Newsday by Verne Gay
A fun show, but where, oh where is all this heading?
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After being fired as a nurse for whistleblowing, Cath Hardacre steals the identity of a friend and starts a new life as an emergency department doctor in Edinburgh with her daughter. As she works and becomes close with her colleagues, Cath, now Alison, is forced to keep her true identity a secret.
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Newsday by Verne Gay
A fun show, but where, oh where is all this heading?
Wall Street Journal by Nancy DeWolf Smith
Everything happens quickly -- scenes, cameos, comments and quips fly by. But nothing is throwaway or stupid, and in the midst of laughter, the emotion, when it comes, feels real. That's good acting. It also happens only when writers respect their audience.
New York Magazine (Vulture) by Emily Nussbaum
Trust Me is a neat spin on this ancient tradition--and in fact, I shall grandly state that it is, in both its lovable and off-putting elements, a workplace drama for our time.
Los Angeles Times by Mary McNamara
Hunt Baldwin and John Coveny, who created Trust Me (and have been writers on “The Closer") are former admen themselves; they chose the milieu to explore the creative process among a group of people with a collective-neuroses score high enough to maintain a smart and breezy comedy.
The Hollywood Reporter by Ray Richmond
The first pair of episodes augur a breezily entertaining addition to the TNT stable of dramatic originals.
The New York Times by Alessandra Stanley
Trust Me, a TNT series set in a Chicago advertising agency, is clever and likeable.
New York Daily News by David Hinckley
Mainly, underneath the sitcom setups and witty banter, this show moves to the pulse of the ad game. The mystique and power of raw ideas push this story as surely as they push the characters of "Mad Men."
San Francisco Chronicle by Tim Goodman
Right out of the gate, the series is surprisingly solid. What it ultimately becomes bears watching.
Boston Globe by Matthew Gilbert
No, it's not "quality cable TV" or Top 10 list material, and it's marred by lapses into character cutesiness. But still, I liked it. It's likable.
Chicago Tribune by Maureen Ryan
As it is, Trust Me, which perks along energetically but lacks emotional heft, may be one of those shows that stacks up on my TiVo, along with other shows I don’t get around to viewing.
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