With an overwhelming amount of debt from medical school and no residency, David Tracey decides to work towards a psychologist license by completing 1,920 hours of unbilled sessions.With an overwhelming amount of debt from medical school and no residency, David Tracey decides to work towards a psychologist license by completing 1,920 hours of unbilled sessions.With an overwhelming amount of debt from medical school and no residency, David Tracey decides to work towards a psychologist license by completing 1,920 hours of unbilled sessions.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe titles of the first two episodes ("1,920 Hours" and "Another Stakeout 2") seem to make a reference to buddy cop action-comedy movies from the 1980s: 48 Hrs. (1982) starring Nick Nolte and Eddie Murphy, and Stakeout (1987) starring Richard Dreyfuss and Emilio Estevez. Both these movies had a sequel whose title used the word "Another" instead of just adding the numeral "2" (Another 48 Hrs. (1990) and Another Stakeout (1993)).
- Quotes
[repeated line]
David: Pursuant to the requirements set out by Illinois Statute two-two-five I-L-C-S dash one-o-seven, I am required to inform you that I am not a licensed psychologist, psychiatrist, or a registered therapist, but that these therapy sessions are being tape-recorded to provide a record of the one thousand nine hundred and twenty supervised clinical hours needed to acquire such a licence.
The main character is a sympathetic millennial everyman whose situation is very relatable (for certain demographics, anyway). But he's not generic or predictable. In fact, nothing about this show or its writing is predictable. Which is probably why it is so funny. Yet, at moments (not *too* often, fortunately; it's a dramedy, not a soap or melodrama), it also pulls off "heartwarming." And not in a hokey, smarmy way, but genuine.
The Chicago locations are authentic (and I could swear David's parents' house is a bungalow in Cicero, actually, but hey - Capone had a hotel in Cicero, so it's kind of an extension of the city, heh)... either that, or they've done an amazing job recreating these locations on a sound stage somewhere in LA... or, hell, maybe here in Chicago. It's obviously not a super high budget show, but the production quality is actually quite high -- nothing about it looks or seems low budget.
The ensemble acting is superlative, and the minor characters are a major part of some of the funniest bits. I often laugh more times than I can count with each episode... yet... I get these people, I know these people, I've taken care of these people, I'm friends with and related to these people, and sometimes I am one of these people.
And underneath it all, with their/our bad behavior, poor boundaries, repeated button-pushing, messed up histories, defensiveness (and offensiveness), we're all schlepping through life doing the best we can, however dysfunctionally, fearfully, a$$holish-ly, half-a$$ed-ly, and hilariously that may be.
I'm pretty bummed there apparently won't be any more episodes. It's a real shame. This show belongs on Netflix or Amazon (or should be continued there - please?). It's truly right up there with those networks' best original programming.
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Details
- Runtime30 minutes
- Color