Freddie (TV series)
Television series | |
---|---|
German title | Freddie |
Original title | Freddie |
Country of production | United States |
original language | English |
Year (s) | 2005-2006 |
length | 20 minutes |
Episodes | 22 in 1 season |
genre | Sitcom |
Theme music | "I'm a Man" |
idea |
Bruce Helford , Bruce Rasmussen |
music |
Keb 'Mo' , Lazy Lester |
First broadcast | May 31, 2005 (USA) on ABC |
German-language first broadcast |
December 8, 2007 on ProSieben |
occupation | |
|
Freddie is an American sitcom from 2005. It starred Freddie Prinze Jr. co-wrote the scripts and co-produced the series. The framework plot is based on Prince's childhood experiences. The series was no longer produced after a season of 22 episodes.
action
The chef Freddie Moreno owns his own successful Italian restaurant in Chicago. His private life is determined by the four women he lives with. His sister Sofia with her daughter Zoey, his widowed sister-in-law Allison and his Puerto Rican grandmother, who speaks only Spanish, interfere in Freddie's love life and determine large parts of his everyday life. A regular guest is Freddie's good friend Chris, who, like Freddie, is still looking for a woman for life.
Reviews
The sitcom received mostly negative reviews. John Leonard wrote in New York Magazine on October 2, 2005 that Freddie " isn't funny anywhere, and as a bad sitcom ." Tom Shales noted in the Washington Post on October 12, 2005, " The best policy with regard to Freddie is likely to wait for the Directors Cut to be on DVD, two to three hundred years from now." "Freddie" is probably to wait for the director's cut on DVD in two or three hundred years ).
Web links
- Freddie in the Internet Movie Database (English)
Individual evidence
- ↑ Freddie Prinze Jr. to star in sitcom article on usatoday.com of November 4, 2004, accessed January 20, 2011.
- ^ John Leonard: Postpone the Funeral , New York Magazine article, October 2, 2005, accessed January 20, 2011.
- ↑ Tom Shales: Freddie Prinze Jr. Has A Full House With No Cards , review in the Washington Post, October 12, 2005, accessed January 20, 2011.