User Reviews (12)

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  • DSatt5724 September 2005
    I never watch network TV anymore. Usually watch movies but stumbled upon this as I was looking for info on Hurricane Rita.

    It got my attention and kept it the whole hour. I actually didn't want it to end. A big part is because I'm a fan of Ming Na.. I recognized her face and voice but didn't place her until looking here tonight. Thanks IMDb!

    The issues they are tackling are either a minefield or a goldmine, time will tell. But I'm glad someone is addressing them. Oh, I'm from the Bible Belt, it didn't bother me.

    I'll be watching again to see how it pans out.
  • mstyler7 November 2005
    Well, this is a Bummer. I actually liked this show. I think the unfortunate part was a Friday night slot. I think it was a different story with a lot of potential. Remeinded me a little of Heartbeat, several years ago. That was canceled quickly too. I guess people do not want to watch shows about pregnancy and their challenges. With any luck, maybe one of the smaller networks will pick it up, or maybe Lifetime. They like to do shows about women. Great strong cast with good experiences. Now we will never know if she is the surrogate for her best friends....sigh. And another thing, I wanted to know if the conceited British Doc was going to get in trouble because of his nurse and her setting him up. Now I well be left in a quandary for years...
  • i have not really watched network TV since thirty something and knots landing went off the air long ago as it may be . this show definitely caught my attention.i thought it was fast moving and very entertaining. having dealt with baby issues this past year i looked forward to it. then it was gone who decides this stuff anyway? maybe we need one more reality TV show or another cop show please thats why i don't watch network TV anymore. and for those people who claim the show was not completely accurate maybe they are correct but they have to remember it was not a reality show just a form of television entertainment. how can you cancel a show after only 2 episodes why bother airing it at all? there have been plenty of shows that got off to a bad start but the networks gave them a chance. why not this show? is anybody listening at the network?????????????????
  • : This show shows the changes in infertility... and gives hopeless couples a chance to have hope. I was one of those patients about 35 years ago. I just wanted to get pregnant at all cost. I found this show interesting and heart warming... Yes, they have taken some parts and made them unscrupulous. Gotta keep up with the market if you want to get watched. I think they did this to trying to keep up with today's way of thinking. Let's face it that is the way life is now. People will stop at nothing to get what they want. For anyone, man or woman who has ever wanted a baby more that anything in life... this show makes sense...

    I agree that there is some material in it that I am not certain to it's validly. Do they really do this? ... But even when taking that into consideration --- I do not care... It is interesting. And I will watch it for as long as it is on.... In case, you are wondering, my husband also agrees with me. No, we did not like the fact that a couple got a black baby when the labels were changed... but we are living in a time where people do this sort of thing, out of pure spite or jealously... I am surprised that Angie Harmon took the part paying some one who plays God... Decided what eggs need to get a boost for those in the bank and which do not....

    All in all, we love this show and will watch it every week...

    D. Ross Michigan
  • Angie Harmon and the cast has done a great job. The writers have obviously done their research. Very timely, as the black - white twin boys from an infertility clinic are in the news too. People wanting a baby need to visualize and understand the risks and rewards involved. As do the surrogates, both male and female. I have suffered infertility and I appreciate this show. NBC also aired ER where the couple declined to take their baby home because he wasn't perfect. Look in medical journals, it happens. Adoption agencies screens and counsels would-be parents, but still in 2005 - infertility clinics do not. They just ask for the check, and in socialized countries, not even that.The show is honest about this. There is life and death decisions daily at infertility clinics and NBC is wisely tapping into this high drama.
  • I love it. The second episode just ended, and I think it's a very interesting show. I enjoy seeing controversial issues addressed on TV and I think this show addresses both sides of the coin. Also, to those who criticized people who get infertility treatments in earlier posts, you have a lot of nerve. I have never been through this, but I have family and friends who have experienced trouble getting pregnant. If you have children of your own, you should understand the wonderful feeling of carrying and giving birth to your own child. Please do not berate those who desire to have the same joy. Learn to be empathetic and not judgmental.
  • I can't believe this show was/is/is going to be canceled. I love this show and for the past 2 weeks every Friday @ 10pm I turn on NBC and hope that they run Inconceivable. I'm furious they replaced it with L&O TBJ. Apparently this show has angered people because of its content but all the more reason to run the show. It's educational for the people that are infertile and for us people that would like to know more about it. If this was aired in Canada it wouldn't have been canceled. I know the story lines are far-fetched but nowhere near as far-fetched as some of the plots on soap operas. They only aired 2 episodes...did they think they would be up there in ratings after the first 2 shows for a brand new show? I think not....give it a chance NBC
  • deathupgraded12 November 2005
    I cannot realise how hard a show like this may be for some people, but i have a solution.

