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From Michigan to Los Angeles, a small family moves into a new home that looks quite different from what they were in, and then they discover that their dream home is in a society quite different from their small town, but they are not upset. Calvin Butler worried about them. Dave realizes that integration into their new society seems complex but tries to adapt again.
Stripped down to its essentials, it's a familiar sort of comedy about a person who would like to be left alone and the person who won't leave him alone.
The question is what The Neighborhood will then become and if it's something less dated and more worthy of its four main stars who are all, in theory, about as good a sitcom quartet as you could assemble.
Perceptiveness alone will not carry a sitcom; it's got to have jokes. And The Neighboorhood relies far too much on the novelty of a black character spouting edgy lines that we're more accustomed to hearing from a white mouth.
This attempt at a culture-clash comedy about a friendly white guy who is a fish out of water in a predominantly black neighborhood, for now, is a miss.