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Uncoupled
Season 1
TV-MA
73%
76%
Add Show to Watchlist
Stunned when his longtime boyfriend moves out, a New York City real estate broker faces the prospect of starting over — and dating again — in his 40s.
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Where to Watch Uncoupled • Season 1
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Uncoupled • Season 1 Ratings & Reviews
Boston Globe
Matthew Gilbert
I wouldn't argue that Uncoupled approaches great TV, as it pulls out overfamiliar tropes about dating and a few one-dimensional characters. But it kept me entertained with its very posh New Yorkiness, its fast pace, and its deployment of Tisha Campbell.
Pajiba
Allyson Johnson
It's a nothing show, another cog in the Netflix algorithm and without even a character to get invested in that keeps you watching past the point of it being rewarding. There's no selling point to Uncoupled.
Awards Daily
Joey Moser
Watching someone as charming and intelligent as Harris grapple with confusion, heartbreak, and impatience makes for delightful comedy.
TheWrap
Melissa Bernardo
More real estate porn and dirty martinis, please.
CNN.com
Brian Lowry
It's hard to escape a feeling that Uncoupled is the TV equivalent of reheated leftovers. Or to put it in the parlance of these elite zip codes, it's a bit like showing up to a glitzy fashion show in the year-before-last's styles.
Washington Post
Inkoo Kang
"Uncoupled" is flat, joyless and surprisingly cold-looking.
Chicago Tribune
Nina Metz
There are worse things to have on in the background while folding laundry.
NPR
Glen Weldon
Uncoupled goes down easy... and makes for an frictionless weekend binge.
Slant Magazine
Ross McIndoe
The show's struggle to find pathos in its characters' predicament often comes at the cost of its comedy.
Wall Street Journal
John Anderson
The series is generally light in tone, but where it takes a chance is in abandoning the customary love-triumphant angle of much gay-themed entertainment and delving into some of the sad facts of queer life.
Los Angeles Times
Robert Lloyd
Sweet, grown-up entertainment.
San Jose Mercury News
Randy Myers
These eight 30-minute episodes go down quickly and should be toasted with a glass of champagne, a box of chocolates and, perhaps even, a box of Kleenex.
Paste Magazine
Amy Amatangelo
Fun, funny, emotional, and full of characters and friendships you care about. A celebration of what it's like to be in your 40s and 50s. Not a wake.
Variety
Daniel D'Addario
The show thrusts its jitteringly antic "Emily in Paris" energy against a subject, and a character, too lachrymose to generate sparks.
Vanity Fair
Richard Lawson
For all of its clunk and creak, Uncoupled is an agreeable watch. It's daring enough in a few places to feel worthy of its era, while providing the easy, brain-deadening, trapped-in-amber enjoyment that has become a hallmark of Star's work.
RogerEbert.com
Clint Worthington
Uncoupled features the best and worst of what Star has to offer: winsome performances and occasional insights into the bittersweet trials of love and aging, packaged within a cloyingly sweet, ostentatious package.
TIME Magazine
Judy Berman
It's a faster-paced, more entertaining show than King's inert SATC sequel, but one marked by many of the same distracting defects, from overly stylized dialogue to underdeveloped characters to a bad case of affluenza.
The Hollywood Reporter
Angie Han
Like its protagonist, it's blessed with enough wry humor and self-awareness to land just on the right side of likable.
San Francisco Chronicle
Bob Strauss
"Uncoupled" may feel like it's in a rut at times, but laughs and worthwhile feelings are there if you give them a chance. Well, maybe four or five chances.
Entertainment Weekly
Kristen Baldwin
On paper, it all sounds a little Gay Sex and the City, right down to the twinkly theme music. But Uncoupled is - and I mean this as a compliment - more akin to a gay And Just Like That.
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