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  • jacobtinsdale21 February 2016
    Warning: Spoilers
    There is not much to complain about. It has excellent characters, good storyline, brilliant, memorable jokes, and decent actors. It may take one or two episodes to get into, but it is worth watching. I watched the first season in one day, and the second season the next. It only takes a few hours to watch, which is a shame.

    You honestly feel sorry for certain characters, like Linda, as she is always the one being bullied for being Asian and ugly.

    Season 1 get you into the characters for the first couple of episode, and then get into it. Season 2 introduces two new and just as excellent characters, while taking away two from season 1 (One of one is Oliver, my favourite character).

    It is also based on the Office, with its camera movements.

    Final Verdict: 8.5 / 10
  • samuelgeofilho21 October 2018
    10/10
    Amazing
    This web series is 'The Office' level of comedy. Very well made and VERY funny
  • Words cannot describe how many times i've watched this I've loved every bit of this show not only is it filmed like The Office (in the style of a mockumentary) it has this insane edge you couldn't get on The Office since it was on YouTube. All of the characters are creative spins on clichés and stereotypes that are not only funny but you can still relate to them you can still sympathize with them.

    Theater Class is seriously the best series i've ever watched.

    Even though it didn't end the way it was supposed to (instead it ended without an actual ending) it's still insanely fun to watch.

    Brandon, thank you for making this insanely hilarious series.
  • I believe this is a great show, with such a strange premise and the certain type of comedy it aspires to be, it's hard to expect this show to be a home to great characters and a neat plot. Some of the acting might not be good at times but for the most part it's rather good. I'd recommend this.
  • In his hit web series "Theatre Class", youtube personality and comedian Brandon Rogers departs from his usual twisted, dark sense of humour in order to imitate the hit series "The Office", from which he seems to steal jokes directly even more often than he writes his own. Do you like politically correct network-type shows that tiptoe around offensiveness, stay as far away from the edge as possible, and refuse to cross the lines in the sand lest they offend the most sensitive of viewers? If so, stay away from "Theatre Class"! I would offer the same advice to people who enjoy developed characters, coherency, plot, and well-written dialogue.