Families are complicated, which gives TV writers plenty of fodder to draw from. But what if the results are neither high stakes nor funny, so much as warm and pleasant? Well, you take what you can get these days, when the definition of “comedy” has become so expansive as to also mean “light drama,” including Amazon’s “Clean Slate” starring Laverne Cox and George Wallace.
Cox plays Desiree, a native of Mobile, Alabama, who returns home when her glamorous life in New York falls apart. It’s been decades since she’s been back, and now she’s on her father’s doorstep looking for a soft place to land. The only catch is that she hasn’t talked to Dad (Wallace) in all this time, and he doesn’t know she’s transgender. But he quickly acclimates and they work to rebuild their relationship as Desiree creates a new life for herself.
Considering the rapid and alarming threats directed toward the trans community in the first weeks of the new presidential administration, “Clean Slate” arrives as an elegant and defiant pushback: A show built around a talented Black trans actress whose charisma is reason enough to watch.
If only the series had a little more comedic bite. Occasionally a line will land. “It’s like Black to the future,” Desiree says of her father’s house, which has remained unchanged in the 23 years she’s been gone. When she offers him chia seed pudding for breakfast, he tells her, “Chia seeds need to make up their mind: Ya either be a pudding or a pet, but you can not be both.”