2 Broke Girls

2 Broke Girls
Genre Sitcom
Created by
Starring
Theme music composer Peter Bjorn and John
Opening theme "Second Chance"
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 6
No. of episodes 124 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s)
  • Michael Patrick King
  • Whitney Cummings
  • Michelle Nader
  • Liz Astrof
Cinematography Chris La Fountaine
Gary Baum
Joseph W. Calloway
Editor(s) Darryl Bates
Ben Bosse
Peter Chakos
Camera setup Multi-camera
Running time 21-22 minutes
Production company(s)
Distributor Warner Bros. Television Distribution
Release
Original network CBS
Picture format HDTV 1080i
Audio format Dolby Digital 5.1
Original release September 19, 2011 (2011-09-19) – present
External links
Website

2 Broke Girls is an American television sitcom created for Warner Bros. Television by Michael Patrick King and Whitney Cummings. It premiered in the United States on CBS in September 2011. Set in the Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York City, the show's plot follows the lives of friends Max Black (Kat Dennings) and Caroline Channing (Beth Behrs). Whereas Caroline was raised as the daughter of a billionaire, Max grew up in poverty, resulting in differing perspectives on life, although together they work in a local diner while attempting to raise funds to start a cupcake business.

Since its debut, the series has received a polarized response from critics and audiences alike. The on-screen chemistry between the two lead characters has been praised, while others have condemned the show's reliance on sexualized humor and racial stereotypes. It was nominated for three 2012 Emmy Awards, winning for Art Direction. On March 25, 2016, the show was renewed for a sixth season, which premiered on October 10, 2016.[1][2]

Synopsis

The series chronicles the lives of two waitresses in their mid-twenties: Max Black (Kat Dennings), the child of a poor working-class mother and an unknown father, and Caroline Channing (Beth Behrs), who was born rich but is now disgraced and penniless because her father, Martin Channing, got caught operating a Bernard Madoff-esque Ponzi scheme. The two work together at a Brooklyn diner, soon becoming roommates and friends while building toward their dream of one day opening a cupcake shop. Among those working with them at the restaurant are their boss, Han Lee (Matthew Moy); Oleg (Jonathan Kite), an upbeat but perverted Ukrainian cook; and Earl (Garrett Morris), a 75-year-old cashier. Also featured starting late in the first season is their neighbor and part-time boss Sophie (Jennifer Coolidge), a Polish immigrant who runs the house-cleaning company Sophie's Choice.

During most of the first season Max is also a part-time nanny for the twin babies of Peach Landis (Brooke Lyons), who during the season adopts Caroline's horse Chestnut. At the end of each episode a tally shows how much they have made toward their goal of $250,000. Early in the second season, Sophie lends the girls $20,000, which is enough for them to start their business. However, the business fails, and in the 18th episode they are forced to give up the lease of their cupcake shop with just enough money to pay off Sophie's loan, resetting the end of episode tally to $1.

During the third season, the girls reopen the business in the back room of the diner, using the window as a walk up window. Max also enrolls in, and Caroline goes to work for, the Manhattan School of Pastry, where Max finds her first love interest, Deke, a first time for Max in entire series when she gets emotional for a man. Caroline has a brief affair with the Pastry School Head Chef Nicholas, which eventually leads to Nicholas closing down the school and moving back to France with his wife. They also attempt to get Deke's parents to invest in the pastry school, planning to run it by themselves but do not succeed.

During Season 4, the girls start their Cupcake T-shirt Business which soon goes in loss. Max and Caroline ends up in an elite class Pastry Shop called "The High" in order to make more money to return the loan they took for their Cupcake T-shirt business. In the end of Season 4, Oleg and Sophie get married, with the girls realizing they have their own business to worry about and their own dream to work towards, which leads to them quitting "The High" and coming back to their business.

In Season 5, Caroline sells her life story to a film producer for $250,000. She uses most the money to expand their old cupcake space, with part of the adjacent pizza shop, into a dessert bar. The remaining $30,000 is used to purchase part ownership in the diner in order to have Han pay off his debts for gambling on ladies tennis.

