Freaks and Geeks (TV Series 1999–2000) Poster

(1999–2000)

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8/10
Long live William McKinley High School, 1980! (minor spoilers)
vertigo_143 April 2005
I have just finished watching the Complete Series DVD collection of "Freaks and Geeks," one of the best high school television series on televisions that, thanks to idiotic network executives who continue to make the decisions that make network television more and more unbearable to watch, have truly missed out on a gem. And, thanks to a healthy fan network, I was able to enjoy every bit of the series (as short as it was) on DVD.

Freaks and Geeks was one of the most honest portrayals of high school life, pleasantly departing from the overrated attention given to other television series and films who consistently focus on the "untouchable" classes of the dreaded high school social caste system that we are all likely too familiar with. The assorted teen dramas, and the difficulty of just subsisting in the often passively rigid classes within the high school social scene. This television series presented things from two perspectives: a group of freshman friends marked as "The Geeks" and a group of older friends, underachievers known as "The Freaks." The Geeks often provided the comical element to the show, while the Freaks often explore more dramatic story lines such as problems with parents (a constant subplot), self-esteem, drugs, and more. Although the Geeks confronted their own share of problems, their youth and easygoing attitude often made the situation more light-hearted.

Other commentators have often posited the question (on the "Freaks and Geeks" board along with other short-lived television series) why shows like these never last long on television. While "Saved by the Bell" might have been the only show to be quite successful with it (though only after significant retooling of the original series, "Good Morning Mrs. Bliss would NBC even agree to pick up the show), my guess is that this show may have initially had a difficult time finding a loyal audience in the crucial early days of the show. There were issues of drug use and teenage sex which some might not have found ideal for the younger viewers of this show (people in their very early teens as this show tended to sometimes celebrate drug use...even though there was one episode that was clearly anti-drug). Five years ago was a different time, however. And shows like "The O.C." (on Fox) seems to get away with stories surrounding its "young" characters and attitudes towards casual sex. Sadly, however, the network, too, is to blame, as it shifted the show into unrecognizable time slots, airing a show that was ideal for young audiences at a time when they would least likely be watching television--Friday and Sunday evenings. I cannot say that this would be why other television series surrounding high school would also be canceled.

It might also be that the show was never given a fair chance. Some might have quickly judged it as a rip-off of "The Wonder Years" (John Daly and the Geek Gang--especially Neil and Harris--did look like characters you might find on that show, not to mention the high school looking just like that in The Wonder Years).

My other guess for the reason that shows like these are often short-lived is that they are too expensive to produce. "Freaks and Geeks," like "My So-Called Life" filled a lengthy time slot of fifty minutes or so. Filmed partially on location and partially on a set (like "Sqaure Pegs" and "My So-Called Life"), a show like this becomes very expensive to produce and, may unfortunately force some hasty decisions about how long a network would ride out slack ratings.

I still think NBC passed up a good thing, and possibly other networks if it was pitched to them once being canceled. It was a great show that tried to produce a very dynamic set of characters and stories and did well.

I would also like to say while I adored nearly every character on the show (except for Nick who's obsession with Lindsay transformed him into not only a bizarre, but a boring character), I thought Martin Starr was the best as the witty Bill Haverchuck (I love his Bionic Woman bit when he is getting his costume ready in the Halloween episode). Though I thought him to be needlessly bizarre in the beginning (particularly due to his gawky appearance), he turned out to be one of the best characters. He always tried his best to be a good friend to everyone and, he always had some of the funniest lines in th show (Joe Flaherty, as Sam's dad, also had a bunch of good one-liners). And, while he was not in the show but sporadically, I also loved 'Harris,' the Geek mentor who always seemed so confident about everything.

Long live Freaks and Geeks! May the television show's creators reconsider trying this one again (even if you have to start over with a new cast, since everyone has aged six years--as of this writing).
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10/10
Too exceptional to be allowed to remain on TV!
planktonrules9 July 2006
Warning: Spoilers
This was a marvelously written and acted TV show. And, since TV is often a medium full of vacuous mind-numbing crap (reality TV, Jerry Springer, etc.), it's no wonder that this show bombed--it was just too good. It's really a shame, as I think the show would have appealed to people of all ages--kids as well as their parents.

The show centers on two siblings, their family and their friends. The oldest daughter is practically a genius and a nice girl, but she longs for so much more out of life than just good grades. So, she leaves her old friends and creates a new identity with the "freaks". Her younger brother is one of the most geeky kids you could imagine--except for his friends which are even worse. Nice kids, yes, but total geeks.

