| |
 |
GOLF DIGEST
My Game: Anthony Anderson
I'm like a junkie. I'm hooked. My passion for the game goes deep and long. |
| |
 |
NEW YORK POST
New ‘Order’
HERE'S your first look at Anthony Anderson, the newest addition to "Law & Order." Anderson, who starred on Fox's "K-Ville" last season, joins the cast as Det. Kevin Bernard. |
| |
 |
NEW YORK POST
‘Order’ Restored
AS interesting as it is to watch new shows for the first time, sometimes, there's nothing better than a slow week. |
| |
 |
USA TODAY
Andersons New Turn
Is he the buffoon who co-starred opposite a drug-sniffing mutt in See Spot Run, a money-swiping marsupial in Kangaroo Jack and Frankie Muniz in Agent Cody Banks 2? |
| |
 |
PEOPLE MAGAZINE
Relatively Funny
Scary Movie 3 Rapmeister Anthony Anderson Riffs on his family in a WB Sitcom. Anthony Anderson's round baby face keeps looming up... |
| |
 |
TV GUIDE
Shows You Can Watch Together
The throwback sitcom All About the Andersons mixes elements of some beloved old shows. Friday prime time means no homework for tomorrow... |
| |
 |
USA TODAY
Who he is: Anderson stars in the WB family sitcom All About the Andersons... which is loosely based on his own life. |
|
|
| |
TV GUIDE
Shows You Can Watch Together
By Michael Davis |
 |
 |
| |
The throwback sitcom All About the Andersons mixes elements of some beloved old shows.
Friday prime time means no homework for tomorrow, no lunches to bag, no gym uniform to toss into the dryer. It's the right to exercise our inalienable right to chill out and watch some TV after a hard week at work or school.
If you haven't already, may I suggest you click over to WB this Friday night and check out All About the Andersons... You many find, as my family has, that this multigenerational sitcom recalls some of the smart, tart, socially conscious sitcoms of the 1970's, including All in the Family, The Jeffersons and Good Times. Those shows successfully mined humor from domestic tensions, racial inequities, class distinctions and economic hardship. All About the Andersons does, too. But it also derives humor from the struggles of a young dad (Anthony Anderson) who is forced to swallow his pride and move back in with his parents after his wife walks out on him. Anthony's cranky dad, Joe (the always welcome John Amos), is thrilled to have young grandson Tuga (The adorable Damani Roberts) around but is vexed by his son's return to the nest. (Pops calls him the "250-pound boomerang.'")
Series star and producer Anderson, who played the hapless hustler J.D. in the 2002 film "Barbershop," has based the series on his experiences as an unemployed actor. It has great heart and a bellyful of laughs. If you ask me, there's a lot to love about the Andersons. |
|