Cast

Main

Recurring

Special guest stars

Production

Development and casting

Even before it went to series, the then-undeveloped pilot was the subject of a bidding war, with CBS landing the deal on December 10, 2010,[15] and ordering it to series on May 13, 2011.[16] It was one of two shows commissioned for the 2011–12 television season for which Whitney Cummings served as producer and co-creator, the other being Whitney, which was picked up by NBC but was cancelled after two seasons.[17]

Dennings was the first to be cast in role of Max on February 18, 2011.[18] A week later on February 25, 2011, Behrs won an audition to land the role of Caroline, beating out other established actresses.[19] Moy, Morris and Kite were the last three to be cast on March 16, 2011.[20]

Filming

The series is taped in front of a live studio audience with some sweetening.[21]

Timeslot change

The first episode aired at 9:30 pm (E/P) after Two and a Half Men on September 19, 2011, and the show moved to its regular timeslot following How I Met Your Mother on Monday nights at 8:30 pm (E/P).[22] Production for the second season began on August 6, 2012.

For its second season 2 Broke Girls moved to 9 pm ET/PT after Two and a Half Men was moved to Thursdays, and remained there until early in its third season.

On March 27, 2013, CBS renewed 2 Broke Girls for a third season.[23] The show was first moved back to its original timeslot, which opened when We Are Men was cancelled, and stayed there until March 24, 2014. Beginning on April 7, 2014, 2 Broke Girls moved to 8 pm to replace How I Met Your Mother following its conclusion, with the show's former timeslot given to the short-lived Friends with Better Lives.

On March 13, 2014, CBS renewed 2 Broke Girls for a fourth season. The network announced a premiere date of October 27, 2014.[24] The move was prompted by CBS' arrangement to air Thursday Night Football for the first several weeks of the season and their subsequent decision not to postpone the season premiere of The Big Bang Theory, which occupied 2 Broke Girls' timeslot until October 20, and then returned to its normal Thursday timeslot. The fourth season consisted of 22 episodes.

On March 12, 2015, CBS renewed 2 Broke Girls for a fifth season which premiered Thursday, November 12, 2015. CBS relocated the show to Thursdays 9:30 pm ET/PT due to Supergirl taking over its previous Monday night timeslot. 2 Broke Girls had its premiere delayed again this season due to CBS airing Thursday Night Football for the first few weeks of the season. By November, regular Thursday programming resumed with The Big Bang Theory and new comedy Life in Pieces moving to Thursdays after airing on Monday nights at the beginning of the season. Mom and 2 Broke Girls then premiered the same month to form CBS' Thursday night comedy block. By midseason, CBS moved 2 Broke Girls to Wednesdays 8 pm ET/PT starting January 6, 2016 pairing it with the final season of Mike and Molly. Both comedies were slated to air for six weeks on the Wednesday 8-9 hour before going on an indefinite hiatus due to Survivor returning to that timeslot the following month. However, on February 8, 2016, CBS cancelled new comedy Angel from Hell with 2 Broke Girls replacing it and returning to its Thursday timeslot on February 18, 2016.[25]

Episodes

SeasonEpisodesOriginally aired
First airedLast aired
124September 19, 2011 (2011-09-19)May 7, 2012 (2012-05-07)
224September 24, 2012 (2012-09-24)May 13, 2013 (2013-05-13)
324September 23, 2013 (2013-09-23)May 5, 2014 (2014-05-05)
422October 27, 2014 (2014-10-27)May 18, 2015 (2015-05-18)
522November 12, 2015 (2015-11-12)May 12, 2016 (2016-05-12)
622October 10, 2016 (2016-10-10)TBA

Broadcast

2 Broke Girls has been broadcast in English in numerous countries around the world. In Canada the series airs on City TV.[26] In the UK it is broadcast on E4,[27] and in Ireland it airs on RTÉ2.[28] In Asia and Oceania the series airs on Star World in India,[29] ETC in the Philippines,[30] the Nine Network in Australia,[31] and TVNZ in New Zealand.[32]

Reception

Dennings and Behrs at 38th People's Choice Awards. January 2012.

