NEW
YORK (TheWrap.com) - CBS's very successful block of Monday night
comedies includes constant hook-ups ("How I Met Your Mother"), blurred
male nudity ("Two and a Half Men,") and vagina jokes and ethnic
caricatures ("2 Broke Girls") -- but none of them go too far, says CBS
entertainment president Nina Tassler.
Still, she said, the network has talked to "2 Broke Girls" show runner Michael Patrick King about continuing to "dimensionalize" characters during diner scenes that sometimes rely on ethnic stereotypes.
Tassler said at the Television Critics Association winter press tour Wednesday that the network doesn't worry that the cumulative effect of the shows -- which share Mondays with the double entendre-filled "Mike & Molly" -- is one of too much raunch.
"We don't bring people in for a mass meeting about that quality of the shows," she said. "Each show is separate unto itself. ... They're a little risqué, but the characters are, we like to think, they're living truthful in their relative situations."
The Monday night block has been a runaway success this fall: "Two and a Half Men," already TV's biggest sitcom, has only gained in the ratings since replacing Charlie Sheen with Ashton Kutcher, and "2 Broke Girls" is the biggest new show of the fall. The shows routinely beat those on other networks, and even their reruns have topped new episodes on other networks.
But critics -- and even Charlie Sheen -- sometimes complain about the lowbrow elements of CBS's Monday hits, especially "Two and a Half Men." Sheen told reporters Sunday night that his new show, "Anger Management," won't feature the kind of sexual or body-function jokes that pop up on "Men."
But Tassler said the shows are funny.
"Their dialogue is really landing with audiences," she said. "The shows are laugh-out-loud funny. ... I laugh out loud. It's not a snicker, it's not a chuckle. They're belly laughs."
"They push the envelope," she added, "but we're a broadcaster. Everything is still within the restraints of out standards and practices."
The "2 Broke Girls" leads, Kat Dennings and Beth Behr, play waitresses who interact with a multiethnic group of co-workers and customers at their Brooklyn diner, and the show sometimes tries to draw laughs from broad caricatures.
Tassler defended the diner scenes as an "equal opportunity offender," but said the show has asked King to add more dimension to the characters.
"Our dialogue with Michael is yes, continue to dimensionalize, continue to get more specific, continue to build them out," she said.
Still, she said, the network has talked to "2 Broke Girls" show runner Michael Patrick King about continuing to "dimensionalize" characters during diner scenes that sometimes rely on ethnic stereotypes.
Tassler said at the Television Critics Association winter press tour Wednesday that the network doesn't worry that the cumulative effect of the shows -- which share Mondays with the double entendre-filled "Mike & Molly" -- is one of too much raunch.
"We don't bring people in for a mass meeting about that quality of the shows," she said. "Each show is separate unto itself. ... They're a little risqué, but the characters are, we like to think, they're living truthful in their relative situations."
The Monday night block has been a runaway success this fall: "Two and a Half Men," already TV's biggest sitcom, has only gained in the ratings since replacing Charlie Sheen with Ashton Kutcher, and "2 Broke Girls" is the biggest new show of the fall. The shows routinely beat those on other networks, and even their reruns have topped new episodes on other networks.
But critics -- and even Charlie Sheen -- sometimes complain about the lowbrow elements of CBS's Monday hits, especially "Two and a Half Men." Sheen told reporters Sunday night that his new show, "Anger Management," won't feature the kind of sexual or body-function jokes that pop up on "Men."
But Tassler said the shows are funny.
"Their dialogue is really landing with audiences," she said. "The shows are laugh-out-loud funny. ... I laugh out loud. It's not a snicker, it's not a chuckle. They're belly laughs."
"They push the envelope," she added, "but we're a broadcaster. Everything is still within the restraints of out standards and practices."
The "2 Broke Girls" leads, Kat Dennings and Beth Behr, play waitresses who interact with a multiethnic group of co-workers and customers at their Brooklyn diner, and the show sometimes tries to draw laughs from broad caricatures.
Tassler defended the diner scenes as an "equal opportunity offender," but said the show has asked King to add more dimension to the characters.
"Our dialogue with Michael is yes, continue to dimensionalize, continue to get more specific, continue to build them out," she said.
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