Each episode tended to focus on one or both of the teens and despite their differences, they both were basically decent kids. The parents, though pretty dorky (especially Joe Flaherty as DAD), were nice folks as well and you couldn't help but care about them all. AND, in spite of all I have mentioned, the show kept a nice sense of humor and was never saccharine! What a pity.
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10/10
One of the best shows of all time.
mikefogerty28 March 2006
The show's creative team seems to have an eye for the high school experience and their vision transcends the setting. Freaks and Geeks is set at a Michigan high school in 1980 and the opening shot of the series sets us up for who the show will be about. We track across a football practice and up to the bleachers where a player and cheerleader are discussing how they love each other so much, it's scary. We linger briefly on this generic moment before moving underneath the bleachers to real life and a conversation about Molly Hatchet and Led Zeppelin. These are the Freaks. Then come the Geeks. They are three boys quoting Caddyshack, are bullied for it, and then saved by a girl. It's through these freaks and these geeks that we will relive the high school experience. Sure the names of the groups change, their lingo and the bands they listen to, but everyone can relate to the horrors and beauties of high school and the relationships that reside there.

So many characterizations about this period of life are presented through the eyes of characters that virtually no one was. The characters are either too smart, quoting Kierkegaard at fourteen and making their own label-worthy clothing, or they are perfect, as if everyone's capable of making the game-winning shot. Our story here is presented through the lives of Lindsey and Sam Weir. Lindsey is the oldest. She's a former "mathlete" and "that girl in English who got an "A."" However, dissatisfaction with her life and an attraction to the easygoing ways of Daniel Desario, the head freak, leads her to a new group of friends and a shift in direction. Her successes as a student and the perception of her as a perfect daughter have left her feeling empty. So she trades her plaid dress for her dad's old army jacket and forsakes the library for the smoking patio. But Lindsey's is not simply a story of "teenage rebellion." Her's is a journey into the genuine as she finds a home in the murky adventures of friendships and a real life lived.

Sam and his friends, Bill and Neal, are freshman, learning from the outset that "high school sucks." But their stories are not simply the ninth grade torture chamber they could have been. No, Sam, Bill, and Neal are redeemed by their acynical, wide-eyed approach to life and their affection for one another. This care they have for one another is refreshing and truthful. In one episode (The Garage Door), Sam suspects that Neal's dad is being unfaithful in his marriage. Bill reminds Sam that he has to tell Neal what he saw. There are no secrets. "Remember that time in science class when I tried to sneak out a fart and it came out a…poop? Do you think I wanted to tell you that?" Their innocence isn't simply an extension of their naivete, (well, Bill is a little naïve) but flows more from their trust in one another and willingness to be faithful. In "Smooching and Mooching," Neal and Bill discuss strategy for spin-the-bottle at an upcoming make-out party. Bill asks, "What if they don't wanna kiss us?" Neal replies, "That's the genius part of the game. They have to." "I don't know. I just don't want to see the expression on their face when they see that the bottle lands on me," says Bill, gently. The geeks are not understated, and yet never over the top. They get their friendship just right.

Freaks and Geeks also gives us two of the great television characterizations that I've ever seen, Bill, played by Martin Starr, and Nick, played by Jason Seigel. Bill is the anti-Eddie Haskel. He's brimming with authenticity and his laid back ways provide some of the shows greatest comedic moments. In "Girlfriends and Boyfriends," Bill gets to be study partners with Cindy Sanders, one of the cutest girls in school and Sam's big crush. At a study session, her getting up from a chair is accompanied by a noise that either came from her or from the vinyl seat covering. When she leaves the room he immediately switches chairs and scootches around on it to see if indeed the sound came from Cindy or the vinyl. (It wasn't the vinyl…) Nick isn't quite so self-assured. If he is wide-eyed, its because he's staring into headlights. In fact, there are times when he comes off as manipulative and creepy and yet there is a sadness in his character that I haven't quite seen before. He is afraid. In "I'm With the Band" Lindsey encourages him to try out for a local band and fulfill his dream of being a rock-n-roll drummer only to find that his skills don't quite match his passion for the music. In "Discos and Dragons" he finally finds something he's good at, disco, and yet it's revealed to the viewer that the disco will close within a weeks time. He's the friend that has to be taken care of. (Ken smashes Nick's guitar so that he won't sing an embarrassing love ode to Lindsey.) Yet he wants to be the spirit of the group. ("Laser Floyd is playing at the laser dome!") But Nick isn't simply sad because bad things happen to him. He wants to be a deep thinker, but can't scratch the surface of things and conventional modes of "finding your way" seem only to backfire. He has glimpsed his place in the world, and he can't bear it.
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Perfect Television (only a network executive couldn't love it)
liquidcelluloid-117 April 2004
Network: NBC; Genre: Drama/Comedy; Content Rating: TV-PG (for language, drug use and adult content); Available: on DVD; Perspective: Modern Classic (star range: 1 - 5);

Season Reviewed: Completed Series (1 season)

There are few shows, currently on the air or in the entire pantheon of television, that are so obviously crafted with as much love as 'Freaks and Geeks'. Created by Paul Feig and produced by Judd Apatow, 'Freaks' crackles with an honest writing and flawless chemistry and creates it's own wonderful universe. To watch the show is to be awash in details and obvious care that was taken to make it.The high school series has never been so real.

