Sitcom
in sentence
234 examples of Sitcom in a sentence
Game On is a funny British
sitcom
and apparently he left because he wanted to break into Hollywood and star in this film.
Return of the Boogyman is a dreadful movie which doesn't play like a movie, it plays like an episode of a TV
sitcom
when they flashback to older episodes.
On the back burner for years (so it was reported) this television reunion of two of the most beloved characters in
sitcom
history started off badly - and went straight downhill from there.
The poor attempts to frighten you using flashback scenes are worse then ones used in 80's
sitcom
shows and in the end it'll leave you wanting to bang your head against the wall of your house.
That save the children stuff is wonderful for campaign trails , I guess, but it does not hold water in a cable
sitcom
about a suburbanite mom , as the local pot dealer.
The rest are a crop of
sitcom
stereotype - can you say "Norm!!"?
Aside from the tastelessness of having a
sitcom
about Hitler, it just isn't funny or entertaining in any way.
It is very similar to a 1950's
sitcom
in its cornball humor and contrived situations, but while it can be well done like in I Love Lucy, it's just not funny here.
I think the show was based around the novelty "look, it's Hitler as a bumbling
sitcom
figure" but it just fell flat in every regard.
America would never air a
sitcom
about Hitler, although we did have that show about Lincoln's slave, The Secret Diary of Desmond Pfeiffer.
I like almost every British
sitcom
(okay... maybe not Monthy Python, some of the jokes were great, but some of them I didn't understand.), but this League of Gentlemen is just something good to make you sick.
With Redd Foxx in the central role and enough pimpy outfits and polyester to carpet the entire 1970s, "Norman" plays like a blaxploitation picture combined with any number of silly
sitcom
episodes involving comic misunderstandings, not to mention an elongated cameo by Waylon Flowers!
Then it slaps itself into the ONLY good part in the movie which seems to be set up like a
sitcom
without the laugh tracks.
This film is a good example of how through media manipulation you can sell a film that is no more than a very unfunny TV
sitcom.
With a couple of exceptions the acting is awful; the comical over-emoting and gesticulating of some cast members might be well suited to a late-night infomercial, but not a primetime
sitcom
(even a Canadian one.)
As a proud Canadian I hope this thing goes away soon, and that the rest of the world, primed by the CBC's publicists, quickly forgets this colossal embarrassment of a
sitcom.
The plot is the kind of thing that deluded teenagers churn out when they're going through that "I could write a book/screenplay/award winning
sitcom"
phase.
The script is sub-Neil Simon nonsense with one-liners galore, a flat, inexpressive direction by Henry Winkler (stuck in
sitcom
mode), and family-conflict at the ready.
At other moments, it reminds me of
sitcom
and mini-series music.
This is more like a
sitcom!
A singularly unfunny musical comedy that artificially tries to marry the then-cutting edge rock 'n' roll explosion with the middle-class sensibilities of a suburban
sitcom.
I turned on CBS's Monday night
sitcom
line-up, (which has become a regular way for me to relax after stressful Monday workdays) and found this on.
Of course, the
sitcom
line-up would be reruns anyway, being summer, but seeing those episodes over again would have been more entertaining.
That's right: just like in a sitcom, which is what this is, with the added 'bonus' of delusions of grandeur and a 110-minute running time.
Furthermore the link between this show and the '70s' is extremely tenuous beyond the style of dress and the scenery and background used for the show -it seems to be nothing more than a modern
sitcom
with the same old unfunny, clichéd scripts that modern sitcoms have dressed up as depicting a show from twenty years ago in the hope that it will gain some nostalgic viewers or something like that.
All the funny things happening in this
sitcom
is based on the main character Jim being either a bad father, a bad husband or generally just enormously selfish.
The only positive thing that can be said of 'Knots' is the catchy saxophone signature tune, later used as the title music for the I.T.V sitcom, 'The Upper Hand'.
Written like a sitcom, this movie fails to strike any sort of likeable chord throughout, from the self-help doctor played by the aways sexy-as-chopped liver Molly Shannon to the 'I'm fat, and therefore funny' John Linette.
I was excited to see a
sitcom
that would hopefully represent Indian Candians but i found this show to be not funny at all.
This script is just not funny and one of the glaring problems is that the characters are all written down to a
sitcom
level.
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