A grief therapist starts telling his clients exactly what he thinks
Ignoring his training and ethics, he makes huge changes in people’s lives, including his own. Check out our list of renewed and canceled shows to see if your favorite show has been saved. When Brett Goldstein, Jason Segel, and Bill Lawrence asked how they got Harrison Ford to join the series, Segel said that Goldstein originally wanted “a Harrison Ford type” and that he was going to audition for people like Ford.
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Segel told Goldstein that they should have pitched him to Ford first, thinking he would immediately turn it down, but at least other people would hear that Harrison Ford was involved in the project, sparking significant interest from other actors. Eventually, Goldstein spoke to Ford and convinced him to take the role. Goldstein still doesn’t know what he did to convince him, but he was thrilled nonetheless.
It’s pure joy
Tightly written, good lines, enough pathos to keep it from becoming The Big Bang Theory for the middle class, a joy to watch. Yes, real therapists wouldn’t behave like that, but anyone with a functioning brain cell would know that, so criticism from that perspective is just negativity for the sake of lowering ratings. Are any of the characters stereotypes?
A complete revelation and a show worth watching, especially for him
Yes, but no offense is intended and none are to be assumed, FYI I worked with a gay guy who was exactly the stereotype shown here. The real success here is mixing the seriousness and grief of therapy with the growing pains of life at different ages, stages, and lifestyles and making it all damn funny. Finally, who knew how good a light comedy actor Harrison Ford was?