

In the opening of this week’s Black-ish, Dre and Bow are barely holding it together as parents. They sent Jack to school with medical waste instead of lunch, Junior’s shirt has a giant iron mark on the back, and they straight up forget about Diane.
In the opening of this week’s Black-ish, Dre and Bow are barely holding it together as parents. They sent Jack to school with medical waste instead of lunch, Junior’s shirt has a giant iron mark on the back, and they straight up forget about Diane.
Last week, The Dolby Theater was infiltrated by a slew of popular television shows, their stars, and their fans for a series of panels. Here’s the complete recap and analysis from this year’s Paleyfest.
The last episode of Black-ish was an instant classic, addressing police brutality in a poignant, touching way. This week’s episode would invariably be a step down, but “Any Given Saturday” was decently funny, once again keeping the focus tight on the Johnson family.
As the cast and creators of Black-ish took to the stage at PaleyFest, conversations varied from writing process, to Norman Lear, to that time Tracy Ellis Ross supposedly punched co-star, Anthony Anderson. See all the top moments here!
Expectations were high going into tonight’s episode of Black-ish. The show has consistently addressed heavy issues with a mixture of humor and heart, and tonight’s episode hit both of those with incredible force.
GLAAD has announced its full list of nominees for the 27th Annual GLAAD Media Awards ahead of its events in Los Angeles on April 2nd and New York City on May 14th, 2016. The awards recognize and honor various branches of media for their outstanding representations of the LGBT community and the issues that affect their lives.
The roaring ’20s are back in the Black-ish finale, and it delivers in heart, charm and high-profile guests.
Junior becomes a big-r-republican with an even bigger-d-democrat Dad in an episode with a surprising amount of brains.
Mother’s day is here and Dre’s younger and [not so] ambiguously gay sister Rhonda that pops by for a visit. Raven Simone as Dre’s gay sister with a cat named “Kitty Lang?” Yeah, they’re bringin’ it this week.
With only a small handful of episodes to go in its freshman season, the team over on Black-ish seems to have gotten the memo that the show might need a little nudge to the finish line. This week, the pugnacious parenting pair – of course I mean Dre and Rainbow – are, shockingly, upset with something their kids are doing.
Dre has to prove his blackness to his new white client, and yeah, it’s as iffy as it sounds.
Rainbow bears it all — like, EVERYTHING — when her old chums visit. It’s worth watching, but only just.
OMG Rainbow is pregnant!!! Not really, April Fools…but seriously, Black-ish is pretty fun this week, check it out.
Even when it’s not laugh out loud funny, Black-ish can be a very sweet show. And a new, humbled Dre is pretty winning.
Put down the laundry, stop paying bills, this episode is perfection and it’s more important than what you’re doing.
Junior tackles a bully at school…with his words. Beyond that, it’s pretty much more of the same on Black-ish.
Zoe lands a boyfriend at school and, shock, Dre is upset! The rest is as predictable as it is boring.
Valentine’s Day is here and Dre has a perfect opportunity to screw it up — thank goodness he delivers.
Dre and the family weather the winter in style, hinting that this year “Black-ish” will really earn its stripes.
A new year brings new vitality to the show, coming back with a fresh perspective and all new laughs by the bucket.
Dre gives us a black Santa Claus, with a really sweet message along the way. Get ready for “Black-ish” to make you smile.
Leave your winter woes at the door, because the Black-ish team are back in top form and all about family this week.
The Johnsons face some mommy issues when Dre’s mother arrives. The problem is, she’s pretty dull and so is this episode.
With some of the humor lacking, and only a somewhat clever story, this week feels only slightly above being filler.
The Johnson Halloween isn’t anything earth-shattering, but it’s hard to deny that they’re a charming family when they’re working as a team.
The show tackles a lofty premise: physically reprimanding kids…and they do it beautifully.
Things are starting to feel familiar and predictable. And with the bar set so high, being lazy just won’t cut it.
A round-up of the week’s TV News!
Black-ish strikes the perfect balance between funny and meaningful in its best episode yet.