Tag: the-carmichael-show

  • NBC Cancels ‘The Carmichael Show’ After ‘2.5’ Seasons, Jerrod Carmichael Reacts

    NBC and creator/star Jerrod Carmichael just confirmed “The Carmichael Show” won’t be returning for a fourth season. Season 3 is currently still airing, having premiered on May 31, and just last week the dramedy showed the mass shooting episode it had held for two weeks.

    The network revealed the cancellation news not long after Carmichael announced that he was exiting the series, and cast options were scheduled to expire at the end of today (June 30).

    Jerrod Carmichael released a statement via Deadline:

    “For three seasons (okay 2.5), I got to make a show that I love with my friends. It’s something I’ve wanted to do since I was 13. Now, I’m excited to go make other things that I love. Thank you to every person who worked on or watched The Carmichael Show.”

    “The Carmichael Show” started with six episodes in Season 1, which aired in 2015, then returned with 13 episodes in Season 2, and 13 more ordered for Season 3.

    20th Century Fox TV presidents Jonnie Davis and Howard Kurtzman also released a statement:

    “The Carmichael Show was such a wonderful show that we choose to focus today not on its loss but on the three incredible seasons we had the pleasure to produce. We are thankful to the brilliant Jerrod Carmichael and his talented cast, and to showrunner Danielle Sanchez-Witzell, our fantastic writers and devoted production team. It’s a rarity that a comedy series tackles the social and political issues of the day in such a clever and hilariously funny way. This show was special, and we will miss it.”

    The timely, hot-button comedy has been averaging over 3 million viewers a week, with the most recent June 28 Episode 6 earning 3.49 million viewers and a 0.7/3 rating/share in the adults 18-49 demographic.

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  • ‘The Carmichael Show’ Star: NBC Did ‘a Disservice’ to Pull Mass Shooting Episode

    THE CARMICHAEL SHOW -- "Yes Means Yes" Episode 302 -- Pictured: (l-r) Loretta Devine as Cynthia Carmichael, David Alan Grier as Joe Carmichael, Jerrod Carmichael as Jerrod Carmichael, Lil Rel Howery as Bobby Carmichael -- (Photo by: Chris Haston/NBC)Last night, “The Carmichael Show” Season 3 was originally scheduled to air an episode called “Shoot-Up-Able,” with the sitcom once again tackling a tough, timely subject in its own way. However, after the Congressional baseball shooting, and then the shooting in San Francisco, NBC ended up pulling the episode in favor of “Lesbian Wedding.”

    Earlier in the day, after NBC made its decision to pull the episode, but before the show actually aired, star “Chelsea,” to talk about the episode that would’ve followed his character surviving a mass shooting.

    “I thought that tonight’s episode would have an opportunity to talk about these tragedies in a meaningful way and really lend itself to conversation. A lot of times when things like this happen, and someone wants to talk about it in an outlet that’s not the news, people will say ‘too soon.’ But when is it not too soon? Unfortunately these things happen constantly, and it’s a thing that breaks all of our hearts. The episode itself was about me, the character Jerrod, surviving a mass shooting and him coming to the realization that even though he wasn’t physically harmed he is still very much a victim.”

    He argued that we’re all victims after these attacks, suffering from fear, and the pain of knowing that families have lost loved ones.

    “And that’s what the episode is about. Right now, NBC wants to pull the episode. To me, I understand a corporation making that decision, but really, to me, what it says is you don’t think America is smart enough to handle real dialogue and something that reflects real family conversations and something that feels honest and true and still respects the victims. We handled the episode with as much love and integrity as we possibly could. To just pull that is just, it’s criminal. It seems to do a disservice to the viewer, it does a disservice to you, it does a disservice to all of us.”

    He told Chelsea Handler he hoped they were having a conversation about it, as opposed to just a set decision.

    The episode did not air last night, but perhaps it will air later. He’s right, though, if you wait for the perfect time to address mass shootings — and consider the perfect time to be when there hasn’t been one — you’ll end up waiting forever. They seem to happen every single week.

    The full episode of “Chelsea” airs Friday on Netflix.

    [via: EW]

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  • How Amber Stevens West Went From Beverly Hills High to Sitcom Star

    World Premiere Of 'Snatched'So it isn’t exactly a long way from Beverly Hills High School to Hollywood, but “The Carmichael Show” star Amber Stevens West is determined to make the most of the journey.

