Imagine the most derivative, vanilla sitcom you've ever seen.  Just your basic 
"King of Queens"-style show about a husband and wife and the struggles of daily 
life.  "Everybody Loves Raymond", but with less funny jokes.

And then imagine the most derivative daily-life-grind drama you've ever seen, 
but with the least attractive aspects of some semi-popular shows currently in 
the network lineups.  "Blue Bloods" without the folksy charm of the family 
dynamic and Sunday night dinner;  "This Is Us" without the tear-jerking 
melodrama;  "The Equalizer" without...well, no..just like "The Equalizer".

Now, flip back and forth between these two dissimilar styles, but in the same 
show.  Visually, it's kind of interesting, as you watch the brightly lit 
soundstage (the primary set is suspiciously similar to the living room in "All 
in the Family") with the requisite laugh track, typical wacky neighbors and 
cheesy over-acted situations, all done in a standard three-camera shot.  And 
then you follow the main character as she walks through a door and BAM!  The 
soundtrack abruptly cuts off, the lighting goes much darker and the view 
switches to a one-camera shot with dramatic angles and cuts.

That's "Kevin Can F**k Himself".  Annie Murphy continues her quality work from 
"Schitt's Creek" and is the only bright spot in the show, as she reaches an 
epiphany that she's wasted the last 10 years of her life in a loveless marriage 
to her complete waste-of-space husband, Kevin.  The first episode shows her 
finally reaching her breaking point and justifies what seems to foreshadow 
Kevin's eventual permanent departure from the show.  A former lover (now 
married and newly returned to the town that Murphy's character never left) is 
introduced as the obvious future romantic entanglement, and the two-hour 
premier follows her as she sprirals down into self-pity and loathing at her 
husband in particular and her life in general.

The visual gimmick is interesting, but it just can't overcome the almost 
complete lack of a fresh story.  If it were either the sitcom or the drama 
alone, it would be a bad show.  Mashing the two versions together does nothing 
to improve their separate deficiencies.

Doug Fields
Tampa, FL

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