The TV Column

Sexy, bawdy and highly entertaining Shameless returns

Shameless returns to Showtime tonight and stars Jeremy Allen White as Lip Gallagher and Emmy Rossum as his sister, Fiona.
Shameless returns to Showtime tonight and stars Jeremy Allen White as Lip Gallagher and Emmy Rossum as his sister, Fiona.

Shameless returns to Showtime at 8 p.m. today. It's Season 8 for the engrossing adult comedy/drama.

By adult, I mean that because it's on a premium channel, the show contains nudity, coarse language, adult dialogue, alcohol and drug use and sexual situations.

Shameless treats the viewer like a grown-up, but none of the above is gratuitous. However, all or any of that may be a deal breaker for some viewers.

If you don't mind TV-MA programs, then this is an outstanding series for your consideration. I've seen every episode since it debuted on Jan. 9, 2011. I appreciate well-done adult TV and Shameless has never disappointed.

The show has a large ensemble headed by Oscar-nominated William H. Macy (Fargo) as Frank Gallagher, the shameless, dysfunctional, alcoholic, deadbeat (but charming), hedonistic, narcissistic father of six independent children in South Side Chicago.

Yeah. Frank is a real piece of work.

The Gallagher kids are Fiona, Lip, Ian, Debbie, Carl and young Liam. They are played by (in order), Emmy Rossum, Jeremy Allen White, Cameron Monaghan, Emma Kenney, Ethan Cutkosky and twins Brenen and Brandon Sims.

Note: Liam is black, although both biological parents are white. Something about a recessive gene.

Fortunately for Frank, Fiona is a fierce surrogate mom to the siblings, and each kid is savvy and industrious in his own way. If it were not for Fiona, Frank would probably have died in some gutter long ago and the kids would have been carted off by human services.

But the kids are getting older, so where do we go from here?

Executive producer John Wells (ER, The West Wing) recently told Variety that in Season 8 the core of the show will still be family.

"When the kids were growing up," he said, "there were these moments of the family holding onto each other just for survival so they don't drown, but then they reach an age where they could take care of themselves and should take responsibility for themselves, so it becomes a question of how much do you separate?

"Uniquely in these kinds of families, the survival instinct to be together is really strong. They've survived together, and being in the foxhole bond is great."

Wells says to expect the series to deal with the fallout from the new presidential administration this season.

"We live in a world in which everybody is talking about what's happening," Wells says. "I have very liberal tendencies, but the one thing you can say about what is happening is it's started a conversation. There is a conversation in America about who we are, who we want to be and how we got so separate. Why are we not talking to each other? And we try and go right at it."

The Gallaghers buried their estranged mother, Monica (Cameron Monaghan), in last season's finale. That will loom large this season.

Frank will smoke the last of his meth, shave and move on with his life. Macy tells us Frank even gets a job and a car and tackles his brave new world.

Fiona will throw herself into the rental apartments she bought; Debbie is getting the hang of motherhood; and Lip will concentrate on getting sober.

There's more! Wait. As long as we're on adult programming, Showtime is following Shameless with SMILF, a new half-hour comedy that it claims is "an honest take on motherhood, co-parenting, and female sexuality through a raw and unfiltered lens and the life of a 20-something single mom."

Anytime the words "raw" and "unfiltered" are used, that's code for TV-MA with all the attendant goodies. We have been warned.

SMILF debuts at 9 p.m. today. What's a SMILF? It's a variation of MILF, a vulgar acronym that I can't spell out in a family newspaper. Let's just say that SMILF refers to a single mother with whom a dude would like to have an intimate physical encounter.

The SMILF in the title is South Boston single mom Bridgette Bird, played by Frankie Shaw. The series is semi-autobiographical and Shaw not only stars in the show, she created it, writes it, and directs it.

There's an impressive supporting cast. Rosie O'Donnell stars as Bridgette's mother, Tutu, and fan favorite Connie Britton (Friday Night Lights, Nashville) has a recurring role as Lily, Bridgette's boss.

Former hip-hop artist Miguel Gomez (The Strain) plays Bridgette's baby daddy Rafi.

The comedy comes from Bridgette attempting to balance her life as a working-class single mom and her desires for relationships and a career.

• Ray Donovan. Showtime has picked up the drama for a 12-episode sixth season. It stars Liev Schreiber and Jon Voight and will relocate to New York from Los Angeles.

The TV Column appears Sunday, Tuesday and Thursday. Email: mstorey@arkansasonline.com

mstorey@arkansasonline.com

Style on 11/05/2017

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