George as the lead role. I wasn't too sure what I was getting into before the first episode, but I'm glad I watched. There is nothing overly innovative here that's for sure;it's just Lopez being Lopez. If that is bad or good is up to you to decide. As of me, I like it.
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- 30m
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