'Freaks' follows a group of geeks and a group of burnouts at McKinley High School in 1980, both of which centering around the Weir siblings. Lindsay Weir (Linda Cardellini) is our heroine whose rebellion from the Mathlete life and into the world of the burn-outs (with the terrific James Franco, Jason Segel, Seth Rogen & Busy Philipps) creates a domino effect that the entire series spins on. Sam Weir (John Francis Daley) is an underdeveloped geek whose unrequited love of cheerleader Cindy Sanders (Natasha Melnick, perfectly cast) drives much of the geek story lines. Sam faces the torment and humiliation of daily life in high school with friends Neil and Bill (wildly underrated, star-making Samm Levine and Martin Starr, respectively). The show is a badge of honor for all involved.

The school is populated with a fully realized universe of supporting characters from Lindsey's church-going friend Millie to Dungeon master Harris to Mr. Rosso (David "Gruber" Alan, hilariously stealing any scenery not bolted down) - the school guidance counselor without any boundary for the inappropriate. . No more accurate depiction of the look and feel of high school (or the hell that was high school depending on your perspective) TV has ever seen.

Becky Ann Baker and Joe Flaherty make the perfect '50s era parents. Flaherty comes off the most over-the-top, but even that fits the vision. The dinner table scenes between the Weir family are so uncharacteristically happy and intentionally corny that it will surely be off-putting to the average cynical viewer. Years before "The Office" made embarrassment and viewer discomfort into a science, "Freaks and Geeks" was doing a similar thing, effectively making us really feel Sam and Lindsey's embarrassment over their parent's behavior. I particularly like the set design of the Weir house, and the show in general. "Freaks" is set in 1980 but designed with 50s, 60s and 70s paraphernalia. Unlike the many fast food period pieces now, - "That 70s Show", "The Wedding Singer", "American Dreams" - where the decade is treated like a "Saturday Night Live" sketch, the decade doesn't turn over to 1980 and suddenly everyone runs out and buys parachute pants and the Thriller album.

The self-professed anti-'Dawson's Creek', the series is almost as distinctive for what it isn't than for what it is. It isn't a flashy show with 20-something preps playing high school kids set to blaring Top 40 pop songs where the biggest problems among the characters include juggling two hot dates on the same night. In other shows - most overly concerned with what the consuming public thinks of them, the geeks and the burnouts are fringe groups usually given as much thought as the potted plant in the corner, or used as 1-joke stereotypes. 'Freaks and Geeks' is the first show to acknowledge that they may be more interesting. They don't participate in the high school caste system and they muse about never being able to get girls.

I love the way the show's camera lingers on faces and soaks up Cardellini's incredible expressions. It rests on the kids as they sit and talk about their favorite drummer or the TV show they watched last night just like everyone does. At an hour the show allows for those quite moments. Just as it takes time out to do elaborate mid-show set pieces like an action movie-like dodge ball sequence or a violent spat between Kim Kelly (Philips) and her parents. The series is packed with these unforgettable little moments - heart-breaking and screaming funny, sometimes all at once. In 18 episodes it says more than most shows ever do: the geeks watching their first porno, the freaks getting their first fake IDs, the family catastrophes in Niel and Bill's homes and the painfully real crush Sam has on Cindy. Their world doesn't always a happy ending and awkwardness and embarrassment rule the day.

The fact that 'Freaks and Geeks' wasn't given a chance to make it by NBC is a sad testament to how network executives box in their viewers to find a ratings silver bullet. No matter, these 18 episodes are self-containing and fully satisfying enough to get over the sting of the network apathy. I'll break a rule and do a little necessary promotion here. All this is captured in a DVD set this show deserves, with as much attention and love put into the extras (29 commentary tracks!) that was put into the show. It is the single best DVD I've ever seen.

Who knows if the show would have been able to keep it up as the kids grew up and the show had to be written around it. As it stands, this is like lightening captured in a bottle. That perfect mix of all the elements coming together to make a truly classic series. No matter what the future holds, "Freaks" has a reserved place in my heart. This is really one for the ages, people. No list of modern classics is complete without "Freaks and Geeks".

