Dead Like Me
Dead Like Me (2003)

Dead Like Me

3/5
(40 votes)
8.1IMDb

Details

All seasons

Dead Like Me - Season 1

Season 1

Dead Like Me - Season 2

Season 2

Cast

Awards

Image Awards (NAACP) 2005


Image Award
Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series

International Horror Guild 2004


IHG Award
Best Television

Primetime Emmy Awards 2004


Primetime Emmy
Outstanding Music Composition for a Series (Dramatic Underscore)
Outstanding Special Visual Effects for a Series

Keywords

Reviews

I know it seems many like this show if you like it, obviously I'm just stating my views, maybe I just have wrong expectations or a strange taste. But in my opinion, this show could have been so much better.

The characters are all mean, unfeeling, bored with their existences, or actively trying to make other people miserable. None of them seem to have any redeeming qualities.

This is the kind of series that you can put on and enjoy pretty much every episode and even though there is just 2 seasons there are 30 episodes. The story starts with a sullen and typically 18 year old college drop out Georgia Less.

This show is utterly ridiculous I'm amazed someone had the courage to produce it. Am I ever grateful that someone.

I haven't quite figured out why I like this show but I think it's because of Ellen Muth and, of course, the excellent writing. Ellen Muth, who plays the lead character George who seems to have almost no muscles in her face, somehow projects a humanity into the show without seeming to do anything.

Made me laugh, made me cry.. Every episode touches your soul in so many ways.

It as 1 bullet going threw 3 walls, ricocheting off things and blowing up a propane tank at the end! Didn't Mythbusuters do a show about how this couldn't happen?

Would love a reboot with original cast! Great mix of comedy, cast, drama, twist etc!!

If you do the research -- which means mainly reading comments contemporaneous with the show -- you will find that unique one-of-kind projects like this (projects that make no sense on paper, but are almost hypnotic once filmed and in the can) were considered to define the "breakout" of cable and speciality channels/media, proving that the "name" studios and stations did not have a monopoly on creativity. (And paving the way, for, of all things, Netflix.

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