You are here : Magazine»Item Display

Andy Barker, P.I.: The Complete Series

Last Updated 1/9/2010 8:32:40 PM


By: John B. Moore

andy barker, p.i. complete seriesAndy Barker, P.I.

The Complete Series

(Shout Factory)

If you needed any further proof that TV executives are little more than sadistic puppet masters who like little more than to tease us with what might have been, look at the career of Andy Richter.

After leaving “Late Night with Conan O’Brien,” Richter made the bizarre, but extremely funny “Andy Richter Controls the Universe.” The show was smart and original, so obviously it was cancelled after one season.

Richter got a second chance with “Andy Barker, P.I.” – again quirky, original and very funny (everything most sitcoms currently on the air aren’t), so naturally it was axed after only six episodes.

Created by O’Brien and Jonathan Groff (“How I Met Your Mother”), the pilot introduces milquetoast accountant Andy Barker who begins moonlighting as a private eye after he moves into the office of a former investigator and starts getting mistaken for the office’s old occupant.

The writing is sharp, but it’s Richter and the supporting cast – including “Arrested Developments'” Tony Hale and “Fargos'” Harve Presnell that made the show so unforgettable.

The DVD includes the complete series – the six episodes that aired, along with a gag reel and a behind-the-scenes look at the show. Richter is now back with O’Brien, as sidekick on “The Tonight Show” and we are left with a slew of mediocre, by-the-numbers sitcoms like “Two and a Half Men.” Thanks, Hollywood.

Rate this:
Recent Comments
There are currently no comments. Be the first to make a comment.
More Articles from IW! Minimize
These Canadians are a hard band to pinpoint, but that is also the reason they are so damn fun to listen to.
Every town should have, assuming that it is a place worth living, a band like the Soul Movers. It makes for a great night out. Real music performed in bars for real people with real beer.
Ari Up and Tessa Pollitt are back with a band whose ingredients — punk, reggae, hip hop, and even middle eastern music — have had enough time to blend, ferment, and become spicy, pungent, and tasty.
The Chicago-based post-rock unit Russian Circles is a three-piece group known for their instrumental approach to post-hardcore/post-melodic.
A friend asked me to describe The Prairie Cartel’s sound to him, and the first thing to come to mind was “electronic rock you could dance to while punching someone in the face.”

LEGALITIES - Innocent Words Magazine is published multiple times per year and assumes no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts or artwork.  Reproduction of the contents of this website and/or past printed issue is strictly prohibited without the consent of the writer and/or publisher.



Copyright © 2002 to 2010 by InnocentWords.com
Privacy Statement Terms Of Use
Register|