* * * * * / 5
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10/10
How did it not last?
ComedyFan201023 February 2018
This is an amazing TV show. I would say it is one of the most realistic portrayal of high school life that I have ever seen. My high school time was around the same when this show aired and I could connect my memories to many things that happened on the show.

Most of the actors were not known back then but now watching it is like watching a show full of comedy stars. Which is a good thing because it makes me happy they got the success they deserved. All characters bring something to the show. Most of them aren't too deep, but this is because only a season passed. If it went on longer we sure would see more development. There is no character that I disliked. Parents, teachers, freaks, geeks, popular kids they all have humanity in them.

Every episode keeps one watching and being interested in what happens and triggers a lot of feelings. Happy and sad ones.

So how come it was cancelled? I think so far it is the biggest loss on TV that this show never went past the first season.
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10/10
Charming Cast, Superb Acting, and Great Soundtrack
adrianocuevas14 July 2020
The only teen tv show that doesn't deserve a freakin' one season. As an 18 years old turning 19 in the 21st century, Freaks and Geeks didn't make me feel bored at all. NBC made a wrong decision when they cancelled it for a second season. They argued that it had an average ratings but the real problem is - the poor timeslot (source: reliable online articles).

Unlike any other teen tv shows, this doesn't feel unreal. You can easily relate with the story and its characters that was made possible by the charming cast and good screenwriters. The songs adds an effect to the series - like a seasoning to a main course dish, great soundtrack indeed. Watching this series brings you not only lots of laughter but also lessons in life.

Even though the series is critically acclaimed and always had been on the list of "Best TV Shows of All time" in many articles, magazines, and the like - this series deserves more recognition than it is getting. This is a classic show that needs to be recognize by broader audiences.
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10/10
The most authentic depiction of high school on TV
ericliuanish1 May 2022
As a high schooler watching this in 2022, I went into this 90s comedy expecting laugh tracks, overdramatic acting and fake-looking props, but at the end of the first episode, I was blown away by the level of authenticity that is presented. This show just gets teenagers and high school.

Every character is relatable and endearing, they face problems teenagers face everyday in the real world, they feel insecure about their body, they struggle to gain social confidence, they don't know what to do after they graduate high school, and they just behave like normal kids. So many other teen dramas are detached from reality, with completely ludicrous character motivations and characters who look like as if they are supermodels attending a fashion show, but not Freaks and Geeks.

The casting in this show is impeccable, mainly because child actors are actually hired to portray a child. Linda Cardellini also did a great job playing Lindsey, she totally pass as a 16 years old, as does all of the main cast. The writing in this show is probably one of the best that I've ever scene. Every line is so simple yet reveals so much about characters and what they are about. The amount of subtlety is insane.

No other comedy made in recent years has felt as natural and genuine as Freaks and Geeks, even if you look at great comedy series like the office, parks and rec or Veep, the characters in those shows are absolutely amazing but they do feel fictional, and I think that's what make Freaks and Geeks stands out among the crowd, its true to reality characters.

Can't believe they canceled this, this show was 30 years ahead of its time.
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9/10
I Will NEVER Understand Why This Was Cancelled
mcal197324 August 2021
I recently had the privilege of binge watching this, after many years. I forgot just how funny and honest it was. I was an instant fan when this show premiered, and pissed when it was canceled. I am so happy that Judd Apatow had his revenge.
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10/10
Ahead of its time...
Space8143 October 2008
Freaks and Geeks is quite possibly one of the best television shows of the last 20 years. Maybe even better. It's raw, real, full of laughs and pulls every heart string. I believe, wholeheartedly, that if this show was aired now, it was have a massive viewing audience. I think ten years ago, the public wasn't ready for it. Now that Judd Apatow has had some serious box office hits (Knocked Up, etc.) the public might be more receptive to F&G.

My proposal: Judd Apatow, write a Freaks and Geeks movie with all of the same characters. Yes, John Francis Daly will be much taller and I'm sure some of the other freshman (i.e. Martin Starr) may look a little older. I don't care what plot twists might have to be added to make it work, but I think it would be incredible.

