March 20, 2008 10:34 PM by Sarah Z. Wexler | 100 Views, COMMENTS
This week I was psyched to see some great actresses, the kind usually relegated to the periphery, carry their own shows. In The Return of Jezebel James, indie queen Parker Posey lives with Lauren Ambrose, the troubled, dark, smart sister on Six Feet Under, who plays
Poseys troubled, dark, smart sister. The show, which Id been so excited about, is entirely unwatchable. Every time Posey, a book editor, skipped through her multi-million dollar NYC loft, I rolled my eyes; every time the overzealous laugh track kicked in, I hunched my shoulders in embarrassment.
Burned, I was skeptical about trying out the other girl-power season premiere, starring Judy Greer. For years, Ive loved Greer, who paid her dues as the perennially quirky-best-friend-sidekick (13 Going on 30, The Wedding Planner, 27 Dresses). Even though shes a funny, sympathetic actress, I think her looksyou know, like a regular person instead of a plastic surgery cyborg of perfectionkept her from nabbing lead roles. So I was beyond excited to see her get her own show, Miss Guided (despite its being produced by Ashton Kutcher). Its a cross between Never Been Kissed and Romy and Michelles High School Reunion, where she plays former-nerd Becky Freely, who goes back to work as a guidance counselor at her high school alma mater. Watching her hide behind a car while her rival (a total former prom queen) hits on Freelys Spanish-teacher crush is a heart-swelling rush. The flashbacks to Freelys high school yearbook are hysterical, even with a few clichéd jokes about headgear. A few days after being crushed by Jezebel James, Miss Guided restored my hope in (TV) humanity.
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