    Make it a "Straight-to-DVD" release, so then the people who are interested in this show can buy the DVD (i would) and then the people who don't want to see it, don't buy it, it's that simple, also the makers of this show (who have probably lost a lot of money) can regain some of there losses.

    EVERYBODY WINS! I hope this will happen, it would be a shame for something to be made and not get to be shown in full, i mean when TV shows are cancelled i near-enough mourn them (sorry for the spelling) i was heart broken when i found out that Off Centre was cancelled, it was great, as well as Futurama, why was that cancelled, its better than the Simpson's yet it was cancelled on season 4, but the Simpson's are on season 17 and running out of steam.

    So if a show is cancelled for reasons such as the ones for Inconceivable, then they should put it straight to DVD, where everyone is happy.
  • I spent 8 years suffering from infertility, now a group of women I bonded with watched the show as a form of entertainment and release. It was not meant as a informational piece but as a Friday night drama. I find it criminal that murder and rape of children is considered more suitable entertainment. I was a beautifully written and acted drama and I hope Lifetime or Bravo see the value and pick it up! I appreciated the doctors positive comments. The show brought back a lot of sad and happy memories, just like life. I find it very sad that some people use there own unhappiness to spread anger and more sadness! I bought Tivo for just this show... what a waste of money!
  • Sorry NBC, I think you have got a great cast that has produced probably the worst new series on network TV and I'm including the FOX show that has already been cancelled after 2 airings. The idea that a fertility clinic is a great backdrop for a riveting drama is well, at best misguided. I have no real opinion on the fertility issue, but thousands do and that is dividing your viewing public right there. Then you alienate another bunch of viewers by having white parents rejecting a black baby. Going well so far? Then there is gay couple using a surrogate (I think that lost the bible belt), a BJ in the office, switching "husbands deposits" kept in a wine cooler, labels that seem not to stick well, records laying around with photos and no security. Hell, no wonder they need a lawyer, I think they must have broken so many laws it is a wonder they are not already closed down. Come on NBC, pull their license to practice and put on reruns of Law & Order, you know it makes sense. And Angie Harmon, run like hell away from this Friday night fiasco.
  • As a person who is still in the throes of infertility, this show smacks of every misconception (pardon the pun) that exists about infertility. There have already been several story lines about irresponsible surrogates, and frankly, surrogates already get enough crap dumped on them; what they are doing is a wonderful gift for an infertile couple, and very rarely do these crazy situations arise such as those recently aired on Inconceivable and ER. But hey - it's all about drama, right? And ratings? Then by all means, perpetuate the myth.

    In reference to another commenter, who said "People wanting a baby need to visualize and understand the risks and rewards involved. As do the surrogates, both male and female". First, there are no male surrogates. Perhaps you mean sperm donors? You clearly have not suffered infertility, especially if you can actually say "adoption agencies screens and counsels would-be parents, but still in 2005 - infertility clinics do not. They just ask for the check, and in socialized countries, not even that." Are you suggesting that just because a person has a medical problem preventing pregnancy, that they should be required to go through screening in order to be a parent? As opposed to the crack mothers, who as far as I know, aren't required to fill out so much as one paper in order to get pregnant? Wow, you must live in a red state.

    This show is a slap in the face to people who deal with infertility, and it only furthers the myths and lies that surround those of us who struggle for the simple joy of becoming a parent. I am glad to see this trash being taken off the air.
  • As a woman who has suffered through the IVF process multiple times, I found this show to be disappointing at best and insulting at worst. There are thousands of us living quietly in the US. We live secret lives of shame and often even our families do not know the physical and financial burdens that we endure to have children. That NBC would create a show that exploits the IVF process and spreads fallacy and myth (mixed up embryos, sex with nurses, donor sperm without husband knowing) is irresponsible. There is plenty of drama throughout the IVF process without having to resort to the misguided attempts of portraying the process that this show has used in the first episode. The writers should visit a clinic, talk with women and men who have suffered through IVF and see how it is done in the year 2005. Fortunately, it is such a badly written and acted show that it will probably not make it a whole season.