I just watched the final episode, again, and was choked up. It never gets old. "Ripple in still water...."
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10/10
Why was this canceled??
bsm-286379 November 2023
Seriously the best show. It is beyond me why it didn't last. It depicts teenage life perfectly as well as parents and is so witty. The actors chosen for each group were perfect. Sam and Lindsey were the perfect kids to center around. I am Ratcliffe with my teenage daughter and we literally laugh out loud through the whole show. We can't figure out why it would've been canceled. From crushes to sex and drug use to parents and the struggle to be popular enough, there is so much that everyone can identify with something. The gym class shower episode was priceless! We also just watched the mascot episode and literally were falling from our chairs laughing. Nbc missed out on this one. I loved it originally and still love it today. It's a hidden gem!
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10/10
Best High School series I've ever seen...
LobotomyKid12 March 2006
I'll make it short because most comments here will already tell you how great this show is in detail much better than I could and in adding a lenghty review I would only repeat much of the other reviews. Freaks and Geeks is a wonderful show with real characters the viewers can identify with and it tells school life as it was with all the humiliations, pain, angst, joy, discoveries, secrets...it's a very honest and low key show with a slow narrative but the stories and characters really grab you by the heart. The casting was incredible and the chemistry between the actors is something else. Especially the geek trio is awesome. Sams unanswered crush he has on cheerleader Cindy is something all Geeks of the world can relate to, as we all know nice guys finish last :-) I was fed up with all the models and pretty boys who follow these stupid, superficial, oversexed and manipulative dating&love story lines a long time ago already and only recently saw these episodes of Freaks and Geeks. And it was like a fresh breath of air! I didn't watch it from the beginning unfortunately and zapped in to "We've got spirit". Then came the scene when Todd thanked the team and the high school and then he thanked God, and I knew I was in for something special. Only I didn't know right then and there just how great of a show freaks and Geeks truly is! The fact that NBC stopped this series after one season only is a true testament to the sad state of television these days.
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10/10
Fantastic
blionart19 December 2021
Simply incredible, I recommend it to anyone, more so if you like the 00s american vibe.

You'll empathize with the characters as you never before, idk how they archive that I ended up crying just because it's ended.
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7/10
Not... bad... I guess?
dudesweethej20 February 2012
Well, not bad... But kinda, uhm... well, I mean, what's the hype? Anyway, it's a veeery casual show, nothing unexpected will pop up. The characters are archetypal and one-dimensional. The "nice girl wanting to be cool", the "bad girl with bad parents", that kind of stereotypical. The theme is, apparently, the life of 80's youth cliques, the "geeks" who are smart, nerdy and unpopular (seriously, in which world is this NOT a cliché?), and the "freaks" who are... well... stupid, irresponsible and very much not likable at all, and apparently, our "sweet girl" can't get enough of 'em, even though most of them treat her and the people around her like crap. The different motives from episode to episode can be the suches as drinking, Halloween(?), and going to parties... wooptie freakin' doo... nothing we haven't had explained a couple of times before... And most of which are portrayed through practically one angle only... And it's when the show hits me with clichés like the teacher teaching sexual matters, while the students laugh at every term he uses, which is NOT only a cliché, but also simply stupid (unless American high school students seriously are that lame? I doubt it) which annoys me. It is enjoyable, though, at times to be able to kick back with something completely casual and predictable, but in that case, i think I'd prefer an old fashioned sit-com anyway... Obviously, some people enjoy this a lot, and while i don't get it, i guess it's fine... As said, it's not bad... It's just elevator television, really...
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4/10
Highly Over-Rated
sachin-ua-1405948 May 2013
Its a series that connects only with a certain group of people. Poorly written scripts, really bad execution. Although it has quite good actors, and some decent episodes the overall series was average. Now as a guy sitting somewhere in the world, apart from America, I would probably keep wondering what the f*** is wrong with the stupid characters? What are these bunch of retards trying to show? And would never understand the so-called "Freaks" or "Geeks" part of it. I mean what a series needs is a good story, an ingenious concept, good research and technical aspects and frankly, it was average (if not lousy) in all these aspects. No wonder it got scrapped. 9/10? Bitch Please! Not even worth a 7!
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Best show about young people in a long time.
11-ball21 March 2000
"Freaks and Geeks" is about as good of a television show as tv can be. I'm only two years out of high school, and although the show is set in 1980, it effectively captures the life of high schoolers. Nowadays, with this huge surge in teen movies and television, I feel that young people are misrepresented by television shows like Dawson's Creek and movies like "Varsity Blues." Simply put, beautiful people were rare at my high school. Nobody I ever knew engaged in sexual relations with a teacher as a freshman, and I was never approached by women wearing only whipped cream (and I was a three-year varsity athlete). My high school life exactly resembles what the kids in "Freaks and Geeks" do: talk about sci-fi movies, get high, feel alienated by my parents, had confusing talks with guidance counselors, etc. And these kids look like teens, with big glasses, young faces, and zits. From watching "Dawson's" or all the other teen movies out there (although some of those films are admitteldly entertaining I liked "She's All That" and "10 Things I Hate About You) one would glean that all teenagers are young Adonises. "Freaks and Geeks" thankfully corrects that error.

