Previously... on 2 BROKE GIRLS: Max (Kat Dennings) is a street-smart waitress at a greasy spoon in Brooklyn. Caroline (Beth Behrs) is the now-broke, formerly insanely rich daughter of a Bernie Madoff type, who until recently had been waited on hand and foot her entire life, her every wish indulged. Now that Caroline has nothing to her name, she applies for a job working alongside Max. They despise each other on sight, so is there any doubt they'll be odd couple roommates by the time the pilot is over? Also, Caroline discovers that Max bakes fantastic cupcakes, and she determines that the pair will make their fortune by selling them, just as soon as they've raised $250K in necessary capital. And Caroline imports her horse to live in Max's yard (every hovel having one of those).
Episode 2: There was a significant behind-the-scenes change at 2 Broke Girls after the pilot was produced: co-creator Whitney Cummings had her own sitcom picked up by NBC, so she had to reduce her involvement with the show (she's now credited as Executive Consultant), and her creating partner Michael Patrick King (from Sex and the City) has taken over sole control.
Any hope that this would improve the quality of the writing, however, goes unfulfilled. Here's a sample line from tonight's episode, a caution from Max when the Asian owner of the diner misspells Caroline's name on her name-tag: "You can't tell an Asian he made a mistake--he'll go in the back and fall on a sword." Then there's the bit when Caroline asks Max to open the back door of the apartment and let in some fresh air, leading to this witty response: "We've known each other 2 days and you're already asking for back door?" Ha HA.
Kat Dennings is terrifically funny and has real star quality, so it'd be nice to root for 2 Broke Girls, but when the big sight gag of the episode is Caroline falling hands and chest-first into either horse manure or mud (no doubt CBS Standards made them keep it ambiguous, although you wouldn't think it really could be), we're not in very classy or smart territory. To the extent there's any attempt at credibility here, one would note that making Caroline act like she's self-obsessed and brain-dead for virtually every beat of the episode (I doubt any actress could redeem the role of Caroline as written) and yet still asking us to believe that she's some kind of business genius is really stretching it. And thus far, none of the supporting cast is popping either, unless the diner cook who's aroused to hear that Max masturbates strikes you as hilarious.
None of this means 2 Broke Girls is going to flop (although it'll certainly fall off from last week's 2 1/2 Men-boosted rating). The show has the most comfortable spot on the CBS comedy schedule, between How I Met Your Mother and Men, so it's likely to be around for a while. The problem is, that isn't necessarily a good thing.
Original Verdict: Change the Channel
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