Should i watch weeds




















And as the name states It's filled with Weed. This title contains: Sexy stuff. Read my mind. Great Tv Show for mature teens I discovered this show while watching watchmojo. Teen, 13 years old Written by AztekParsnip June 21, Definitely not suitable Although there is little violence sex scenes are trough the roof.

There is graphic sex scenes and at one point in season 3 Andy works at a porn scene as a cook and later as a porn star Foot F--kers as 2 of his 10 toes are missing due to a graphic encounter with a dog throughout the scene a penis is seen, buttocks and breasts are also seen.

The main character a mother is a pot dealer and is constantly with more serious dealers heroin, cocaine, sex and organ industry, firearm industry etc. Later her kids get involved in the drug trade. A 13 year old has a threesome with two girls. There is constant viewing of homosexual relationships and sex. A character abuses a long list of drugs both pharmaceutical Which she buys from a pharmacy in Mexico and street drugs.

Cocaine, Heroine, Weed and for pharma Xanax, Oxycontin etc. They are used for both sexual and offensive references. Also the show shows a enormous deal of corruption.

Ex A character is married to a drug dealing illegal Mayor of a city in Mexico. Towards the end of the show a character became a police man and lots of corrupt things are show ex. Police give out and sell expensive cars that have been seized, A fake interrogation is set. This show still remains amazing being funny, dramatic etc. Teen, 15 years old Written by tomogutu October 1, The drugs are main concern. Sex scenes are awkward and appear at random times, very graphic, and a scene where they are in a porn set.

Teen, 16 years old Written by Jacob R August 10, Weeds - Mature, explicit, but excellent. Weeds is an amazing, and highly addicting comedy-drama, about a suburban widowed mother raising money for her family by selling marijuana, but getting caught up in the corruption of the drug business. Although mainly a comedy, the show features sexually and emotionally disturbing material best suited to older viewers. On occasion we also see nudity in a non-sexual context, ranging from moderate to explicit and featuring bare breasts, non-detailed views of male and female genitalia, and bare butts.

Most episodes feature moderate to strong sexual jokes and references as well. The entire show is about dealing marijuana, and features extensive and frequent use of marijuana. The show also features non-frequent heavy drug material such as sight of heroin, a character acting high from ecstasy, non-detailed view of cocaine use, implied use of pills mostly Xanax , and references to heavy drug use.

One character has an addiction to alcohol and is almost constantly drinking, and many other characters drink alcohol including children and teenagers on occasion. Many characters smoke cigarettes and cigars as well. Like many other series, Weeds uses its first season to work the kinks out, and set up the tone and pacing for its best years, Seasons This is the season where Nancy and her family are running drugs back and forth across the Mexico border.

Seasons 2 and 3 chronicle the increasingly violent though still funny! Tropes which would later be overused Nancy is reckless, men will do whatever she wants, her kids are obsessed with her are at their best here. This is the most memorable and most successful season of Weeds. In her relationship with a DEA agent investigating the drug business in Agrestic, Nancy best explores the tension that fuels her character.

For anyone who has slogged through piece this without ever watching Weeds … first, congratulations! Sexual innuendo jokes said by the minor teenage kids to other kids.

Christ said as expletive. What I don't like about the show and find annoying is the lewd and crude language that's used trying to make the show seem cool and funny. The "war on drugs" will also never end, and the government doesn't want it to end, because it's helps fund the government and private law enforcement complex, and includes privately run prisons that're run for a profit, like any other business, and only survive because government keeps convicting and locking people up as an excuse to get taxpayer money.

Also the United States CIA running drugs, guns and other weapons to and from other countries, some of whom are our enemies, should be all a person needs to know to reach the conclusion that government is the problem not the solution. The drug content of Weeds doesn't bother me. I think anything that can be drank, injected, smoked, swallowed or otherwise ingested into the body should be legal for anyone 21 and older and taxed just like alcohol and tobacco that are legal, have large lobbies in D.

I don't use any recreational, or "illegal" drugs and substances, I don't smoke or drink alcohol. I prefer to not associate with anyone that uses "illegal" drugs because the company you keep can get you in trouble if you're in the wrong place, at the wrong time, with the wrong people. I don't support government telling people what they can and can't do with their bodies.

The less government we have in our lives the better off we'll be. Those are long held beliefs I've had about government and drugs for a decade or more. Summer of I was watching a TV series about drug cartels in Mexico, a cartel guy being interviewed said, the cartels want drugs to stay illegal so they can keep making large profits. If "illegal" drugs were legalized and mass produced by authorized companies and drug treatment easy to get, it would cause a quick and significant profit loss to the cartels.

For years Weeds is being the "everybody-talks-about" series but I never had the opportunity to watch it. But finally I did it, and I did it desperately because the show is addictive. So finally I could understand why it got so much attention. First of all, the cast is amazing. Mary-Luise Parker, as Nancy Botwin, fits so well in her character and she is so charismatic and so beautiful and so subtle, gentle, comprehensive and polite that it's almost impossible dislike her.

Elizabeth Perkins, as Celia Hodes, my god, that woman rocks! She's so naturally dried by the unhappy life she has built that even a spontaneous smile seems like a rock.

I can't believe that Elizabeth Perkins never won an award for this character until now because every moment is an outstanding performance and I mean it! It's a shame that her character lost so much of her potentials to a point of being kicked out of the show because Celia was one of the gears of the show.

The most interesting things about the show were not the drugs, neither was Nancy living a hell each new day, nor the mistakes each character does during the episodes, but yes the social matters that it pointed. I know a lot how is to survive in a place where you're surrounded by ignorant people that are moved just by an inexistent appearance. It's so revolting to a point that sometimes you just want to do things just to provoke them and play with their abstraction of reality, and the series shows it in a very intelligent and interesting way so you feel connected by it.