Most importantly though, "F&G" is a great show. Hopefully NBC finds an audience for this show. It is definitely different, slower paced, and doesn't play the latest hit music at full volume, but it IS clever, funny, and warm. It also deftfully balances comedy and drama, without ever being cloying, manipulative, or condescending to its audience. I hope this show stays around for a long time. If NBC drops it, please, some other network, give "Freaks and Geeks" it's very well-earned chance.
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10/10
Brilliant: wonderfully funny, profound, emotional and nostalgic
grantss5 January 2020
William McKinley High School, Michigan, 1980. Lindsay Weir is a straight-A student but is feeling like expanding her horizons. She starts hanging out with the "freaks", the students more into rock music, drugs and just having fun. Meanwhile, her younger brother Sam and his friends are navigating growing up and teenage social politics.

Wonderful series that is part comedy, part drama. Covers many aspects of teenage life, all with humour, warmth and in a profound yet non-judgemental and objective way. Hilariously funny at times, yet also highly emotional at times too.

Quite unpredictable and realistic in the way plots develop. There are plenty of occasions where I think, oh no, such-and-such is now going to happen (because that's the way the average TV series would progress it), only for it to pan out differently and in much more relatable and likely fashion.

Highly nostalgic too, due to the period of one's life it is set in and also because of the music and other cultural references. The music is superb, from the Joan Jett theme song to incidental tracks. The tracks are not just there for background music but inform and enhance the plots, thus are crucial to the storylines.

The whole feel to the series is like The Wonder Years meets Dazed and Confused.

Rounding it all off are some great, convincing performances, all of which contribute to an unforced, natural vibe to proceedings. Linda Cardellini, as Lindsay, is the pick of the bunch but nobody puts a foot wrong. The series is famous for launching the careers of James Franco, Seth Rogen and Jason Segel. Guest stars include Ben Stiller and Leslie Mann and among the minor roles can be found then-unknowns who are now stars: Jason Schwarzman, Ben Foster, Shia LaBeouf and Lizzie Caplan.

Sadly, the quality of a TV series is not what matters to TV executives, only ratings, and Freaks and Geeks only lasted one season. This was very unfortunate as there was still a whole lot it could have tackled and heaps more plot- and character-development potential remaining. Thankfully the season (and series) does end on a high, emotional note, so there is a degree of closure.

Like Firefly, it will remain a series criminally terminated in its prime.
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9/10
Wish There Were More Seasons!
I finally discovered this show nearly 22 years after it's premiere date and it has became one of my favorite 2000s shows ever! I am so sad it ended after just one season because I'm sure I would have loved it more if it got season two and beyond. I really love nearly everything about it. The acting is fantastic, the casting is impeccable, and the soundtrack is possibly my favorite of any television show ever! Overall, I really love this show and I am very sad it was cancelled after just one season.

8.6/10.
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10/10
The entire high school experience in eighteen episodes
GRWeston30 December 2013
Warning: Spoilers
When I was in high school, the most popular TV show about people my age was Dawson's Creek. As someone who was on the outside looking in to the kind of teenagers this series featured, I avoided it because I thought it would be as incomprehensible as some of the lectures on C-SPAN. Before Freaks and Geeks, the supposed antithesis to shows like Dawson's Creek, came along, my first thought was that with a title like that and a tag line of "what high school was like for the rest of us," it would be along the lines of the typical '80s teensploitation movie. Instead, we got a show that is intelligent, heartfelt, genuinely funny and - best of all - real. Instead of stereotypes, Freaks and Geeks gives us characters who seem so authentic that it is easy to mistake their names for the names of similar people we grew up with. I knew at least one dismissive, sarcastic man of few words like Ken, a constantly fighting couple like Daniel and Kim and was, ahem, knew an awkward, all-around geek like Bill. Despite focusing on the titular cliques, the show covers facets of high school life both in and out of the classroom that all students regardless of social standing encounter. These include romantic relationships that end before they begin, initial exposures to sex, drugs and alcohol and what could be the overarching theme of the series: how difficult it can be to discover who you are and where you belong. My favorite episode and the one where I feel the series hit its stride is "Carded and Discarded," particularly for how it reveals the unfortunate fact that some high school friendships are merely confidence-building stepping stones to bigger and better things. Freaks and Geeks only lasted one season, but since its portrait of the high school experience is so complete, this is hardly a drawback. For this reason and for the show's hilarity, authenticity and that it never hits a false note, Freaks and Geeks deserves to be on a list of the best TV shows of all time.
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10/10
The Apatow brand is born
SnoopyStyle27 August 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Sam Weir is a geek. Along with his two awkward friends, they try to survive high school. Sam's older sister Lindsay is trying to find herself and falls in with a crowd of freaks.

