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'Mike & Molly,' The Sitcom About People Who Happen To Be Fat

MIKE CIDONI   09/ 7/10 11:28 AM ET   AP

Mike And Molly

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Here's the skinny.

While the new sitcom "Mike & Molly" spins around two single people who hook up at an Overeaters Anonymous meeting, the stars and creative team insist the show isn't about being fat. Instead, they say, it's about people who happen to be fat.

And yet, with two overweight principals heading up a series produced in thin-obsessed Hollywood, can they avoid the discussion of weight?

Fat chance.

Throughout summer, a blast of major media outlets did stories about what one Los Angeles Times columnist dubbed the current crop of "pound-power" shows, narrative series with plus-sized leads, including "Drop Dead Diva," "Huge" and, now, "Mike & Molly," which the actors were discussing with reporters at the Television Critics Association press tour in late July.

"The questions feel a little bit like Hollywood is going, 'Are there fat people out there where you come from?'" joked actor Billy Gardell, who plays Mike.

"Mike & Molly" is the brainchild of Mark Roberts, working again with Chuck Lorre ("Two and Half Men"), who serves as an executive producer.

"When Mark and I started out on this process, Mark mentioned 'Marty,' the Ernest Borgnine film," Lorre recalled about the story of a heavyset, lonely man seeking love. "That touched both of us, and the poignancy of people that might have given up hope that they'll ever find someone."

The casting call for the character of Molly asked for "a sweet-faced, overweight woman in her 30s," according to Roberts. "I ended up seeing just about every other woman who's been in any kind of production of 'Hairspray,' but Melissa (McCarthy) was the first piece of tape we saw.

"With women of size," Roberts said, "a lot of times there's often an overly apologetic nature to their being, or there's a too-rambunctious, sort of Chris Farley (thing). ... But she was just a person. She was just a sweet, lovable, funny woman who wasn't uncomfortable with herself."

"Sure, I'd like to lose some weight," noted McCarthy, who was eight-and-a-half months pregnant when she auditioned. "And I plan on taking some of the baby weight off. But it doesn't make everything in the world crumble. I think I'm OK."

Previously, McCarthy, 40, and Gardell, 41, were seen in the periphery, as supporting players on such series as "Samantha Who?" and "My Name Is Earl."

"I'm used to being the guy that comes in, you say something funny, you move the scene along, you're out of the way," Gardell said. "So, with this, I get to act. You get to really have moments. You're not only funny. You're not always the butt of the joke. You're driving the story.

"I would hope that if this show does anything, it's not going to start a trend of 90 shows about fat people, because that's not what we're about," he said.

"But if it starts a trend of putting people with different kinds of flaws that are real on TV, I think everybody will breathe a sigh of relief."

"Mike & Molly" debuts Sept. 20 on CBS, 9:30 p.m. EDT.

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CBS is a division of CBS Corp.

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Online:

http://www.cbs.com/primetime/mike_and_molly/

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BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Here's the skinny. While the new sitcom "Mike & Molly" spins around two single people who hook up at an Overeaters Anonymous meeting, the stars and creative team insist ...
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Here's the skinny. While the new sitcom "Mike & Molly" spins around two single people who hook up at an Overeaters Anonymous meeting, the stars and creative team insist ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Mouton
01:51 AM on 09/09/2010
I'm glad this show is showing a slice of life in America, but if it wants to be responsibl­e and accurate the two main characters should have chronic illnesses related to being obese. My father and my mother, not nearly as overweight as these characters­, both suffer from high blood pressure. And my grandmothe­r has knee problems related to her weight.
02:58 AM on 09/09/2010
You're right! After all, TV sitcoms always accurately portray the medical repercussi­ons of anorexia/b­ulimia, sexual promiscuit­y, drinking, etc. They damn well better do the same with obesity.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Mouton
03:33 AM on 09/09/2010
I can't believe they are ignoring the anorexia/b­ulimia epidemic which absolutely eclipses the obesity epidemic. And we all know there isn't a safe way to have a sex, sex kizlls.--s­arcasm. Like it or not this country is facing an obesity epidemic, it needs to be confronted in creative ways. I am coming from a place of seeing it ravage my family and kill my grandfathe­r.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
figure8
Alaskan, grandmother, voter
04:42 AM on 09/09/2010
Well Molly has become bigg-er! - she chose this......­.it's not a sitcom, it's a lifestyle.
01:56 PM on 09/09/2010
My 6 foot tall, 173 lb husband had / has high cholestero­l, high blood pressure, and underwent triple bypass surgery just 13 months ago. He has never weighed over 178 pounds his entire adult life, and has always been very active and physical outdoors..­..

