From Deseret News archives:

What did you expect? 'Cavemen' is bad; 'Carpoolers' is an even worse sitcom

Published: Tuesday, Oct. 2, 2007 12:06 a.m. MDT
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Cavemen has one thing going for it — expectations couldn't possibly be lower.

C'mon, just about everybody expects this show (7 p.m., Ch. 4) based on a series of insurance commercials to be horrible. And it's not horrible. It's bad, but because it's not horrible, you might be pleasantly surprised.

Probably not. But maybe.

If you've ever seen one of those Geico commercials, you pretty much know what "Cavemen" is about. Cro-Magnons live in the modern world, and they're sick of being thought of as inferior and dumb.

The show centers on three of them who live in San Diego. Joel (Bill English) is smart and successful — and he's got a beautiful Homo sapiens girlfriend, Kate (Kaitlyn Doubleday). His younger brother Andy (Sam Huntington) is a dopey surfer dude. And his best friend Nick (Nick Kroll) is smart, sarcastic and wary of the Homo sapiens world.

The premise is that they're just like us on the inside.

"We had always just developed it as they are just like you — they just don't look like you," said executive producer Joe Lawson said. "I think there was some sort of glitch during the Ice Age, and these guys made it through. So everything developed but their sort of outer shell."

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"We all believe in this as a show, and as platform to sort of speak about a fish-out-of-water experience or what it feels like to want to belong to something and to feel misunderstood," said executive producer Will Speck.

The "Cavemen" deal with prejudice all the time ... and yet the show's creators/producers run away from the idea that it's a metaphor for racial prejudice. Or, at least, that it's specifically aimed at prejudice against African-Americans. Although that seemed pretty clear in the original pilot shown to critics (which may or may not air later in the season).

In that original pilot, the cavemen are stereotyped as lazy, good dancers, athletic, oversexed, and they have a problem dating outside their, um, ethnic group.

Not that there's anything wrong with using a TV series as an allegory, but it would help if it were a good TV series. "We hope that issues about assimilation and different groups having preconceptions about each other will be something that everybody will identify with," said executive producer Bill Martin.

On the other hand, executive producer Mike Schiff insisted, "That's something we'll touch on, but it's not the driving force."

"Cavemen" is "about, ultimately, three friends in their 20s who happen to be cavemen," Speck said.

He wasn't trying to lower expectations. He just couldn't really avoid it.

Recent comments

missedthepoint: Think "The Green Movement" (& live it!)

t | Oct. 4, 2007 at 1:12 a.m.

The REAL question that got missed here is "what is a dentist doing...

missedthepoint | Oct. 2, 2007 at 11:30 a.m.

Mr. Pierce is lucky. He's the only critic to have seen the revised...

Anonymous | Oct. 2, 2007 at 9:53 a.m.

Image
Bob Damico, ABC

ABC's "Cavemen" features Bill English, left, as Joel, Nick Kroll as Nick and Sam Huntington as Andy.

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