Rarely does a short-lived cult TV show have such a long lasting profound effect on the wider entertainment world. Not only that, it introduced us to Paul Feig, Judd Apatow, James Franco, Seth Rogen, and Jason Segel. On the surface, it's a simple teen high school drama about nerds and outsiders rather than the jocks and the popular crowd. It's great start when the camera pans down from the cheerleader and football player on the top of the stands to under the stands where the freaks and geeks can be found. It's taking embarrassing awkward realism to mainstream entertainment. It ushered in the Apatow brand of humor. This is not only a great TV show, but an important development in entertainment. Apatow and his friends would set a new standard of awkward humor that would be spread into TV, movies, and the net.
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9/10
Incredible and nuanced show from both sides of the story
martinpersson9721 June 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Paul Feig, Judd Apatow and the splendid and since very established actors conveyed an ingenius series with this, and though it was cancelled, the ending was perfect and perhaps at just the right time.

What could be a typical high school show with all the stereotypes and caricatures sets itself far beyond that, and brilliantly deconstructs it all. Everyone is written very much like real people, and you find yourself rooting for all of these kids in different ways.

In some ways it is even more eye-opening to watch it as an adult, far detatched from the social structures of high school and being able to see it all for how complex it is.

The child actors of course all do an incredible job, as provwn by most of their careers since, and the writing provides both stellar and well written drama and comedy in all the right places.

Overall, definitely one of my favourite shows of all time, and very much deserving of its spot on IMDb's Top 250 list!
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9/10
I'm devastated
t-37410-885895 July 2023
TL; DR: Amazing show, due to it's simplicity and originality. I started of thinking it was fine, but once I got into it... damn.

There is a bit in the Never Ending Story book (maybe it's also in the movie, I don't remember) where the main character is described as the ultimate outsider and nerd, with a long passage about how much books and stories mean to him. Everytime he'd finish a story, no matter what the ending, he'd end up crying, because he would never be able to see those characters again, they were dead to him (literally).

At the time I found this to be such a unrealistic trait that it became pretentious. I have always loved books, movies, shows and stories for as long as I can remember, and as a nerd I thought this couldn't be how anyone felt. I have only been sad with characters deaths, didn't really watch cancelled shows, and have always been done with a book once I finished it. I think that I finally found this feeling now.

This show was a trip, because it had all the high school drama tropes, while at the same time being completely original. I only started 4 days ago, and begun thinking it was a fun show with the purpose of being relatable to teens in high school like me (I'm 16), but this tiny golden show ended up as so much more. It's so weird, because it only has a handfull of story, and yet it means the world to me. It's probably because I am the perfect target audience, but this show is so much about life for me that it hurts.

While still being subtle, it also makes you feel incredibly much. I have never reacted so wildly to such tiny and unimportant things. Before this I watched Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul, both shows are genius in a very other way than Freaks and Geeks, BB and BCS aren't really about life at all, and they sure as hell aren't relatable, and they weren't supposed to, not really creating the ability to make you walk besides those characters. (again a lot of amazing shows are like that, they weren't supposed to) F&G does have that ability, which makes it the perfect show to watch with the people you love. (makes me sad that I watched it alone.)

And these characters are just so goddamn well crafted, they don't paint anybody as the bad guy. You get to see everything through the eyes of everyone. It's not trying to be a lesson in how you should or shouldn't be, it's a lesson in that everyone can be amazing in their own way. The show being called: "Freaks and Geeks" + the intro makes you think that the message is that being different is okay and cool, but the lesson is that you should be who you are as long as you accept others for how they are. Because you first see the popular kids in the show as the bad side, but eventually you can understand them.

And they don't try to make every episode it's own story. They don't need to give every episode a cliffhanger nor do they need to be happy endings, which just makes it feel like life. And not everything needs to be meaningfull or lead to one thing.

And then it just ends. In the perfect way for F&G, they don't make the ending a finale, but an ending.

The show was cancelled and it just leaves you behind devastated, not knowing the futures of these characters. They're dead. It's so perfectly bittersweet, because you know that if the show had a proper finale it wouldn't mean half as much. The show is so perfect because it's limited. Real life is often limited, and sure as hell won't give you a proper ending. Like many things in the show by the way. That's how life is.