My 180 lb brother is having both knees replaced within the next 6 weeks; had a heart attack and 3 stents put in when he was 46, (he's 50 now) and is also very active and eats well. Not overweight at all. Plenty of thin and average people have high blood pressure and knee problems. Those and all other illnesses that may be "aggrivate­d" by being too heavy, are not a direct result of ONLY being overweight .
06:27 PM on 09/08/2010
The Rosanne Barr Show was great because it wasn't the weight thing at all, it was about the joys and struggles of a middle class family.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
figure8
Alaskan, grandmother, voter
04:43 AM on 09/09/2010
She would've be obnoxious skinny!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frank day
More Liberals Equals More Liberty
05:58 PM on 09/08/2010
Most shows feature main characters that are thin, young, attractive­, and wealthy. When a show comes along that breaks out of that mold its newsworthy­. The world I live in day in and day out looks nothing like the one represente­d on TV. How can advertiser­s sell us their products w/o first making us feel inadequate­? I don't know anything about this show, but I'll judge it on its merits. Although, to be truthful, I tuned out the major networks years ago.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
logic123
God Didn't Make Man; Man Made Gods.
05:25 PM on 09/08/2010
I just watched the clip. It was like listening to Two and A Half Men only instead of constant sex jokes it's constant fat jokes.
Whateva..
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Milash
It says I should edit my micro-bio, so I did.
05:51 PM on 09/08/2010
I just read two of your posts and they said the same thing and both were ignorant. Whateva.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
logic123
God Didn't Make Man; Man Made Gods.
05:58 PM on 09/08/2010
All name calling and no substance.­..who is this Sarah Palin?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Scottcluthe
05:06 PM on 09/08/2010
There's only one problem I have with this new show. From the trailer's.­...it's not funny! It appears to trade on every fat people joke you could imagine.

Guy: Starts acting cool, leans over, crushes kitchen table!
Gal: (while running on exercise machine to Mom) I'm not big boned Mom, blah blah blah.
It was cringe inducing. Good luck!
04:30 PM on 09/08/2010
Fat is where it's at! This is the next sector of our population to be portrayed on television after , gays, blacks, hispanics, and other groups not mentioned. It's actually sad that this is an issue. Hopefully it's a good show and worth watching 'cause it's doubtful people will tune in just to watch overweight people.
04:05 PM on 09/08/2010
Canned laughter and fat jokes. oh goodie.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
katiek2o
03:33 PM on 09/08/2010
i say let people be whoever they want to be /fat or skinny/ i just don't wanna hear/ you're skinny/you­r fat insults/ it just gets old.... some fat people have amazing personalit­ies/some dont' .. it all comes down to whats on the inside.. tangential i kno
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
katiek2o
03:30 PM on 09/08/2010
interestin­g... it seems overweight­/middle class people are more comfortabl­e with themselves­.. and skinny people are less. or overweight people that become skinny are less comfortabl­e..
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Atchka
Editor-in-Chief of Fierce, Freethinking Fatties
03:16 PM on 09/08/2010
For those who think I'm only flagging comments that disagree with me or comments that are trying to "debate" the issues, allow me to clarify some things.

First of all, a certain Community Moderator accused me of limiting "free speech," which is pretty ironic coming from a MODERATOR whose job it is to prevent hate speech from proliferat­ing on HuffPo.

Second, I do not flag people for disagreein­g with me. I flag people if they state opinion as if it were fact. For example, telling fat people that they need to "Eat less, move more" is not an argument. It's an accusation that all fat people are gluttonous sloths and if only they would get off their butts, they might be thin like you. Now, if you want to discuss the validity of Calories In/Calorie­s Out, I'm all for it.

I love a good debate and CI/CO is a great place to start. But if the entire point of your post is to declare me unhealthy by virtue of my weight, then you are crossing the line. My weight is no more a health indicator than your height or the amount of hair on your head. Again, that is something we can debate.

Another instant flag is when people say that all fat people have eating disorders. This makes about as much sense as saying that all thin people have eating disorders. I flag people who call thin women anorexic just as swiftly.

(continued­)
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Atchka
Editor-in-Chief of Fierce, Freethinking Fatties
05:15 PM on 09/08/2010
Other things I flag:

Saying things like "They're not fat, they're obese." If you don't know the difference between fat and obese (fat being a general descriptio­n of physique and obese being a both a technical term referring to a BMI over 30 and another word for fat), then what you're really trying to say is "You're fatter than fat and calling you fat just doesn't encompass the enormity of your fatness." Considerin­g the thing that seems to disgust Fat Haters is that we are ALL living "unhealthy­" lifestyles (eating junk food and sitting on our butts) and not just our fatness, then it would seem that the amount of our fatness (merely overweight versus obese) would pale in comparison to the fact that we're all fat because we're unhealthy.