    Daughter of the famed radio personality, TV announcer and actor Shadoe Stevens, the 30-year-old actress came of age in the heart of fabled 90210 community among the offspring of many other entertainment industry figures both in front of and behind the camera, making a move into modeling and acting a seemingly natural career path given her natural beauty and charismatic energy.

    But now, following a lengthy stint on the collegiate dramedy “Greek” and her current leading role on the issues-driven NBC sitcom headlined by Jerrod Carmichael, Stevens West admits that her course wasn’t always as clear as some of her fellow alumni, but now that she’s found her comedic voice she hopes to mine it for all that it’s worth.

    Moviefone: Give me some teases for what you in particular as Maxine will be dealing with in the new season.

    Amber Stevens West: Oh goodness — there’s a lot that happens! This season’s been amazing. I don’t think there’s a bad show in the bunch. Not that there ever has been! There’s a lot of really strong topics, some dramatic stuff, some hilarious awkward stuff.

    Maxine, now, is out of school, so she’s a working woman. Her opinions have just become stronger — they’ve just become stronger and louder — so her point of view is always going to be heard on the show. She’s not easy to budge. So there’s more of that. Yeah, it’s a lot of really kind of fun and interesting conversations that we get to have.

    You guys are unafraid to take on some hot button topics.

    Oh yeah, certainly. There’s a lot of stuff that we’re doing that I have never seen on television before, approaching subjects in a completely different way, with new angles and perspectives that haven’t been shown before, and I think that’s when our show is at its best, that’s what we’re doing.

    We’re not having conversations that you’ve already had at home with your family. We’re trying to find at least one new perspective, whether it’s my character that has it or someone else in the cast, that you haven’t really heard said out loud. Maybe you’ve thought it before. We have a new angle on the subject, so I think that’s what sets our show apart from everyone else. And we certainly do that with every single episode this year.

    Three seasons in, what do you love about working in comedy in this tried-and-true TV format?

    I think this is the way that a lot of people really like to consume their entertainment. It’s 22 minutes of thought-provoking, but, like, silly fun. I really enjoy having a live audience. I love that we get to rehearse all week with each other, and really find the conversation that needs to be had.

    At the beginning of the week, the scripts may not have all the perspectives that we’re looking for, so by putting it on its feet and giving ourselves the few days, we have the time to find it and really nail down exactly what we’re trying to accomplish. So I think that this multi-camera medium works so well for the show that we do.

    Working in comedy is the best job in the world. I get to laugh all day long, and I get to have the live audience every week, and get that instant feedback. It’s super gratifying. I would be fine doing only this the rest of my life.

    Give me your take on the dynamic between you and Jerrod, because you have to have a certain kind of chemistry to sell both your relationship and the comedy at the same time. Tell me about how you guys have developed that over the course of three seasons.

    Yeah. The more you work with somebody, the more comfortable you become with them. But quite honestly, when Jerrod and I first met, it was instant chemistry. And I just mean that in the sense of, like, we immediately felt like old friends. There was just something that was naturally there between us.

    So of course over these last few years together, we’ve gotten more and more comfortable with one another. And I think that you can tell that on the show. People who have been in a long term relationship, you can guess that almost right off the bat, if they’ve been dating for a long time, or if they’re brand new, but based on like how comfortable they are with one another.

    I think in the show we’re able to show that we truly love each other, and that we’re on the same team, but we can have real arguments. We differ on opinions on a lot of things on a regular basis, but at the end of the day, we have respect for one another to say, “Okay fine, that’s your opinion and this is my opinion.” We like to hear each other’s side of the conversation because we respect one another’s side of the conversation. I think that we get along really well in real life, and I think that you can tell that on the show as well. I hope you can!

    Tell me about the shows that you grew up watching that were the ones that made you both laugh and think, like this show does.

    I did certainly grow up watching a lot of sitcom. I was a huge fan of “Everybody Loves Raymond.” That was a show that kind of would get me to think. Even like older shows like “Mary Tyler Moore” and “Rhoda,” I thought they were progressive and thought-provoking. But to be quite honest, my favorite show of all time is “Friends,” and it’s not always making you think, but God, that was a good show!

    I like to watch shows that make you think, but also characters that you love, that you feel like you know. And I think “The Carmichael Show” also is that. It’s a family that you feel comfortable with. I think a lot of people that I meet who watch the show feel like we are their family, and I’m really grateful that they feel that way, because we certainly feel that way with one another.

