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In Season 6 we present a new set of different events and comedies where Jake and Gina are reunited for a different high school reunion. On the other hand, Charles helps Rosa with her emotional life that looks different and somewhat new, and relieves Terry Crews from the stresses of the holiday by drawing an original artwork in his living room, while enjoying the warmth of the record Yule.
Brooklyn Nine-Nine is just as goofy, warm, fast-moving, and funny as ever. Even better, the new season of Brooklyn Nine-Nine seems to be doing exactly what any show in its sixth season should do.
Braugher wields the show's popcorn-cooking patter like a scalpel... [making] each punchline land to even greater effect. It's one of television's best performances, and in this year, it's better than ever before.
Consider this, then, less a "review" and more a "reassurance." The Brooklyn Nine-Nine that premieres Thursday night on NBC is essentially the Brooklyn Nine-Nine you remember from Fox. That's a very good thing, indeed.
Comedies can often feel strained at this advanced age... That doesn't happen here. If anything, the series feels more in a groove than it did when it was young and new and still surprising.
They're good episodes although the second feels a little more familiar, or typical - fast, irreverent, bound to logic by only the most fragile of threads.
What really counts, however, is the show's zingy humor, which can involve coconuts filled with merlot and random jokes about Bonnie Bedelia in Die Hard. Welcome back!