Pittsburgh Post-Gazette's Scores

  • TV
For 792 reviews, this publication has graded:
  • 43% higher than the average critic
  • 3% same as the average critic
  • 54% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 5.2 points lower than other critics. (0-100 point scale)
Average TV Show review score: 58
Highest review score:
Critic Score 100
Lowest review score:
Score distribution:
  1. Mixed: 0 out of 368
  2. Negative: 0 out of 368
368 tv reviews
    • Metascore: 96
    • Reviewed by
      Rob Owen
      100
    Maintains the quality viewers have come to expect.
    • Metascore: 94
    • Reviewed by
      Rob Owen
      100
    "Battlestar Galactica" is one of the most politically relevant and necessarily bleak series on television today.
    • Metascore: 73
    • Reviewed by
      Rob Owen
      100
    Another edge-of-your-seat thriller.
    • Metascore: 74
    • Reviewed by
      Rob Owen
      100
    There are a fair number of leaps of logic in the light-hearted Torchwood and mysteries abound. The special effects are generally decent and the writing and characterizations leaps and bounds better than in "Flash Gordon," "Eureka" or "The Dresden Files," to name just a few pathetic contemporary sci-fi shows.
    • Metascore: 62
    • Reviewed by
      Rob Owen
      100
    Eli Stone offers a well-stirred mix of character comedy, relationship drama, legal cases and musical numbers.
    • Metascore: 87
    • Reviewed by
      Rob Owen
      100
    The Lost writers begin the season with a firm grasp on their story and a keen understanding that viewers won't object to the introduction of new characters as long as old favorites are well served.
    • Metascore: 78
    • Reviewed by
      Rob Owen
      100
    Credit for building drama goes to screenwriter Kirk Ellis ("Into the West") and actor Paul Giamatti ("Sideways"). His intellectual, vain Adams is a reluctant rebel, tentative in his support of an American revolution, wary of insurgency and mob rule and defender of the tenets of American democracy.
    • Metascore: 89
    • Reviewed by
      Rob Owen
      100
    As season two begins, creators/executive producers Robert and Michelle King show no signs of standing pat. They're allowing the series and its characters to evolve while reminding viewers of the show's original premise.
    • Metascore: 96
    • Reviewed by
      Rob Owen
      100
    None of these twists are for the faint of heart, which is why Breaking Bad is a smart, thought-provoking TV show that elevates the artistic achievements of the medium.
    • Metascore: 99
    • Reviewed by
      Rob Owen
      100
    Series creator Vince Gilligan wrote the first two episodes of this eight-episode batch, and they crackle, as always, with intelligence and an ever-lingering sense of dread.
    • Metascore: 96
    • Reviewed by
      Rob Owen
      100
    What's most important is that Homeland provides a smart, thrilling hour of entertainment for the next 12 weeks.
    • Metascore: 87
    • Reviewed by
      Rob Owen
      100
    The best new show of the season...It's less sentimental than "The Wonder Years" and not as concerned with its period setting. Unlike "My So-Called Life," which was real in a gloomy-doesn't-life-stink way, Freaks and Geeks finds abundant humor in the absurdity of the situations the characters face. [22 Sept 1999, p.C-1]
  1. For this one half-hour, Frasier is high-class entertainment. Grammer does scowling exasperation as well as any actor in America (it's hard to imagine an actor who could get more laughs trading looks with a dog), the fraternal relationship is wonderful, and the work-place material works perfectly (thanks to another fine supporting performance from Peri Gilpin). [16 Sept 1993, p.C7]
    • Metascore: 74
    • Reviewed by
      Rob Owen
      100
    An engrossing new series with a fascinatingly unsympathetic character at its core. [14 Nov 2004, p.TV--5]
    • Metascore: 90
    • Reviewed by
      Rob Owen
      100
    HBO shows aside, visceral Boomtown is the new exemplar of quality TV dramas on Sunday night... Boomtown engrosses. It's the season's strongest new drama, not just because it takes a chance on a novel format, but because it manages to tell stand-alone stories even as it develops the characters in its large ensemble. [27 Sept 2002, p.40]
    • Metascore: 84
    • Critic Score 100
    Yet another explosively compelling police drama -- not to mention a controversy that seems certain to guarantee a big audience for the program. [21 Sept 1993, p.D1]
    • Metascore: 87
    • Reviewed by
      Rob Owen
      100
    Even in its sixth season Mad Men, remains a standout, a better series than 95 percent of what's on television.
  2. It's the most thrilling premiere hour of "24" yet.
    • Metascore: 98
    • Critic Score 90
    "The Wire" is as complex a picaresque as one is likely to find this side of Dickens.
  3. One of the fall's brightest new dramas.
  4. Easily the best of ABC's overly similar, large-cast ensemble dramas.
  5. "Longford" dives head-long into some of the most complex questions of human morality, and it's a pleasure to watch an actor of Broadbent's caliber tackle the notion of forgiveness with dignity and solemnity in what is easily one of the best TV movies you're likely to see this year.
  6. "I'm living like there is no tomorrow because there isn't one." Not a pretty sentiment, to be sure, but it makes for an intriguing character in what's likely to be the best new summer series of 2007.
  7. This new season gets off to a rousing start that lives up to high expectations.
  8. Mad Men exists on another level. Smart, mysterious and alluring, Mad Men remains a smooth concoction of period charm and psychological character drama.
  9. If you're a fan of nuanced, character-driven story-telling, there's no question The Pacific is the superior effort.
  10. Bad challenges anxious viewers, but it remains one of TV's best hours, thanks to strong performances from the entire cast and the steady, guiding hand of executive producer Vince Gilligan, who proves in tonight's episode that he values realistic, risk-taking storytelling over the more convenient status quo.
  11. The family comedy gets a welcome and winning update in ABC's Modern Family, the fall's best new sitcom.
  12. On screen the show has a soaked-in mood, courtesy of pilot director Michael Dinner, and terrific performances that mark Justified as the best new series premiere so far in 2010.
  13. Better With You is a genuinely funny, well-acted traditional sitcom reminiscent of "Dharma & Greg" and other past successful romantic comedies.