    How early in your acting aspirations did you want to do comedy? I know some actors love to do the really emotional gut-wrenching thing, but then they find out that they’re good at comedy. So where were you on your desire to do it early on?

    I always wanted to do it. It was really the only thing I ever wanted to do. Now, I’m not like the funniest person, but I sure enjoy being around funny, and a lot of jokes, and silly, and making light of things, and just having fun. I’m that way in life, too.

    I was really introduced to acting firsthand by watching my dad on a sitcom. He was on a show back in the ’90s called “Dave’s World.” I would go every single week with my mom and my baby sister, and we would watch the live tapings. I didn’t know at the time that that was something that I wanted to do, and how much it was influencing my decisions later in life. But I knew that it looked fun, and I knew my dad was having the best time.

    So as I got older and I kind of found my way into acting, I always liked the live audience aspect and doing comedy, and not having to go into some dark place and think about scary, sad things in order to get to some emotional place in order to do some heavy scene on some drama. Those moments are fun, and you can certainly feel like you’re doing some serious acting. But comedy’s also hard and it’s challenging, but it’s so gratifying at the end.

    What were some of the other lessons, either directly, or just by osmosis, that you picked up about a career in Hollywood from watching your dad at work and hearing about his experiences?

    It all kind of happened really naturally for me. Growing up here in Los Angeles, I was around the entertainment business from my peers, and their parents, and what they did, and then my family being a part of it. It just seemed like kind of like the family business. It’s like an easy thing for me to find my way into, and the only real job I knew anything about.

    I was actually modeling through high school. I started modeling in middle school, and just doing things here and there. I just thought it was fun because I got to cut class and go take some pictures for Macy’s or whatever. But then I was earning some money and thought that was cool, and it turned into doing commercials, which turned into like meeting a manager who said, “Hey, if you want to be an actor, I’d be interested in representing you. I recommend maybe taking this acting class and seeing how you feel about it.”

    Then I kind of just slowly found my way into this world without truly seeking it out. I know that sounds really annoying, but that’s just the truth. I’m just still riding the wave, and I can’t believe this is my career. I’m very, very grateful and pinch myself every day. It’s weird to me still when someone asks me what I do for a living, and my answer is that “I’m an actress.” It’s so weird. It’s so weird.

    You went to Beverly Hills High School, and in my very first job when I moved to Los Angeles, I covered the high school and the school system for the local newspaper in Beverly Hills.

    Oh my gosh, that’s great. Yes, that’s where I went to school. I was student body president. Very involved. Loved going to high school. I loved that school. I had a great time.

    One thing that is unique about it is that a lot of people that go there have family in showbiz, and, like you, find their way into the family business. Do you still see a lot of people that you went to high school with working in your industry?

    Yeah, there are a few. This Is Us,” and she’s done a ton of stuff. She’s super successful. We were good friends growing up, so it’s really cool to see her doing so well.

    But there are people who work also behind the scenes, like who work for Fox and work at CBS and work for different movie producers. I do catch people around town doing a lot of stuff. It is very cool to see people as adults working in the industry. Leighton Meester also went to my high school for a little while. She didn’t graduate with us — maybe she went to home school or something after a while; I don’t know what she did. But she was there for a while. She was in the same class as me.

    People have an endless fascination — maybe because of things like “Beverly Hills 90210” and “Clueless” — with Beverly Hills High. I was always taken with how “high school” it really was. It’s just like any other high school, in many ways.

    It’s a public school. It was a very diverse school. We certainly had more kids driving Range Rovers to school than your average high school. But there was still a lot of middle class families. Kids were, like, too cool to go to spring dance or whatever, and the football team wasn’t very good.

    We were just like your average little high school, which is part of the reason I joined student counsel, because I wanted to create really fun memories and try to make it more like TV, I think — like more of what I thought it should be. Because everyone was so blasé about it, and was like, “Whatever, it’s just high school.” I was like, “Come on, these are supposed to be the best days of our lives. I’m going to be in charge of lunch time activities, so everyone can have great memories from high school.” Very glass half full.

  • The Key to ‘The Carmichael Show’ Is ‘Seeing Things From the Other Side’

    Build Series Presents Jerrod Carmichael Discussing '8'Jerrod Carmichael is championing a new generation of sitcom with a dose of social commentary — and no shortage of laughs.