2 Broke Girls has received mixed reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes the first season holds a rating of 59%, based on 34 reviews, with an average rating of 6.4/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Kat Dennings and Beth Behrs have undeniable chemistry, and although 2 Broke Girls is at times bogged down by predictable jokes, this old-fashioned odd couple sitcom is rich with laughs."[33] On Metacritic, the first season has a score of 66 out of 100, based on 25 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[34]

Much criticism for the show was focused on the perceived overuse of sexually based jokes and offensive racial stereotypes. Tim Goodman of The Hollywood Reporter said the show had potential but "squandered it away every week on cheap, predictable and unfunny jokes" and noted that many jokes were of a racist or sexual nature.[35] New Zealand critic Chris Philpott was especially offended by the rape jokes in the first three episodes of the series, calling the series the worst new show of 2012, stating that it "display[ed] a lack of understanding and creativity on the part of the comedy writer."[36] Andrew Ti, writing for Grantland.com, singled out the portrayal of Han Lee as "a fairly regressive portrayal" of the stereotypical Asian male: "a tiny, greedy, sexless man-child with infantilized speech patterns."[37] Elliot B. Gertel at Jewish World Review[38] similarly found that the show misrepresented "Orthodox" Jews in an episode. When asked about the racial stereotypes at a January 2012 press conference, Michael Patrick King said "I don't find it offensive, any of this".[39][40]

Emily Nussbaum of The New Yorker wrote that while the way the supporting characters are written is "so racist it is less offensive than baffling", she noted that the show has "so much potential", and compared it favorably to Cummings' other show Whitney.[41] Positive reviews such as one from Entertainment Weekly focused on the "potential" that the series has based on the acting and chemistry between Dennings and Behrs.[42] The series also received a B+ from The Boston Globe TV critic Matthew Gilbert, who was impressed with the casting and production: "The actresses – especially the Gwen Stefani-esque Dennings – transcend their types, and the pop-savvy humor has spirit thanks to producer Michael Patrick King from Sex and the City. After the forced opening minutes, it's the best multi-cam-com of the season."[43] The A.V. Club editor Todd VanDerWerff in writing his weekly reviews of the show, he hoped that the series would improve, but ultimately wrote: "Most of the problems—weird story construction, stereotypical characters, bad jokes—that have bedeviled the show have been there from the very beginning, though I will certainly say they've gotten worse as the season has gone along and the show hasn't bothered to diversify its rhythms at all."[44]

In 2015, Rob Owen of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette said what started out as "a modern Laverne & Shirley" attracted lots of young people to begin with, until they "realized it was a waste of their time."[45]

The show has appeared on many critics' "Worst of The Year" lists throughout its run.[46][47][48]

Ratings

The series premiere was watched by 19.4 million viewers after its lead-in, the first episode of Two and a Half Men without Charlie Sheen. This marked the highest rating for a fall premiere of a comedy series since Fall 2001.[49] It scored a 7.1 rating in Adults 18–49.[50] With DVR viewers included, the premiere rose to over 21.5 million viewers and an 8.1 in adults 18–49.[51] The show has done well in ratings with college students and young males.[51]

Season Episodes Timeslot (ET) Premiered Ended TV season Rank U.S. viewers
(millions)
Rating
(adults 18–49)
Date Premiere
viewers
(millions)
Date Finale
viewers
(millions)
1 24 Monday 9:30 pm (premiere)
Monday 8:30 pm
September 19, 2011 19.37[52] May 7, 2012 8.99[53] 2011–12 32[54] 11.29[54] 4.4/11[55]
2 24 Monday 9:00 pm September 24, 2012 10.14[56] May 13, 2013 8.94[57] 2012–13 32[58] 10.63[58] 3.7/9[58]
3 24 Monday 9:00 pm (Episodes 1–3)
Monday 8:30 pm (Episodes 4–21)
Monday 8:00 pm (Episodes 22–24)
September 23, 2013 8.88[59] May 5, 2014 6.49[60] 2013–14 37[61] 8.98[58] 3.8/10[58]
4 22 Monday 8:00 pm October 27, 2014 8.43[62] May 18, 2015 7.56[63] 2014–15 48[64] 9.14[64] 2.6[64]
5 22 Thursday 9:30 pm (Episodes 1–5, 12–22)
Wednesday 8:00 pm (Episodes 6–11)
November 12, 2015 6.34[65] May 12, 2016 6.99[66] 2015–16 54[67] 8.06[67] 2.3[67]
6 TBA Monday 9:00 pm[68] October 10, 2016 6.36[69] TBA TBA 2016–17 TBA TBA TBA

