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5 reasons to see Tyler Perry’s new Netflix show “She The People”

You cannot accuse Tyler Perry not to be productive.

The multi-hyphenate creator and youngest Cowboy Carter Tour participant has produced a project since the project since he signed a first creative contract with Netflix in 2023. From well-recorded historical dramas to questionable right thrillers (not to mention two other Madea films), Perry basically created his own universe of Netflix content.

This now includes its new sitcom Tyler Perry’s They the people which Stars Terri J. Vaughn as Mississippi’s first black lieutenant governor. When a series is invoiced in which Vaughn’s Antoinette Dunkerson “manages her crazy family” and “has to overcome a boss who is in the past”, you have to defeat, “overcome”, “overcome”, and must manage “her crazy family”, “overcome”. They peopleThe first season Includes eight half -hour episodes that are now out and other eight that will debut in August. Here are the ups and downs that you can expect in the first episodes (or not).

1. The tour is great

Vaughn is a TV veteran of The Steve Harvey Show And it offers a steady hand at the wheel for this crazy sitcom world. She makes Antoinette seriously and intelligently, but also reliably overwhelmed-she tries to educate the two teenagers, which she shares with her ex-husband or pumps up through the recitation of the texts to Whitney Houston’s “I’m no matter” pump.

Terri J. Vaughn and Jade Novah
Terri J. Vaughn as Antoinette Dunkerson and Jade Novah as Shamika Latavia Latoya Farrah Dunkerson Charles “Chip” Bergmann/Netflix

2. The production values ​​are questionable

Perry is known for his quick, cheap productions, and this is definitely shown here. The aesthetics of the series looks like a cross between a Hallmark Christmas film and Rebecca Blacks “Friday” music video.

3. The comedy is wide

“We were on the Stripper Pole and – and we came to vote!” If a woman raves on the street after a video by Antoinette passionately obtains her daughter from a party, becomes viral. As always, Perry is happy to bend in broad tropics in his comedy, from Antoinette’s weed smoker mother-mother-mother Cleo (Jo Marie Payton) to her striking driver Basil (Dyon Brooks).

But there are some wiser Moments too. After Antoinettes Cousin Shamika (a lovable Jade Novah) met the cheeky white assistant of the governor, she whispers: “She will put the” I will put a few s in your tea and bring you to the sunken place. “

Kevin Thoms, Tony Robinette, Robert Craighead Ad Terri J. Vaight.
Kevin Thoms as Jed Bonds, Tony Robinette as Henry Clatterbuck, Robert Craighead as governor Irwin Harper and Terri J. Vaughn as Antoinette Dunkerson Charles “Chip” Bergmann/Netflix

Perry and co-creator Niya Palmer seem to try to address as many comedic sensitivity as possible at once, which the show does a bit about the place. But it tends to be funny when it takes how Antoinette has to go between her black community and the white world of governor policy with the switch.

4. Politics is really fascinating

Mississippi is one of 18 countries in which the governor and lieutenant governor are chosen separately, which means that they can come from different parties. This electoral shit ensures a fascinating political institution. Antoinette is a democrat that was chosen by the predominantly black population in Jackson, while governor Harper (Robert Craighead) is a Smarmy “Good Ol ‘Boy” Republican with a white rural basis.

Once in office, Antoinette has to find out some of their agenda. The show remains more in a feel-good sitcom mode for feel-good than the scorching political satire and Antoinette comes across A few Naive for an organizer of the Harvard Law Graduate Community, but the weak cross-party alliance is still a strong, original premise for a political series.

5. There is a welcome touch of absurdism

While the first two episodes basically expect, the show finds a welcome new comedic tone in its third episode, as Antoinette and her family go down in the villa of a governor lieutenant who may be a literal plantation or not.

Terri J. Vaughn
Terri J. Vaughn as Antoinette Dunkerson Charles “Chip” Bergmann/Netflix

From the flag carpet of the Confederated and pillows to a butler that came out of the 19th century, it is a strange absurd reef about the horrors of how South America “honors” its story.

Although the rear half of the season has a little stuck in an action on Antoinette to move a pipeline that is passed through several impoverished communities, there is a general sense that the show wants to grow and develop further, both strange and dramatic. This is a quality that will serve the series well because it will later move into its second term this summer.

(Tagstotranslate) Tyler-Perry (T) Netflix (T) TV

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