    By the time the 30-year-old standup-turned-actor, writer, and producer of NBC’s “The Carmichael Show” was born in 1987, the heyday of the kind of issue-minded, debate-inciting half-hour network comedy that had reigned — best evidenced by producer All in the Family,” “Maude,” “One Day at a Time,” “The Jeffersons,” and “Good Times” — was over, and warmer family- and workplace-driven sitcoms would largely prevail for the next few decades.

    But in 2015 — well before the current moment on non-stop, often heated political and social discourse ensured — Carmichael brought sharp, often biting commentary back to the sitcom (as had “blackish” a year earlier) with the debut of his series, which during its first two midseason runs generated much critical praise for its injection of topical elements into its humorous plotlines, using its character’s different perspective to explore everything from Black Lives Matter and LGBT rights, to Bill Cosby and Donald Trump.

    Now “Carmichael,” the show, and Carmichael, the star, are back for a third season after nearly a year off the air, and the comedy fodder is as relevant as ever, including issues of sexual consent, patriotism, gun violence, and same sex marriage. And as Carmichael tells Moviefone, he hopes that by leavening the explorations with laughter, perhaps the real-life conversations that result will open minds to other viewpoints.

    Moviefone: How did the success of Season 2 and the kinds of stories that you were telling and getting such a positive response creatively energize you for Season 3?

    Jerrod Carmichael: It forced you, not forced, but encouraged us to kind of go deeper on things and let us know what our audience could handle. It showed us that there is an appetite in the world for very truthful conversations. And you kind of test the waters a little bit throughout the season, but we got more comfortable and more confident in the writing because of that. People’s response was really beautiful, and it inspired us, I think, to come stronger.

    The finale of Season 2, the Trump episode, was very well done, in a really fair and measured way. Given how politically minded everybody has been in the last few months, do you want to keep going in that kind of direction, figuring out how to play both sides of an issue?

    That’s the fun, for me, as a person, as a standup comedian, it’s all about the challenge, challenging whatever your core beliefs are, because it’s the only way to really test the mettle of them. So with that Trump episode for instance, it really was the true feelings of “I need to actually try and inject some sort of discourse — like, true discourse, and nuanced understanding of one another.”

    So that’s just such a true perspective. We try and lean into that with every topic — not just Trump, but really anything that we do. Just seeing the other side. I think that’s probably what so much of the show is about. It’s about just trying to see the other side.

    Do you have a lot of good debates going on behind the scenes in the writers’ room?

    Oh, constantly! It’s not good unless somebody’s mad. Unless someone’s arguing and really feeling it. Amongst like me and Danielle [Sanchez-Witzel, executive producer], and me and Ari Katcher, who we write a lot with. It’s always a sense of curiosity and exploration for any topic. Questions that we have, unanswerable questions, are usually what we look for.

    Obviously, the show’s got the smaller-scale dramas that spark a lot of your comedy. Tell me what we can look forward to, as far as the personal clashes that we see on the show all the time.

    We have played with a lot of character dynamics, I think, this season more than we have before, because I think we know everyone’s perspective. It’s fun to see each other kind of trying to help each other – their version of helping, the same way you do with your family or friends. This is the way that I live life, or things that have helped me.

    Maxine tries to do that with Bobby, Cynthia and Nekeisha. I think it’s warmer in a more interesting way this season, just kind of playing with everyone. Everyone on the show thinks that they’re right — not just thinks, is sure of it. It’s fun having our characters trying to lead each other down a different path.

    You started with a really strong group of performers. As time’s gone by, I’m sure that you have all developed that sort of sense of family that makes it even easier to play these scenes, and more fun. You know how to push each other’s acting buttons. Tell me about developing that, and getting to the point where you guys are now with that family feel when the cameras aren’t rolling.

    I just responded to a group text amongst us a few hours ago! It is a group of people that enjoy each other’s company. I can’t stress how helpful and important that’s been to this process. It’s kind of hard to say, because it’s a thing that all casts say. It’s a good press point: “Oh, we have so much fun, and we laugh …” But it’s like, I hope everyone else is telling the truth, because I definitely am.

    It really is such an enjoyable experience. We laugh at each other, we get upset with each other, we argue with each other. It really does kind of play out like a real family. Like me, and Tiff [Haddish], and LilRel [Howrey] have known each other for years. So there was a true friendship there already.

