Fantastic first season, and the second was just as good until the last episode where it kind of fell apart for me. Luke Cage makes a great hero, and in both seasons he had great villains to fight. Loved it.
The first two seasons were very good. The power to manipulate luck (at a cost) is very interesting and allows for a lot of really fun coincidences, and the cast did a very good job. Sadly the third season wasn't quite as good, and the last two episodes lost me completely.
I've seen some criticism of the show being a bit corny, and of Supergirl being unoriginal, but the entire point of Supergirl (and Superman) is their unceasing idealism. While that doesn't leave as much room for personal growth as others characters have, it is an intrinsic part of the character. It's also nice to see a DC show that isn't relentlessly dark, gritty, and miserable.
It's a decent show, but a bit too grimdark like most DC shows that I've seen. Still, most of the characters are interesting enough that it's worth a try.
Corny, but a lot of fun to watch. I think it came out as a female counterpart to Hercules, but it quickly surpassed that show in quality. Not too much emotional weight, but a lot of epic adventures.
The premise allows the writers and cast to be as wacky as they can be without it seeming out of character, a freedom which they use and abuse to delightful effect. Absurd and charming, it's a good show when you just need to laugh away some stress.
Rowan Atkinson and the rest of the cast did an amazingly good job with this show. Each season sets the cast in a different time period, portraying a member of their family tree during that time. It works brilliantly. Season one is actually my least favorite, so if you give this show a chance you may wish to try season two if the first isn't catching your interest.
While the four male characters are stereotypes, I see enough people like them - and enough of them in myself - that I really can't object. Most of the characters are fairly easy to emphasize with, so you keep watching to see how their lives turn out. For a Chuck Lorre sitcom it really is amazingly good.
The motley crew of characters at the bar kept things interesting, even if most of them didn't show any growth over the seasons. I quite liked the ending, too.
This show could have done so much with another season or two. Odd couple style sitcoms aren't normally my thing, but seeing the two interact is quite entertaining. And having James Vanderbeek playing himself in the show is strangely amusing. Just...so real that it's surreal, if that makes any sense.