EPISODE
SEASON
The Middle - Season 1
Following the struggles and adventures of Frankie, a middle aged married woman, who lives with her wacky family and struggles against coping with their life in the small town of Orson, Indian, where her children are raised and grow older, the thing that brings terrible for her, as they are always bring challenges for her. Brick has trouble in dealing his teacher with bad results.
22 May 1952, Fort Bragg, North Carolina, USA
17 March 1960, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
14 February 1986, San Jose, California, USA
19 May 1982, Los Angeles County, California, USA
27 December 1949, Santa Monica, California, USA
29 January 1963, Darby, Pennsylvania, USA
7 May 1988, Greensboro, North Carolina, USA
12 January 1951, Wichita, Kansas, USA
22 March 1965, Lexington, North Carolina, USA
October 08, 2009
The single-camera pilot is neither distinctive nor consistently funny enough to stand apart from the ranks of TV's great unwashed.
October 08, 2009
The Middle could be 200% better than it is right now if it got rid of the voiceover, which doesn't provide any extra information about the plot or characters and is neither witty nor whimsical.
October 08, 2009
Not a single line here feels like a dead ball. The characters, too, arrive fully formed and believable.
September 17, 2013
It may improve as it finds its feet, but at the moment, it's a very middling kind of deal.
September 17, 2013
The Middle wasn't tremendously funny, but the family dynamic felt like a healthy mixture of real and sitcom-y, all with a big dose of heart at the end.
October 08, 2009
It has the potential to blossom into a sweet if small celebration of a family of oddballs living distinctly unhip lives.
October 08, 2009
"The Middle" resides somewhere in the nondescript middle of the pack of new fall comedies.
October 08, 2009
It's just a semi-traditional family comedy (no laugh track, but some obligatory warmth).
October 08, 2009
A funny, fast-moving celebration of harried family life in middle America.
October 08, 2009
The characters feel like more contrived versions of other characters we've been meeting in sitcoms for years.

