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The third season deals with Shirley, who dreams of daydreaming and desperately wants to put her in Prozac. The idea of taking medications seems to lead Ally to ask about the hallucination error, as she seems to bring her comfort and keep her in her right perspective in any way away from the noise of life. Meanwhile, Neil and John defend a boy who appears to be reckless and kisses his classmate.
An hour long and laugh-track free, it certainly stretches the definition of TV comedy. In the abstract, it is probably easier to think of it as a drama with humor. But it is, after all, very funny.
The fact is that I just don't care about any of these characters anymore. While they used to be endearingly offbeat, now they're just annoyingly strange.
Kelley is capable of taking the dramedy and making a much bigger mark. So when I witness his oeuvre veering from once-insightful observations of contemporary women into male fantasies of female eroticism, infantalized women... I want to scream.