Line of Events
A grieving therapist begins to tell his clients exactly what he thinks
Ignoring his training and ethics, he finds himself making a huge difference in people’s lives, including his own. share the best moments that defined their characters in the first season and show who did the best Harrison Ford impression. When Brett Goldstein, Jason Siegel, and Bill Lawrence were asked how they got Harrison Ford to appear on the show, Siegel said that Goldstein initially wanted a “Harrison Ford type” and was going to audition people who looked like Ford.
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Siegel told Goldstein that they needed to at least present it to Ford first, thinking that he would immediately decline, but at least other people would know that they had offered the project to Harrison Ford, which would generate interest from other famous actors. Goldstein eventually talked to Ford and offered him the role. Goldstein still does not understand what he did to convince him, but, nevertheless, he was delighted.
Are some characters stereotypes?
This is simple and pure entertainment. Brightly written, excellent wit, enough pathos not to turn it into “The Big Bang Theory” for the middle class, it’s a pleasure to watch. Yes, real therapists would not behave like this, but anyone with a functioning brain knows this, so criticism from this point of view is just negative for the sake of lowering the rating.
Yes, but no insults are present and should not be accepted
FYI, I worked with a gay guy who fit exactly the stereotype shown here. The real success here is to combine the seriousness of therapy and grief with the growing pains of life at different ages, stages and lifestyles and make it damn funny. Finally, who knew what a wonderful light comedy actor Harrison Ford is?