Metacritic TV

Free Ride

SERIES: Fox, Sunday 9:30p (30 minutes)

Starring Josh Dean, Loretta Fox, Allan Havey, Erin Cahill, and Dave Sheridan

Created by Rob Roy Thomas

Genre(s): Comedy

FIRST AIR DATE: March 1, 2006

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

45 / 100

Critic Reviews

70 Newsday Diane Werts
The best thing about "Free Ride" is the lack of pressure to be about something. Trusting its talented cast to embody their own truths, it ambles and weaves, leaving space for the characters, even folks briefly bumped into, to nail a specific attitude or situation.
70 Washington Post Tom Shales
The results are often wickedly amusing.
70 Kansas City Star Aaron Barnhart
A goofy and likable new comedy.
70 Time James Poniewozik
Good-hearted, eccentric and wry, Ride goes nowhere fast, but it has a fine time getting there.
60 Variety Brian Lowry
There's a breezy charm to the show.
60 Los Angeles Times Paul Brownfield
"Free Ride" is a bit more than passably good, but like "Arrested [Development]" it feels hard to love.
50 New York Post Adam Buckman
Portions of "Free Ride" show promise, due mainly to the show's star -- Dean -- whose character remains grounded and sane, against all odds.
50 Village Voice Joy Press
Everything about Free Ride is slightly exaggerated and artificial, including the odd facial expressions.
50 Detroit Free Press Mike Duffy
[It has] just enough funny, semi-improvised moments to make you wish it was better.
50 Hollywood Reporter Barry Garron
When the show clicks, as it does in several scenes, the improvised performances have a more natural look and feel than typical sitcom scripts. Elsewhere, the comedy feels forced and staged.
50 Entertainment Weekly Alynda Wheat
Free Ride can't milk any fresh laughs from this fish-back-in-water tale. [3 Mar 2006, p.96]
50 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Rob Owen
More of an amusing diversion than a laugh riot.
50 People Weekly Tom Gliatto
The show... is partly improvised, a stunt used to richer effect on ABC's upcoming Sons & Daughters. [6 Mar 2006, p.41]
50 Boston Globe Matthew Gilbert
It's made of familiar slacker material that's slightly freshened with an improvisatory feel as the actors um-and-ah their way to their punch lines. And it's blissfully missing the canned laughs that make the likes of ''That '70s Show" so obnoxious. Still, ''Free Ride" is far from essential TV viewing.
50 The New York Times Alessandra Stanley
Mr. Dean is appealing as Nate and Mr. Sheridan is amusing as Dove, but the tone of the series is uneven.
50 USA Today Robert Bianco
What you get from this sometimes outlandish family comedy is a sweet Ride, but one that is neither funny nor believable enough to command your loyalty.
40 Salon Heather Havrilesky
It's not that bad, which leads me to believe that it could actually be good, if it weren't so neutered and lovable.
40 TV Guide Matt Roush
A fresh approach can take you only so far when the material is this tired.
38 New York Daily News David Hinckley
This "Free Ride," I suspect, will be over very soon.
30 Chicago Tribune Sid Smith
Harmless and intermittently amusing, winning points by letting its actors indulge in improvisation, "Free Ride" is nevertheless about as unpromising as its lead character's aimless career goals.
30 San Jose Mercury News Charlie McCollum
"Free Ride" is crude, mean-spirited, and not nearly as fresh and innovative as the producers think it is.
30 Seattle Post-Intelligencer Melanie McFarland
"Free Ride," though improvised, feels like every other Fox comedy that has come and gone: It has generic young stars stuck in a stale boy-pines-for-girl story line.
25 San Francisco Chronicle Tim Goodman
This is a series that shimmers with potential -- until Dove shows up. Someone at the network must have thought "Free Ride" was too irreverently weird and creatively nuanced, so they made Dove as annoyingly cartoonish as possible.
25 Chicago Sun-Times Doug Elfman
Tonight's premiere episode doesn't have a single laugh in it.
10 Miami Herald Glenn Garvin
This kind of comedy only stands a dim ghost of a chance if it has a lot of gratuitous nudity and substance abuse, along with the words ''National Lampoon'' in the title.
10 Philadelphia Inquirer Jonathan Storm
Everything's so shrill and flat, it's hard to tell when the writing stops and the improvisation begins.

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