In that series there will be a wide range of dramatic and comedic events where Loay goes to the doctor and argues with an old friend, and Omar Loye is an advantage and sets the history of play. On the other hand, Louis's brother comes to him with a strange request concerning his history. Mother Louis comes to tell him that she is a lesbian. As the children move away, Lowe eats lots of ice cream, gets a high percentage of neighbors and saves an old dog from the pound.
Often profane and occasionally offensive, Louie won't be to every viewer's taste, but it's a more interesting show than many with a definitive point of view.
It takes a while for Louie to find its own voice, and while it is at times a crude and offensive one, it is not without a strange wit and under-the-radar appeal.
There's something undeniably endearing about Louie, who even at his most shocking seems willing to acknowledge the force of language - and who generally reserves his most cutting words for himself.
A brutally funny slice of rant that bears a surface resemblance to Seinfeld in the way that the show organically builds its episodic vignettes around the star's stand-up shtick.