And I hate it because I begun thinking it was a mid show, but I now ended up binging it so much that I'm gonna fail my social studies test, failing that class, failing my year. Lmao. Ill study.
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9/10
A Not-Forgotten Gem
gpierpoint6 March 2023
A wonderful friend gave me the whole series DVD set of this very special show. A show that I wasn't aware of.

Having recently watched "Dead to Me", falling in love with Linda Cardellini in the process I was stoked to be able to see her 20 years younger.

Here, she comes across as unassuming and natural. I can imagine that's what she's like as a person. A real joy to watch.

So many great things here. The authenticity of 1980 school life, the music (a few goofs but pretty much spot on) and the family home (with 1 TV and 1 phone- Ah the days) The caring mother, the straight-laced father (with some classic one-liners) the drama and the humor. The poignancy. The list goes on.

"Freaks and Geeks" has aspects of movies like "American Graffiti", "The Breakfast Club" and "Stand by Me". Shows like the often compared "Wonder Years" and even the early episodes of "Happy Days" (before it sold out and became a caricature of itself). If "Freaks and Geeks" continued it would have been sad for it to go down that path. If the creators and producers remained in charge I don't think this would have happened. But "What If"....

As it is, it has become 18 episodes of legendary TV....and that may be just as well.
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9/10
A must-see teenage show for adults
mertafor20 November 2021
Title may sound creepy yet it's true. When this show first came out back then, I was in high school. I remember that I watched an episode for 10-15 minutes and thought that it's joyless, a bit dark even I used to be a nerd (probably still am).

Last week I decided binge watch this show after all these years. Oh man this is something else, I laughed a lot and loved every episode. Every single character, actor, story and event is spot on. Also the bands mentioned in the show and soundtrack are amazing. Although this show is set in 1980 and pictures the American school life, characters and events are universal. A definition of teenage world.

On the other hand I totally understand why this show was cancelled. In my opinion it's too real, way too real. Right now I can enjoy every second of it. But I'm sure it wouldn't be that way if I was in high school. Even though story gets more positive in later episodes, this show is like a mirror, especially first few episodes, that it gives you the feeling that you're a bum, geek, nerd or simply a loser and you'd try every idiotic thing to be cool. It's actually what being a teenager is and there is nothing wrong with it. Yet probably the last thing a teenager would want to see the harsh truth about themself.

Adolescence years are very special times. It might be a dream or nightmare depending on the mindset you're in. Therefore I'm not sure if I could recommend this show to anyone younger than 19. Otherwise it's the ultimate fun and chemistry that you'll ever see. Just make sure that you'll be patient to watch all episodes, first few might be a drag. At least you must watch it for how and why this show defined the next decade through 90% of its actors and still recent cool shows like Stranger Things, Sex Education highly influenced by it. For the sake of a time when telling stories based on people's feeling and characters was much more important than their ethnicity or gender.
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6/10
Disappointment , overrated and its synonyms.
akshett-jainn10 May 2012
9.2 !!!! . So i started watching the show with the preconceived notion of it to be another extremely well scripted, rounded and complete show.Filled with humor and sarcasms interwoven together.Needless to say i had to swallow a bitter pill. The plot was ordinary, the story telling was not entertaining and if i isolate this to be a teenage drama, it still leaves me unsatisfied. Another reason for my low rating is the fact that its too "overrated". Its a good and simple drama, the humor is admissible, but after finishing arrested development just a week ago, this was forgettable waste of my time. So if you want to kill time and you are prepubescent then go for it!!
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1/10
Entertaining but overrated
doof32215 July 2010
This show seems to be unanimously loved by virtually everyone that has seen it. After I found out it was the launching pad for guys like seth rogen, jason segal, james franco, and judd apatow I felt obligated to give it a try. I downloaded all 18 episodes and watched them over the last week (i've had a lot of free time). I was really shocked at the lack of humor in the show. Every now and then I'd get a good laugh but a majority of it was dramatic or lame cliché pg jokes. The main reason I stuck it out the entire season was to watch the early work of the future stars. I found it pretty interesting. Also, the lead character Lindsey was shockingly beautiful. She definitely kept my interest. Although, I was a little put off by the episode where she tries pot for the first time and freaks out. It was so exaggerated, it literally seemed like something out of reefer madness. Obvious bullshit anti-drug propaganda. I also found the characters Kim (blonde girl) and Sam (lindseys little brother) to be sub-par actors... to say the least. Especially Kim, the acting was so ridiculous at times that it came to be really hard to take her seriously. Enjoyable series, I guess, but not classic by any means. I don't think I'll ever understand the cult following this show has established.
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