I'm for anything that brings Braugher and his lovely family work, but I don't intend to watch it.
Don't confuse the advertising/marketing spiel from USA and the actual programming/programs. I put it in the same category as
Cosmopolitan
self-consciously slanting itself towards 20somethings when its readers are for the most part women in their 40s and up.
It's like Old Guy Entourage...I'm in.
With the caveat that I wouldn't want to see even beloved Andre do reverse cowgirl with anybody, but it looks like a pleasant experience with that in mind.
Women in their 40s read Cosmo? Seriously? I can't imagine why.
Why would a woman in her 40s read Cosmo? I mean, by now, don't we already know "What He Really Wants In Bed" and "Seven Secret Moves That Will Drive Your Man Wild In Bed" and "How To Tell If Your Man Is Watching Porn Over Your Shoulder In Bed"?
It was quite a few years ago, before the current magazine crash, but I saw statistics about readership, and was surprised to find that the average Cosmo reader was 40- or 50- something wanting really to feel 20-something, and that also the editors were quite aware of this.
Around the same time, I noticed how many female-oriented commercials were showing on shows like
Highlander
and
Star Trek
series which were ostensibly male-oriented action adventures.
I'm not surprised by Highlander, since they started off with his epic romance with Tessa, which definitely wasn't for male viewers. And ST:TNG looked like they took the opportunity to acknowledge the female viewers they'd actually had all along, what with the Crusher and Yar. Troi, on the other hand, was not for us.
I like Romano. His stand-up is really good. Many episodes of his show were mediocre, but the best were hilarious.
I can't stand the big guy who was on his show--once I've hated someone's standup persona it's hard for me to watch them in sitcoms, and I really dislike his comedy stylings.