    Then over the seasons, with Amber [Stevens West], and David [Alan Grier] and Loretta [Devine], it really is just this core group. I went to church with Loretta and my mom last Sunday. It’s like, sometimes, “Oh man, the show’s coming to life.” It really does feel like that sometimes.

    As a standup, you knew what was funny, you knew how to tell a joke, you knew how to tell a story. What have you learned about that in the years that you’ve been on the show now — not just acting, but having a hand in the writing and producing? What have you learned, or how have you expanded your skill set in comedy and storytelling?

    It makes it hard to do standup! It makes it harder sometimes when I’m in the middle of writing the show, because it sounds like I have schizophrenia because I’m thinking from all sides at once. It’s just like, my mind is like immediately arguing, even before I’ve made my point. It informs it because it really does make you, as a writer of such episodes, see each side of any subject.

    As a standup, the most important thing is perspective. Any standup that you care about has a strong sense of perspective. That’s what you spend time honing. That’s what you spend time all your days just trying to lock down. I think that the show helps. I think the show contributes to that because it makes you see even outside of your own perspective. You know what I mean?

    You’re writing an argument, you see it, like I hear it as Jerrod, and as someone’s from Joe’s perspective, or Maxine, or Bobby, or Cynthia. I can kind of hear it from all of their perspectives.

    What do you still love about standup? You don’t get as far in the game as you got without loving it.

    It’s so pure. It’s such a pure and immediate art form. You’re on stage, and you’re just baring your soul. Even if it’s just jokes and thoughts, you’re just up there. And it’s a thing that, no matter how good your last set was, it doesn’t matter. It kind of starts over each time, and it’s a challenge, and I like the challenge of it, in every aspect.

    I just went up at The Comedy Store the other night and probably had the worst set ever. Just so many untied thoughts. I just popped in. I try not to advertise that I’m there if I know I’m just in this place of thinking “It’s the worst set ever.” Even in that, there was some good feeling about it, because I’m like, “Something’s there. I feel like there’s something there.”

    So I’m excited to go do it again immediately. It’s so pure, and it’s just a fun thing to return to, and it’s a fun thing to spark thought. You kind of have a thought and you want to see it through. Getting on stage is such a great way to see and test how you really feel about something.

    It’s a totally different art form working on the show, and a different kind of discipline required. Up until that first staging, there’s no feedback other than your little team bubble that creates the show. What do you like about that?

    It teaches you to trust your instincts. The good thing where they do go hand-in-hand as a performer, as a standup comedian, you know when something’s funny, and you know when something will be meaningful to an audience. So it’s like, throughout the process, you hold on to that. You hold on to your gut feeling that like, “Oh — no, no, no, this works, and this fits.”

    It’s fun. I felt like running with an egg, and I think that’s such a true analogy. It is such a delicate thing that you just have to really trust yourself and your ability to carry it through.

    A lot of people have compared your show to the classic Norman Lear-type shows. We’ve had several decades of things largely focused on families, workplaces, and the little things that spark comedy. Do you feel emboldened now to tell bigger stories and stories that have a little more social impact, or import?

    I don’t think there should have been as long of a gap between the Norman Lear era and now, as far as sitcom, multi-cam or single, as far as like what broadcast shows could do. It’s been such a gap of just having honest conversations. You feel emboldened because I don’t think we answer any subject or any episode with fear. It’s always, we try and go beyond the fear of everything, of talking about a subject with the fear of characters being unlikeable.

    That’s a big one. Everybody’s terrified of that. Networks, writers, creators, everyone is terrified of a character being unlikeable, or saying an unlikable thing. But that’s why you get so much cheap material at sitcoms, because usually everyone’s trying to protect someone from saying, “Oh, they said a bad thing.”

    That’s why you see reaction shots where if someone does say something remotely unlikable, you see reaction shots of someone smiling at it, and just these non-human things because everyone is so terrified. But what people connect with are those thoughts. Those things that seem unlikable, but they seem real. Those are the things that we get excited to write, and create, and perform as a show.

    What’s appealing to you about the time of year that you guys come on? Do you feel like you’ve got actually an advantage being separated from the typical fall season herd?

    A little bit. You want to be away from the fire. Everyone gets so excited and so much pressure on the show to do a certain amount of numbers. It makes it so detrimental and hard for a show to grow, and find its audience, and find itself. I think that we’ve been really blessed. We all know summer isn’t the networks spot of pride, if you will. You’re literally competing against the sun, literally competing against outdoors for people’s attention!

