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Things seem to be fine when it comes to love and dating. It is a series of adventures and the failure of romantic relationships and their success sometimes. The series begins with six real-life people performing five different romantic dates with different people. Perhaps it may be a difficult task to find an ideal person and a Grammy one that could be worth a second date and an eternal meeting.
I guarantee that you're going to chow through Dating Around like it's an ice cream cake. It won't do you any good, but you can worry about that in the morning.
Somewhere between a nightlife docuseries and a Zales commerical, Dating Around first appears as a realistic, personal, vaguely boring, but very pretty glimpse into real-world romance. Then things get fun.
Dating Around turns dating into a spectator sport, and a highly entertaining one at that. But at the end of the day, it's yet another reminder that no one can fully understand a relationship...
Dating Around piles on excruciating, relatable awkwardness... Though cringey, the gaffes bolster the sense that genuine interaction is being portrayed.
If it's not going to say anything about the state of modern love, it could use just a bit more of Tiffany's wild-card energy instead of playing it so damn safe.