It picks up five years after Micheal: Tuesdays and Thursdays, with Michael well established in his new city, and David struggling to continue his practice.It picks up five years after Micheal: Tuesdays and Thursdays, with Michael well established in his new city, and David struggling to continue his practice.It picks up five years after Micheal: Tuesdays and Thursdays, with Michael well established in his new city, and David struggling to continue his practice.
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What a great show! I stumbled into it, had no expectations one way or another, and was sucked in. The two main characters, the shrink and the patient, are likable, very human, and very relatable. The humor is Canadian - wry, a bit self-deprecating, on point. The two leads, the shrink and the patient have messy lives --- because life IS messy. There's a U. S. show,"The Patient" - in which the patient is a sociopath. Gets very strange. This t.v. Show is sociopath-free. It's fun watching characters dip into each other lives. I trying to avoid revealing too much. "Workin' Moms" is another Canadian workplace comedy which is also highly successful (in terms of convincing me love it).
This show was pretty good at first. Felt like it maybe got canceled too soon before it could really find the right groove. When it came back it just was not good at all. I'm not sure if it is still on the air or not. The psychologist character is the best part of the show. Decent writing and story.
Charming, profound, bingeworthy Canadian series written and performed by a couple of veteran sketch-com guys, Bob Martin (as Dr. Storper) and Matt Watts (who gets a credit for "neuroses") as Michael. Sorry to say that it stiffed on the CBC 10+ years ago, a promised third season never materialized, and it isn't getting a whole lot of love on this forum right now, tbh. My clever wife discovered it on Netflix and we gobbled it up just like that.
Dr. Storper's a cognitive behavioral therapist, which means he nudges his "multiphobic" patient into real-life situations that trigger his anxiety, a technique that's not all that different from improv, it seems to me. When that vein's played out, subplots involving Dr. Storper's efforts to cash in on Michael's shaky recovery with a self-help book, plus some workplace stuff where Michael gets sabotaged by a rivalrous normie, are both quite entertaining. Scripts are consistently well worked out; jokes are delivered with deadpan Canadian subtlety, and the supporting cast (including a recurring role for Ed Asner and cameos by Sandra Oh and Samantha Bee) is first-rate. Cougarish Jennifer Irwin ("Eastbound and Down") returns to her Canadian roots as Storper's very hands-on editor; horror-show stalwart Tommie-Amber Pirie gets to stretch as the doctor's ditsy receptionist and Michael's on-and-off GF, on the well known theory that a 30-something protagonist who's a 5 at best deserves at least an 8 as his love interest.
Dr. Storper's a cognitive behavioral therapist, which means he nudges his "multiphobic" patient into real-life situations that trigger his anxiety, a technique that's not all that different from improv, it seems to me. When that vein's played out, subplots involving Dr. Storper's efforts to cash in on Michael's shaky recovery with a self-help book, plus some workplace stuff where Michael gets sabotaged by a rivalrous normie, are both quite entertaining. Scripts are consistently well worked out; jokes are delivered with deadpan Canadian subtlety, and the supporting cast (including a recurring role for Ed Asner and cameos by Sandra Oh and Samantha Bee) is first-rate. Cougarish Jennifer Irwin ("Eastbound and Down") returns to her Canadian roots as Storper's very hands-on editor; horror-show stalwart Tommie-Amber Pirie gets to stretch as the doctor's ditsy receptionist and Michael's on-and-off GF, on the well known theory that a 30-something protagonist who's a 5 at best deserves at least an 8 as his love interest.
Michael is a depressed, anxious patient with more fears than he can count. Dr David Storper has been his twice a week psychiatrist going on 15 years. This series tells the stories of Michael's treatment and recovery, and David's struggles to write a book detailing the whole thing. Created by and starring both Bob Martin (Slings & Arrows) and Matt Watts (The Newsroom), I can definitely feel the influence of both those previous shows on this, it has a lot of the same tone and comedy. No laugh tracks, mostly deadpan, self-deprecating humour and sarcasm, I never really laughed throughout the series, but did breathe out of my nose heavily once or twice. I quite related to Michael's anxiety issues, while he's an extreme case it was good representation, however David is an absolutely terrible psychiatrist, the series really doesn't do well for advocating proper mental health (imo). Neither Michael or Davids character's really get any depth over the series split two season run, and while some phobias are conquered I wouldn't say either character really changes or grows. The series also fails the Bechdel test miserably, its quite bad considering its from 2011. The second season was only a short 6 episode run in 2017, 6 years after the original series ran, and CBC changed its name to Michael: Every Day, I guess to better fit the plot of that season. Either way, only the second season (labeled as the first) is available on Gem, although I have to say I think the original 2011 first season is better, but not by much. You can probably pass on this one.
The only reason I would recommend trying to watch this show is to see how long you can put up with it before slamming your head against the wall. This show is incredibly boring.
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- Michael: Tuesdays & Thursdays
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