    But the way people watch television now, I’m really thankful that we’re on Netflix, I’m really thankful that we’re able to reach an audience, and try and hopefully grow an audience by the Season 3 premiere. I think being on in the summer has given us the room to grow and be away from the pressure that everyone has at a network for these fall numbers to just be killer.

    Because what happens is a lot of times those shows die. Like, a new comedy dies under that much pressure because they want it to be immediately good, and comedies are about growth, and character development, and finding who someone is, and finding a rhythm. You shine this giant spotlight on a show, and it comes out in the fall, and the numbers are not what they were expecting, then they kill the show.

    So we’re in this age where it’s hard for comedies to grow. That’s why it is important for outlets like Netflix and Hulu. They used to program reruns in the summer. If you go back, even shows up until the early 2000s, things will come on in the summer so audiences that didn’t catch it during the fall line could still see it and have an opportunity to see it. But they don’t do it [anymore]. They’d rather make, like, reality television, which I understand. So we look for other outlets to help grow that audience.

    How has your standup audience changed since you became a sitcom star?

    I don’t know. It’s funny: I have no idea about anything because I never go out. I haven’t been performing a lot this year. I taped the special, and then I just haven’t really been going out a lot. The other night was like my fourth or fifth time on stage probably this year. So I don’t really get a chance.

    I have no idea about the audience. I have no idea. Every now and then I’ll go out for a sandwich and someone will say something nice. That’s my gauge. Not on social media. I don’t go out. So you have to tell me — that’s my answer. Hopefully, it’s grown.

    I love watching standups, who have gotten mainstream big success, still go out and work out material. That’s one of my favorite things to do, rather than come out with the same old jokes. I love that you went up there and just did what you did and saw how it worked.

    Yeah. Growth is everything. It’s like, what are you just going to lean on your old stuff? It’s boring. Where’s the fun and creative energy in that? Try new stuff. You’ll bomb a few times, but you’ll figure it out.

  • 6 Reasons Why You Should be Watching ‘The Carmichael Show’

    The Carmichael Show - Season 1On a Wednesday night normally dominated by “Big Brother” and “America’s Got Talent,” 4.8 million viewers tuned in at 9:00 pm to watch “The Carmichael Show,” a solid comedy starring Jerrod Carmichael, David Alan Grier, Loretta Devine, Lil Rel Howery, and Amber Stevens West. The show opened with the highest total-viewer tally of the last 12 comedies to premiere during summer since 2007. But strong viewership isn’t the only reason why you should watch. Here are six more:

    1. Jerrod Carmichael
    Carmichael, a stand-up comic originally from North Carolina, both stars and executive produces this series, inspired by his life and stand-up routine. I had a smile on my face and was laughing the whole time the show was on, and I’m a tough critic of comedies.

    2. Loretta Devine
    Devine brings a new funny side to her character I never knew existed. She flips out because her son says he was thinking of registering Republican and she tells him, “We didn’t raise you that way!” After he confesses to moving in with his girlfriend, Devine tells him he’s living in sin. She also take away her husband’s plate of ribs after he admits to voting for Bush in 2007. Too funny!

    3. David Alan Grier
    We all know Grier from way back in the “In Living Color,” days, and he had me on the floor laughing here.After having triple bypass heart surgery, Grier’s character walks into the room with a plate full of ribs, stating that the ribs help him forget how hard life is and he’ll fight whoever tries to take them away. His son’s girlfriend brings a bottle of white wine as a gift and asks the family, “Do you like white?” Greir shoots back with “Not as much as yo daddy!” OMG, I don’t think you can get any funnier with this keepin’ it real comedy line-up.

    4. Lil Rel Howery
    Howery stars as Carmichael’s hustling brother. Howery has been on the comedy circuit many years, with appearances on “Chelsea Lately,” “Shaq’s All Star Comedy Jam, “Last Comic Standing,” and “Russell Simmons Presents Stand-Up At the El-Rey,” just to name a few. And his comedy special is also very funny. In “The Carmichael Show,” he still lives with his ex wife and tells a story about how he came home one day and found her boyfriend naked on the couch watching TV. He was also trying to demonstrate how to cut a penny in half with a knife. His deliveries had me laughing in every scene.

