A grieving therapist begins telling his clients exactly what he thinks
He disregards his training and ethics and makes huge changes in people’s lives — including his own. Check out our list of renewals and cancellations to see if your favorite show has made it to… When Brett Goldstein, Jason Segel, and Bill Lawrence were asked how they got Harrison Ford on the show, Siegel said that Goldstein originally wanted a “Harrison Ford type” and auditioned for people like Ford.
Eventually, Goldstein talked to Ford and sold him on the role
Segel told Goldstein that they should pitch it to Ford first, thinking he’d immediately reject it, but at least other people would hear that Harrison Ford brought the project to him and piqued the interest of other big-name actors. Goldstein still doesn’t understand what he did to convince him, but he was overjoyed nonetheless.
On WatchMojo: The 10 Best TV Shows of 2023 (So Far) (2023) I’ve watched the first two episodes and I think they’re interesting
Partly because it felt real to me, based on a therapist who needs therapy and wants to reach out to her patients to unexpectedly overcome her own issues. I also respect the way he's portrayed - he doesn't do anything that other therapists are supposed to do, and that's pretty clear.
It's not for everyone
There's no goofy situations like in other shows like Loot, but it's still early days and I'll keep watching. That being said, I like the depth of the characters, and they don't come across as caricatures; they're people I want to get to know.