A story that looks more realistic in the first season of that dramatic and dramatic series. A high school student named Spencer, and must have a bright future in that game. Coach Billy Baker is thinking of joining his team in Beverly Hills and he has to move on to the team. He may face a lot of disappointing situations but he has to fight.
This young adult saga is still filled with fun, and not just because it turns fictional high school football into riveting high drama... If any new series deserves a spotlight in its metaphorical face, it's All American.
The lighter (meaning soapier) material is landing better than the more serious stuff, but that could change once the cast is clicking and the exposition is done.
It's not so much about high-school football as it is about race and class and economic opportunity - mixed with plenty of solid drama and, yeah, some good soap opera.
The parts of All American that I liked best almost all featured Spencer and Coop, because Ezra and Bre-Z are so good and theirs is the dynamic that doesn't feel like a refugee from something I liked previously and more.
So yes, you've seen All American before, but despite its cliches, the first three episodes The CW sent to us in advance deem All American an engrossing, timely and relevant high school drama with loads of potential.
The CW's first high school football series literally is better built in terms of strutting its stuff in the locker room and at the beach. Perhaps the drama will also flex harder in time.