This television comedy series follows the daily activity and struggles of Claudia, a young ambitious and smart girl, works at the mail room, where she works on improving herself to get a new position, but when she gets the opportunity to be the personal assistant for Will Butler, an anchor, struggles against proving that she is qualified for that position.
Less Than Perfect's just staggeringly weird. It doesn't appear to have a point, apart from celebrating Claudia's promotion from obscurity to a plum job working for the news anchor.
[Sara Rue] plays a likable TV character, an average-size woman amid a sea of models. It's too bad [the] premiere harps on this fact constantly as Claude makes self-deprecating jokes about her weight.
It's possible that Less Than Perfect wouldn't have worked at all without [Sara] Rue as the likeable, excitable Claude, but it's also very likely that it wouldn't have worked half as well as it does with any other configuration of the core cast.
The likable [Sara] Rue has an easy way with her material, but that material isn't much. Aside from her personal appeal and laughs generated by Andy Dick as one of her office allies in a future episode, this show is one thudding brick.
There might be a series here, except creator Terri Minsky divides her universe into two extreme poles: Thin people are evil, larger-sized women are sainted.
If you're looking for something light and amusing this summer and "reality" programming isn't your cup of venom, you could do worse than get familiar with this workplace sitcom set in the news division of the fictional GBN network.