Shameless: Series Premiere

Once again the Brits have broken in a TV series before America takes it as its own. Although Shameless attempts to jam a lot into one hour, the show’s tremendous cast, smart pacing and fresh storyline keep it engaging. And the longtime success of the British version is an encouraging sign that it could last awhile.
My primary attraction to Shameless was William H. Macy whose performances have impressed ever since his role as car salesman Jerry Lundegaard in 1996’s Fargo. I expected Macy to be the bright spot in an otherwise mediocre series—but I greatly underestimated the show.
The Gallagher family may be a completely dysfunctional disaster, but at least they’re a family, despite a constantly drunk daddy Frank (Macy). The motherless bunch survives, however, because Frank’s eldest daughter Fiona (Emmy Rossum) refuses to let them do otherwise. Living in the projects, the six kids (all white except for a black toddler who Frank says resembles his sponsor) all contribute in their own ways—working odd jobs while going to school, scraping pennies just to pay the electric bill—while dad spends his disability check (headless chicken accident at a slaughterhouse) on booze.