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America's favorite working-class family returns after many years. Season ten intends many various comedy stories with the Conner. Finally Roseanne and Dan adopt to live with Darlene and her two children, also they sympathize with her because she lost her job.
Pilots are tough. Revivals are tough too. But "Roseanne," at least through the first two episodes, has found a way to balance the old with the new, 1988 with 2018.
The relationship between Dan and Roseanne appears to be quieter, befitting their age, but Goodman and Barr continue to exude warmth and chemistry with each other.
They're on the nose. They're reductive. They're easy. They conflate partisanship with politics writ large. They suggest an American political situation that is a matter of performance and personality rather than of systemic crisis.
If you were a fan of the original, it won't be a hard sell for you to comfortably enjoy it a second time around. If you're just discovering Roseanne for the first time, it will just feel comfortable. It's exactly the reboot that 2018 America needs.
It feels like another couch potato that's ready to birth more couch potatoes, and that's not a revival worth watching. Heck, that's not revival at all.