Awards and nominations

Year Award Category Recipients and nominees Outcome
2012 People's Choice Awards Favorite New TV Comedy 2 Broke Girls Won
Excellence in Production Design Award Episode of a Multi-Camera, Variety or Unscripted Series Glenda Rovello, Conny Boettger and Amy Feldman Nominated
Teen Choice Awards Choice TV Breakout Performance – Female Beth Behrs Nominated
Choice TV: Comedy 2 Broke Girls Nominated
Emmy Awards Outstanding Art Direction for a Multi-Camera Series Glenda Rovello and Amy Feldman Won
Outstanding Cinematography for a Multi-Camera Series Gary Baum Nominated
Outstanding Multi-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series Darryl Bates Nominated
Casting Society of America Announces Artios Awards[70] Television Pilot Comedy 2 Broke Girls Nominated
2013 Excellence in Production Design Award Episode of a Multi-Camera, Variety or Unscripted Series Glenda Rovello Nominated
NewNowNext Awards[71] Coolest Cameo 2 Chainz Nominated
Young Artist Award Best Performance in a TV Series – Guest Starring Young Actor 11–13 Jake Elliott Nominated
Emmy Awards Outstanding Art Direction for a Multi-Camera Series Glenda Rovello and Amy Feldman Nominated
Outstanding Cinematography for a Multi-Camera Series Gary Baum Nominated
2014 People's Choice Awards Favorite Network TV Comedy 2 Broke Girls Nominated
Favorite TV Gal Pals Caroline Channing (Beth Behrs) & Max Black (Kat Dennings) Nominated
Emmy Awards Outstanding Cinematography for a Multi-Camera Serie Christian La Fountaine Nominated
2015 People's Choice Awards Favorite Network TV Comedy 2 Broke Girls Nominated
Emmy Awards Outstanding Production Design for a Narrative Program (Half-Hour or Less) And the Zero Tolerance"; "And the Fun Factory"; "And a Loan for Christmas" Nominated
Outstanding Multi-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series Darryl Bates and Ben Bosse Nominated
Outstanding Cinematography for a Multi-Camera Series Christian La Fountaine Nominated
2016 People's Choice Awards Favorite Network TV Comedy 2 Broke Girls Nominated

Syndication

On June 20, 2012, it was announced that TBS had secured the cable syndication rights to the sitcom, which began airing on September 20, 2015. The series has also been cleared on CBS and Weigel owned affiliates in 35% of the United States.[72]

Home media

The Complete First Season
Set details Special features
  • 24 episodes
  • 3-disc set (DVD)
  • 2-disc set (Blu-ray)
  • 1.78:1 aspect ratio
  • Subtitles: English, French, Spanish, Swedish
  • English: Dolby Digital 5.1 (DVD)
  • English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (Blu-ray)
  • 2 Girls Going 4 Broke
    • Behind the scenes with cast and creators
  • Unaired scenes
DVD/Blu-ray release date
United States Australia New Zealand United Kingdom
September 4, 2012 October 17, 2012 October 17, 2012 October 22, 2012 (DVD only)
The Complete Second Season
Set details Special features
  • 24 episodes
  • 3-disc set (DVD)
  • 1.78:1 aspect ratio
  • Subtitles
  • English: Dolby Digital 5.1
  • Max's Homemade Cupcakes: Go Big or Go Broke!
    • Season 2 highlights and interviews
  • 2 Broke Girrllss! with Sophie Kachinsky
    • Cast and producers discuss the character
  • 2 Broke Girls at Paley Fest 2013
    • Highlights from the panel discussion
  • Unaired Scenes
  • Gag Reel
DVD release date
United States Australia New Zealand United Kingdom
September 24, 2013 September 18, 2013 September 18, 2013 October 7, 2013
The Complete Third Season
Set details Special features
  • 24 episodes
  • 3-disc set (DVD)
  • 1.78:1 aspect ratio
  • Subtitles
  • English: Dolby Digital 5.1
  • Unaired Scenes
  • Gag Reel
DVD release date
United States Australia New Zealand United Kingdom
October 14, 2014 October 22, 2014 October 22, 2014 October 6, 2014
The Complete Fourth Season
Set details Special features
  • 22 episodes
  • 3-disc set (DVD)
  • 1.78:1 aspect ratio
  • Subtitles
  • English: Dolby Digital 5.1
  • Unaired Scenes
  • Gag Reel
DVD release date
United States Australia New Zealand United Kingdom
August 11, 2015 November 4, 2015 September 23, 2015 December 2015

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