But now, after 6 years and some changes, Weeds seems to have lost most of what made it so interesting during the years becoming just another dramedy and Weeds is now just all about a woman dealing with an everyday drama that doesn't fit anymore. While the first 4 seasons were amazing and subtle in its subject, the last 2 seasons lack of the cleverness that once existed. Weeds now is being pushed to something we don't know anymore and it's showing signs of tiredness and completely losing its identity and also its characters.

But that happens with every kind of show sooner or later. But anyway Weeds is not about dealing with drugs, but a way to express the hypocrisy of each single person in the world. I give 8 just for the show in a whole, but the first 4 seasons deserve Tactrix 11 April I've seen a lot of good shows but this one takes the cake, its exactly what the public's been looking for.

Finally a realistic outlook on what to expect in little suburban communities in the middle of nowhere that have nothing better to do then deal a little grass and tap a little ass, and lets face the facts smokers of the world unite on this show. I mean a nice suburban mom dealing weed to the rest of the town including the town counsel, another mom a raging alcoholic and pill popper kids and adults alike that get laid on every occasion they can find the opportunity, crooked DEA agents, and come on the ghetto in this show is most realist portrait of one you can ever get Conrad is probably one of the coolest characters you can ever find This Showtime show follows a newly found widow who starts selling weed in order to maintain her and her children's lifestyle.

Nancy Botwan starts out from being this quirky mother who enters into the world of selling drugs looking for a quick fix her lack of income to a careless and wreck less drug dealer who takes advantage of her children to keep them "protected" from the law. The story is still on the run from the FBI among other sources of contention due to Nancy's out of luck hijinks that she gets her family into. In the first few episodes, I had a great deal of sympathy and interest towards our main character played by Mary Louise Parker.

Now, my interest and feeling towards her now hinders on the point of vacant indifference. I'm not addicted or have a strong urge to follow the characters or see how Nancy gets out of her hijinks. Cynthia and Andy are by far my favorite long term characters. They are entertaining and have a great dynamic in the show, even though Cynthia the bitch is gone.

Seasons 6 and 7 a real stinker! Season 6- the Botwins on the lam from Estobar spelling? Thats the whole season. Season 7, three years later, her sons are in Denmark, scamming over there along with Doug. Silas has become male model no shock there. The character are pretty much all grown up now, completely jaded, unaffected, and unlikable.

Nancy gets released to a half-way house in NYC, her sister who is raising Nancy's baby skype's the boys the good news, so they drop everything and fly to NYC to look for mom, against Nancy's wishes. Her sister Jill is a spiteful, mean and cusses like sailor and wants full custody of her baby who's now an infant But its back to same tired premise. All the characters are scamming to get around the system.

Nancy is trading bombs for weed and sex. Doug hooks up with an old college buddy and will work as his accountant. Silas gets modeling work. Shane uses the Netherland residency card to gain admission to school. Andy has scored a defaulted loft as if and seemingly is the only voice of reason in the show so far. But my biggest disappointment is our lead Nancy, She has become so jaded, mean, slutty and unlikable, its hard to watch the show.

Her demeanor is that of someone on a strong anti-depressant or LSD- I'm talking seriously spaced out. She cares for nothing or anyone except herself. Already we have watched her pee, have sex, and change her clothes several times. She lies to everyone. I see no love connection between her and her boys. Her main goal seemingly is to get back to California and get her infant son, but even with that her emotional dynamic is severely muted. Maybe this is all some clever ploy by Kohan to show how much jail-time has screwed up Nancy;s psyche, but I'm not buying that yet as we have seen in all seasons, how strong and resolved Nancy can truly be.

I just binge watched Weeds. Took me a number of weeks. The evolution of the plot was amazing. Unexpected twists and turns, always very interesting and entertaining. Well developed characters. The one hour finale was unexpected and brilliant. A well done series.

ElessarAndurilS 5 September I just finished the 5th season of Weeds on Netflix and I have to say that the TickyTacky show has me rooted and grounded in its quirky humor.

Not sure how it flew under my radar for so long, but I'm happy that it got picked up thanks to one of those top X shows you should be watching on Netflix and aren't.

I tend to review those, xref them with IMDb and see what is worth giving a try. I'm happy to have given this weed a try as it is unlike any show I've watched. While on the surface Nancy seems to get burned every time she takes a step forward, I find her bumbling to be funny and the supporting cast of psycho misfits entertaining. Normal isn't part of this show. While Nancy's little band of distributors and misfits as dysfunctional as can be, starting with her family down through "cling-ons", the show is just plain funny.

While predictable in the sense that you know things are always going to blow up in some way, that is what makes the show so funny; things are always going wrong in a way that they avoid the major disasters going to prison for growing pot and distributing it en mass and just have to deal with the fallout from the minor ones if having your suburb burned to the ground and your grow house along with it is minor. But it is surprise packed as I laughed so hard when the mayor's "investigator" found a picture of her talking to the DEA agent that busted his operation she countered with a picture of her ultrasound showing his baby in her with the comment "and it feels like a boy".

Definitely his best work. Given the recent legalisation of marijuana in California, and the popularity of programmes such as Breaking Bad and Narcos, the premise of Weeds seems antiquated. Weeds was at its best in the first three seasons, which poked fun at the claustrophobia and hypocrisy of suburbia, with theme song Little Boxes emphasising the stifling conformity. But there was at least an attempt at verisimilitude, plus comic relief in the form of nosy neighbour Celia Hodes Elizabeth Perkins in a lifetime best performance.

Things went south at the end of season three, when Nancy locked horns with a new supplier and paid a local gang to protect her.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000