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One day at a time
One day at a time




one day at a time
  1. #One day at a time series
  2. #One day at a time tv

#One day at a time tv

Isabella Gomez’s character, Elena, gave TV one of its most compelling coming-out stories to date. Machado played the family’s matriarch and rock, Penelope “Lupita” Alvarez, with nuance and heart, pivoting between comedy and tragedy with incredible deftness. One Day at a Time deserves to live on, if only so that fans can get closer for the arcs of each of its main characters: Moreno’s Cuban abuela character, Lydia, burst with life every time she tore open the curtain to her dining-room-turned-bedroom.

one day at a time

For what it’s worth, celebrities have already begun rallying for another network or platform to pick it up.

#One day at a time series

The creators also said that they’re exploring other places the series can live, and with any luck, they will find it a new home. We’ve worked on many shows, but never have we experienced the outpouring of love, connection, and support like we have with ODAAT.” All of you who told us how much One Day at a Time means to you. So while our hearts are very heavy, they are also bursting with appreciation for this amazing experience. “We worked with the best, most giving and talented cast, writers and crew ever, as well as the incomparable Norman Lear. In a joint statement, series executive producer Mike Royce and Kellett addressed the cancellation: “We had the time of our lives making this show,” they wrote. Then again, as Netflix said while explaining its reasoning, this was never about the show’s unquestionable quality, or how deeply it is loved.

one day at a time

Though talk shows have rented planes to declare their love of the show and celebrities have tweeted their support, their efforts this year were to no avail. Their pleas were familiar last season, Netflix left the series in a similarly precarious position before finally deciding to renew it for a third round. Word of the show’s axing comes after its cast and crew have spent weeks tweeting for its salvation, begging viewers to watch and re-watch and tell their friends to join in, too. Fans found warmth, relatability, and joy in this series, which beautifully celebrated a community that most television routinely ignores. The cast- Justina Machado, Isabella Gomez, Marcel Ruiz, Stephen Tobolowsky, and, of course, Rita Moreno, turning in some of the best work of her career-has delivered uniformly delightful performances. Its show-runner, Kellett, has infused the series with an irreplaceably specific personal touch-referencing countless details that ring true to audiences of similar descent, including a heavy reliance on Vicks VapoRub and near-religious worship of Café Bustelo. Since its debut two years ago, Netflix’s Cuban-American reboot of Norman Lear’s classic sitcom-which originally ran from 1975 to 1984-has charmed critics and audiences alike. “You did the work, You worked hard for a long time, You finally got a show, It was a critical darling and it STILL got canceled. “You got to LA,” Gloria Calderón Kellett wrote on Twitter Thursday, shortly after news broke that her series, Netflix’s One Day at a Time, had been canceled after three seasons.






One day at a time