Overall I like the show, but the character of Jason is too much. He started out as the most intensely Flanderized character ever written and he just continuously got worse.
I almost wonder if the character was written with Dax Shephard in mind. It's just such a 2004 type of idiot character.
A Man on the Inside is much more of a character and story based comedy then Shure’s previous work. It’s a lot less joke dense then The Good Place which was in turn less dense Parks and Rec. I mean I’d expect a comedy about grief, loss, and regaining a purpose to go at a slower pace and I found it lovely and clever, but it definitely not a “Joke Factory”. Your Mileage and all that but I got through the whole series in a day because each episode was sweet and cute, not because I couldn’t stop laughing.
I have to agree. I've tried 2 episodes and don't get it. Seems like a hallow, generic soap opera and devoid of any of the clever comedy of Schur's other projects.
The ending was fantastic but I cried for probably an hour. It hit me really hard with where I was/am with my life and loved ones. I absolutely recommend it to everyone.
Same, I cried so hard. Not sure I'm ready for a rewatch given what's going on irl right now, but it was so cathartic that it actually helped me process a lot of anxiety and despair surrounding death.
Michael Schur wrote a book called “How to be Perfect”, which is literally an intro philosophy book and explains how (and why) he incorporated different philosophical perspectives into the show.
If you thoroughly enjoyed the show, you will be tickled by The Good Place: The Podcast. Mark Evan Jackson (Shawn) hosts it, and it's truly excellent. Lots of behind-the-scenes info from people who are truly dedicated to their craft. If you thought the characters were great, the people and writers behind them are even cooler, and you get to hear so much neat stuff about the show from them.
Michael Schur also wrote (an often hilarious) book called How to Be Perfect, about what he learned about philosophy from the research he did in order to write the show. If you get the audiobook version, parts are narrated by some of the actors from the show, and it's just a delight as a fan. I don't think anyone would become a philosophy expert from the book, but it's an introduction to it, and amusing to boot. A good book IMO.
I've always enjoyed philosophy (and taken a few courses) so The Good Place was something I really enjoyed. I think it's got just enough philosophy in it to not scare casual viewers but trick then into learning some of the basics without realizing it. I honestly think we should be teaching a basic introduction to philosophy to high-schoolers. It's such an important basis for understanding the world and yourself. It makes you consider why and what you think that you may have taken for granted before.
oh the podcast looks interesting. I really do enjoy the podcast form where they go over each episode like an unofficial-official commentary bonus, Always Sunny had a good one but I eventually fizzled out from it and need to check back into that. At first I saw the guests and thought it was just a talk show but the descriptions have the episodes they're going over.
I absolutely loved it! My dad recommended it to me. When I finished it, I knew it would be something my wife would like. So I'm rewatching it again with her and with my 10 year old daughter. They are loving it too. I wouldn't change a thing about the ending.
It should’ve ended an episode earlier though. That last image on the hot air balloon was a good ending but the whole final episode felt like an afterthought. It seemed more like a one-off Christmas special that pops up a few years after the show finished.
Michael Schur published a companion book called How to Be Perfect: The Correct Answer to Every Moral Question that covers the philosophy side in more detail. The audiobook has the full cast reading asides, examples and scenarios.