EPISODE
SEASON
After Nancy informs Esteban that she';;;s pregnant, he allows her to live but has bodyguards assigned to her and forces her to undergo a chorionic villus sampling to be sure the baby is both a boy and his. Nancy';;;s older sister Jill arriving in town, and Silas and Doug trying to launch a medical-marijuana dispensary, though their plans are in danger of getting snuffed out by meddling Deputy C.P. Jones. Later, Nancy discusses the possibility of an abortion with her obstetrician, parenthood struggles lead Nancy and Andy to bond, and Celia is the target of a revenge plot.
14 April 1958, Brooklyn, New York, USA
23 September 1980, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA
24 October 1967, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, Canada
16 February 1983, Los Angeles, California, USA
27 August 1980
28 July 1994, Santa Monica, California, USA
15 March 1982, Long Beach, California, USA
16 May 1970, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA
22 July 1947, Beverly Hills, California, USA
1 September 1983, Seguin, Texas, USA
3 July 1980, Walnut Creek, California, USA
10 July 2002, Riverside, California, USA
4 December 1970, Staten Island, New York City, New York, USA
21 November 1968, California, USA
21 August 1975, Casablanca, Morocco
18 August 1986, Freeport, Illinois, USA
June 08, 2009
Creator Jenji Kohan has kept it all going so far, the supporting cast remains the funniest on TV, and Parker, with her carefully calculated stillness and sudden reckless displays of fearlessness, is more riveting than ever.June 08, 2009
Its constant oscillation between vilification and victimization of its female characters leaves me frustrated, and more than a little pissed off.September 13, 2013
If there's one thing that keeps me coming back to Weeds, though, it's the performances.June 08, 2009
There's a sense of drift here that may be hard to reverse.September 13, 2013
It's the funniest thing you'll see all summer - particularly if you're drug-free.September 13, 2013
By the third episode, though, Weeds seems to be finding its footing.June 08, 2009
All this is to say that Weeds, like Lost, proves that good screenwriting and an emotional investment in well-developed, well-acted characters can make any story line work, no matter how ridiculous.