Starz's 'Survivor's Remorse'
To describe the new Starz comedy "Survivor's Remorse" as
"NBA Entourage" sounds at once accurate and dismissive. Accurate
because it's a show about a twentysomething phenom sharing his fame and
fortune with his closest friends and family, dismissive because the
actual "Entourage" was pretty horrible by the end.
But "Entourage" was entertaining before it became bloated and
self-congratulatory and contemptuous of its own fans. And its laziness
prevented it from thoroughly exploring all those questions about the
intersection of family and celebrity, and of staying true to your roots
even as you have the money and opportunity to do things you couldn't
even dream of growing up.
There's a ton of untapped potential in the idea, as demonstrated by the
four episodes of "Survivor's Remorse" (it debuts tomorrow at 9 p.m.)
that I've seen.
Created by Mike O'Malley(*)
— a sports fan who, when he's not acting, is a writer on Showtime's
terrific "Shameless" — the series follows Cam Calloway (Jessie T.
Usher), a once-unheralded point guard who has taken the NBA by storm and
landed a huge free agent contract in Atlanta. Now he has the money to
bring his mother Cassie (Tichina Arnold), sister Mary-Charles, aka
M-Chuck (Erica Ash), cousin Reggie (RonReaco Lee) and Uncle Julius (Mike Epps)
along for the ride, even as Reggie (who, E-style, acts as his business
manager) is trying to keep him from burning through his newfound fortune
in a hurry.
(*) Non-writing producers include Boston Red Sox part owner (and
'80s sitcom titan) Tom Werner, sports management power broker Maverick
Carter, and a fella you may have heard of by the name of LeBron James.
Cam — who went to college (albeit an obscure one that couldn't even
help him get drafted by the pros) — has no more resemblance to LeBron
than Vinnie Chase did to Mark Wahlberg.
The first episode, like a lot of series premieres, gets weighed down
with too much exposition and statement of theme. A run-in with an old
friend they left behind in the 'hood allows Cam to give a big speech
that justifies the show's title, explaining the guilt he feels for
escaping this terrible place. It's darker and less funny than the show
is in the remaining episodes, but it provides a useful foundation for
what follows.
With episode 2, O'Malley couldn't be more unintentionally timely, as
Cassie stirs up a controversy when she does an interview acknowledging
the violent methods she used to discipline Cam as a boy. Later episodes
deal with a Make-A-Wish visit gone awry — complete with the dying boy
pointing out the phoniness of the whole endeavor — Cam struggling to
find a church that won't condemn M-Chuck for being gay, and Reggie's
wife Missy (Teyona Parris, unrecognizable from her role as Dawn in "Mad
Men") pushing him to join a historical black country club.
The makeup of the cast gives O'Malley and his writers license to deal
incisively with race as well as class, and the show carefully walks a
thin comic line that lets Cam's relatives be unprepared for the new
lives he's giving them without letting them come across as moochers.
(Though if Uncle Julius wants to chat up the many attractive women who
want to get with his nephew, so be it...)
It's not wildly funny in the early going, but there's a sense of
confidence in the material, the tone and the world, and the creative
team doesn't ask you to buy into things that aren't necessary.
"Entourage" would occasionally give us examples of Vinnie's acting, and
it did not suggest the talent or charisma to make him one of the world's
biggest stars. Through the first four episodes, at least, "Survivor's
Remorse" doesn't once ask its leading man to play basketball, and only
once even puts him on a court at a local playground, just to give the
dying kid some dunking advice.
Starz CEO Chris Albrecht famously ran HBO during its golden period of
"The Sopranos," "Sex and the City," "The Wire," et al., and when he came
to this new job, he first tried to duplicate his past successes with
pale imitations like "Boss" and "Magic City." "Entourage" was another
hit developed on his watch, and if it never became remotely as good as
the classics of Albrecht's tenure, its unfulfilled potential made it
more ripe to be copied and improved upon. As "Battlestar Galactica" once
demonstrated, a remake can't improve on a masterpiece, but can do very
well in adapting a work that had good ideas but didn't use them well.
"Survivor's Remorse" isn't an exact replica of "Entourage," but the ways
in which the two shows are similar all wind up flattering the newcomer.
Alan Sepinwall may be reached at sepinwall@hitfix.com
In : #HOODKNEWGLOBAL
Tags: starz survivor's remorse mike epps mike o'malley lebron james
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