Ronreaco Lee has one of the most familiar faces in the business. That could be due to the fact that he’s appeared in some of the most popular shows on TV since the 90s. Ronreaco has had roles in Home Improvement, Moesha, Sister Sister, The Shield, and Monk. He’s also made film appearances including his most recent role as Orlando Johnson in the Netflix movie, Coffee & Kareem. Throughout his career, Lee has shown that no matter what his role is, he aims to make it memorable. Here are 10 things you didn’t know about Ronreaco Lee. 1. Survivor’s Remorse Was
10 Things You Didn’t Know about RonReaco Lee...
10 Things You Didn’t Know about RonReaco Lee...
- 4/17/2020
- by Camille Moore
- TVovermind.com
There’s politically incorrect, and then there’s just plain wrong.
Netflix’s “Coffee & Kareem” pairs a young black kid with an inept white cop and hopes that their differences will amuse (or at least distract) stuck-at-home audiences for 90 minutes or so. But what audiences? What adult wants to watch this kind of “Kindergarten Cop” nonsense? that no parent in his or her right mind would let Junior tune in.
But that’s the beauty of Netflix, I guess: Age-based MPAA ratings are for the chumps who make movies for theaters (such a 20th-century — or at least pre-coronavirus — concept), whereas when it comes to serve-yourself at-home streaming, there’s no divide between bad movies and bad-for-you movies.
So here’s the pitch: James Coffee is an awkward, overly cautious cop — a role for which Ed Helms is well suited. Kareem Manning is a chubbier-than-most Detroit public school misfit forced...
Netflix’s “Coffee & Kareem” pairs a young black kid with an inept white cop and hopes that their differences will amuse (or at least distract) stuck-at-home audiences for 90 minutes or so. But what audiences? What adult wants to watch this kind of “Kindergarten Cop” nonsense? that no parent in his or her right mind would let Junior tune in.
But that’s the beauty of Netflix, I guess: Age-based MPAA ratings are for the chumps who make movies for theaters (such a 20th-century — or at least pre-coronavirus — concept), whereas when it comes to serve-yourself at-home streaming, there’s no divide between bad movies and bad-for-you movies.
So here’s the pitch: James Coffee is an awkward, overly cautious cop — a role for which Ed Helms is well suited. Kareem Manning is a chubbier-than-most Detroit public school misfit forced...
- 4/3/2020
- by Peter Debruge
- Variety Film + TV
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