The series offers a host of great comedy and drama events. Events start many years later, friends Tiff and Pitt in high school restored contact in New York City again. It may be surprising when a spectrum is one of New York City's best structures, a secret to hide from Pitt. It may be quite different for Pitt, struggling and needing money. It seems that things will turn into a completely different turn when Tiff offers a house he can not refuse, becoming an assistant at Dominatrix.
Episodes improve after the pilot with a shift in focus to the characters and their relationships, but the season finale shifts tones again into a gear that seems like blatant begging for a second season.
Funny, smart, delicate and yet simultaneously crude -- in case you find the details of fetish sex to be crude -- and in the end, both moving and liberating.
Nate Hurtsellers's cinematography ably apes the saturated, sultry vibrance of an Almodovar or Araki joint, but can't counter the overall aura of patronizing squareness.
Bonding is funny enough to make its structural problems less of an issue than you might think. Just be sure you have a very open mind before hitting "Play" on this one.