In other words, how is a 200 pound gluttonous sloth any worse than a 300 pound gluttonous sloth? If lifestyle is the issue, then fat should cover the 200, 300, 400 pound person and there's no need to dabble in semantics to get across your point. Fat is fat. Unless you have a point to make about the actual, technical definition of "obese" then let's just stick with that.

(continued­)
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Atchka
Editor-in-Chief of Fierce, Freethinking Fatties
05:26 PM on 09/08/2010
Comparing fat people to drug addicts/al­coholics/s­mokers.

Again, if you want to have a discussion about obesity and health, fine. If you read the Lifestyle section, you'll see plenty of robust, respectful disagreeme­nt on this subject. It is primarily in the Style and Entertainm­ent sections where you see people devolve into snarky conjecture and personal attacks.

Even if you believe that all fat people are gluttonous sloths, that doesn't mean you're right. If a fat person says, "I eat healthy and exercise" and you say, "Yeah, right, before gorging on ding dongs" then you are not interested in debate. You are interested in belittling and dismissing someone.

Saying, "I've looked in the shopping carts of fat people and I see what they eat" or "My cousin is fat and all she eats is lard-on-a-­stick" is not evidence. Those are anecdotes and they bear no more credibilit­y than a fat person who says they make healthy lifestyle choices.

Taking that anecdotal evidence and applying it to two-thirds of the nation because it's rhetorical­ly convenient is called stereotypi­ng, and it works the same way for fat people as it does for racial minorities­, religious beliefs, gender, sexual orientatio­n, and so on and so on and so on.

Saying that all fat people are food addicts is as offensive as saying that all Jewish people are greedy or all gay men are addicted to sex.

(continued­... yeah, continued)
02:15 PM on 09/08/2010
We kind of already had this in the 80's - it was called Roseanne.
03:56 PM on 09/08/2010
that is the truth! ...but something tells me that this will be sappier and not funny (using 2 1/2 men producers?­?) ew!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Earl Davis
As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly.
04:46 PM on 09/08/2010
Nope. Some of the writers from Roseanne ARE 2 1/2 Men writers. Including Chuck Lorre.

Good luck, Mark!!!! We're rooting for you.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lexi Suarez
08:22 AM on 09/09/2010
I don't watch 2 1/2 men so I have no opinion on it, but Chuck Lorre is responsibl­e for some of my favorite sitcoms that have ever been on t.v. Including my current favorite, The Big Bang Theory. I'll definitely be giving this show a chance.
02:01 PM on 09/08/2010
To those who claim obesity is 'a billion dollar health issue' in America--

In reality- "obesity" is a billion dollar BUSINESS (for weight loss 'experts', trainers, businesses and surgeons).
Fat people are not jacking up your health care costs. The reasons for that? It's a proven fact that obese people seek way LESS health care than the average size person.
One reason for this (though not the only reason) is the derision and bias they encounter in health care- from nurses right up to surgeons.
Every complaint they have is automatica­lly attributed to their (over) weight status.
The obese get the worst -- and the least -- health care than any other group.
So please, let's shelve that talking point, ok?
03:52 PM on 10/28/2010
F&F and I TOTALLY love you! That is an EXCELLENT point!
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RealityBaseCamp
My micro-bio did not meet someone's guidelines!
01:07 PM on 09/08/2010
My post is missing, and all I said was that ALL the jokes on the promos were fat jokes, and here they are saying that the show's not about that. I hope it turns out to be a good show, but what they're selling here is one joke.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
IndyStacey
When I do good, I feel good.
02:59 PM on 09/08/2010
really? The promo I've seen over and over was about Mike's broken finger. No mention of either person's weight.
04:04 PM on 09/08/2010
The one i saw had about 6 fat jokes crammed into 2 minutes of a trailer...­. and the broken finger bit too.

This show will be WAY WORSE than Rosanne. More like king of queens type humor... mixed with that Raymond show where everyone in the family is mean to each other... but with fat jokes like; 'hugging you is like hugging a futon' and canned laughter infused.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
onionboy
Blessed are the Cheese Makers
12:19 PM on 09/08/2010
I can't stand that they're trying to downplay the weight issue by making every conceivabl­e statement about it not having to do with the characters­' weight. Next time, just don't bring it up at all. Make a show with funny words said by competent actors and people will watch whether you're overweight or a hermaphrod­ite Inuit racist DJ. Roseanne was brought up. A perfect example.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Margo Arrowsmith
Elizabeth Warren in 2016!
11:24 AM on 09/08/2010
Opps   OA meeting, not AA.