    5. Amber Stevens West
    West (“22 Jump Street,” “The Amazing Spiderman”) plays Carmichael’s girlfriend in the show. She had me laughing in a scene that involves a hilarious dance that she does to a Biggie Smalls song. She then proceeds to ask if the song was new. The next funny thing she does is goes out to a “black lives matter” protest with wedged shoes on, and then later comes home happy and excited that she got arrested.

    6. It Is Funny, Funny, Funny, Baby
    “The Carmichael Show” is a blast to watch; it had me smiling and laughing the whole hour. The whole cast is funny in pretty much every single scene. While writing this review, I rewatched both episodes and it still had me laughing.

    Wendell Escott is a student at El Camino Community College and a contributor to Moviefone’s Campus Beat. Are you a current college student with a love for all things movies and TV? Contribute to Campus Beat!

  • 7 Comedian-Led Sitcoms You (Probably) Forgot About

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    There have been tons of TV shows headlined by stand-up comics over the years, but not all of them can be hits like “Seinfeld,” “Ellen,” “Martin,” “Roseanne,” or “Everybody Goes Raymond.” For every stand-up sitcom success story, there are some short-lived programs that fell by the wayside. Even the most talented and popular comics couldn’t make some of these shows last. The Carmichael Show” premieres on NBC come August 26. Will it stand the test of time? Take a look at 7 comedian-starring sitcoms you (probably) forgot about.

  • NBC Sets Summer Premiere Dates for New Comedies, Reality Shows

    The Kia Luxury Lounge Presented By ZIRH - Day 2
    NBC announced Thursday premiere dates for its summer slate of programming, including the debut of two new comedies and two new reality series.

    Freshmen sitcoms “Mr. Robinson” and “The Carmichael Show” will anchor a new comedy block beginning on Wednesday, August 5. “Robinson” stars “The Office” alum Craig Robinson as a professional musician turned substitute high school music teacher, and features a supporting cast including Peri Gilpin (“Frasier”) and Meagan Good (“Think Like a Man”). “Carmichael” focuses on the life of comedian Jerrod Carmichael (“Neighbors”) and his relationships with his larger-than-life family, including his contrarian father (played by David Allen Grier) and religious mother (played by Loretta Devine).

    Returning comedy “Welcome to Sweden” kicks off its second season this summer beginning July 19. The show will pick up after the engagement of Bruce (Greg Poehler, brother of Amy Poehler, who also produces the show) and Emma (Josephine Bornebusch) and their transitioning careers.

    NBC will also have quite a full reality slate this summer, with two new shows joining the mix in 2015. Premiering on May 25, “The Island,” led by survivalist Dancing with the Stars” staple Cheryl Burke, and musicians Joe Jonas, Ciara, and Nicole Sherzinger.

    And finally, returning reality series set to debut this summer include “Food Fighters” (July 2), the Jane Lynch-led “Hollywood Game Night” (July 7), “Running Wild with Bear Grylls” (July 13), and “Last Comic Standing” (July 22). Check out the full line-up — including previously-announced premieres — below.

    Full NBC Summer 2015 Line-up:

    Monday, May 25
    American Ninja Warrior, 8-10 p.m. (season premiere)
    The Island, 10 p.m. (series premiere)

    Tuesday, May 26
    America’s Got Talent, 8-10 p.m. (season premiere)
    I Can Do That, 10 p.m. (series premiere)

    Thursday, May 28
    Aquarius, 9-11 p.m. (series premiere)

    Thursday, June 4
    Aquarius, 9-10 p.m. (regular timeslot)
    Hannibal, 10-11 p.m. (season premiere)

    Thursday, July 2
    Food Fighters, 8-9 p.m. (season premiere)

    Tuesday, July 7
    Hollywood Game Night, 10-11 p.m. (season premiere)

    Monday, July 13
    Running Wild with Bear Grylls, 10-11 p.m. (season premiere)

    Sunday, July 19
    Welcome to Sweden, 8 and 8:30 p.m. (season premiere)

    Wednesday, July 22
    Last Comic Standing, 9-11 p.m. (season premiere)

    Wednesday July 29
    Last Comic Standing, 9-10 p.m. (regular timeslot)

    Wednesday, August 5
    Mr. Robinson, 9 p.m. (series premiere)
    The Carmichael Show, 9:30 p.m. (series premiere)

    [via: TV by the Numbers]

    Photo credit: Vivien Killilea via Getty Images

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