
Not Bad but Her Stand-Up is Better...
Review created: 06/06/08(updated 06/06/08)

This was the first sitcom to star an all Asian-American cast. It's title character is stand-up comedian Margaret Cho. She plays Margaret Kim in a show about her Korean family living in San Francisco. It was supposed to be based on her life/stand-up routines but apparently ABC warped it into a bunch of cliches and stereotypes. She fought with executives because they initially said she wasn't acting "Asian enough" and later she was being "too Asian." They also made her lose 30 pounds in 2 weeks (which caused her kidneys to collapse).
The plot revolves around the "Americanized" Margaret and her traditional mother (Jodi Long). She wants her daughter to marry a nice, successful, Korean guy but Margaret's more into Caucasian bad boys. Also living in the Kim household is Margaret's father (Clyde Kusatsu) who runs the family owned book store, her older brother (B.D. Wong) who's a doctor and mother's favorite, her little brother (J.B. Quon), and her hilarious couch potato grandmother (Amy Hill).
Margaret works at a perfume counter in a local mall. Her partners in goofing off are ditzy Ruthie (Maddie Corman) and, in a nearby department, Gloria (Judy Gold). They frequently spend their lunches together in the food court and their evenings in a seedy club drinking and dancing.
Overall, the show was pretty good. I'm sure it could have been better if they gave Miss Cho full creative control. It's cheesy at times but refreshing that a television show focuses on a mother-daughter relationship that isn't always so agreeable. Even with guest stars such as Oprah and Quentin Tarantino (Cho's real life ex), it was cancelled after only one season.
Review ID: 10000000007458759

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