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We come back during the third season through a powerful comedy that Miranda has been able to do with a strange act of embarrassing her daughter after she decided to run for the local council with Tilly, even though Tilly is fully supported. In the meantime, Gary decides to go into a new dating experience and Miranda decides she needs that experience, and both may try to find dates for Stevie's upcoming birthday party.
Fans of Miranda - including me - would argue that retro done well is preferable to edgy done badly, and that each of the old-fashioned elements - pratfalls, signature sayings and love story - is handled with panache.
At the end of the episode, Miranda gave up on pretending to be a normal thirty-something year-old and delivered a heartfelt speech about how the world would be a better place if adults acted a bit more childishly every now and then. Now that's funny.
It's good-natured family entertainment with just enough innuendo for the parents' pleasure (ooh er) and lots of broad comedy - with pratfalls and fart gags to the fore - to keep the youngsters happy.
While there is obvious merit in showing sitcom characters as flawed human beings, the idea that Miranda might be viewed as speaking for all women makes me want to weep.