Fred Goss Movies
Straddling roles as writer, director, producer, and actor, multihyphenate
Fred Goss launched his career in the early 2000s with a starring role on the quirky Bravo comedy series
Significant Others, which offered a highly improvisational comic riff on group psychotherapy, cutting back and forth between the private lives of four couples and their respective therapy sessions. That program received an enthusiastic critical response, but failed to score with the public, so it had a very limited run.
Unfortunately,
Goss' follow up on one of the main networks,
Sons & Daughters (aired on ABC in 2006 and not to be confused with the 1991 CBS
Lucie Arnaz drama of the same title) failed to catch fire with viewers as well, and was less successful with critics, some of whom dismissed it as a diluted version of the same general setup and as a knock-off of
Arrested Development. Starring
Goss,
Gillian Vigman, and
Dee Wallace, this irreverent sitcom concerned an overstressed suburbanite (
Goss) plagued with stresses and frustrations from a bunch of nutty characters who surround him, and whose inability to keep secrets to themselves trigger a chain reaction of catastrophic consequences.
Goss took on writing, producing, and directing duties for the series, but it unfortunately folded after less than one season.
Not one to be daunted,
Goss quickly teamed up with
Arrested Development creators
Anthony and
Joe Russo to star in their new series comedy
Carpoolers (2007), about a group of middle-aged men who engage in irreverent discussions together on their shared drive to and from work each day, and the office complications that ensue for each man in between drives. The program co-starred
Jerry O'Connell,
Jerry Minor, and
Tim Peper, but again, it failed to gain a wide enough audience to carry on into a second season. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

- 2013
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- 2007
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Created by Bruce McCulloch of Kids in the Hall fame, the ABC sitcom Carpoolers chronicled the zany misadventures of four male suburbanites who, twice each working day, drove to and from the jobs in the same carpool. The unofficial leader of the quartet was Gracen Brooker (Fred Goss), a professional mediator who was self-conscious over the fact that his real-estate agent wife Leila (Faith Ford) and his 22-year-old "onliner" son Marmaduke (T.J. Miller) both had higher incomes than he did. Gracen's best friend and fellow carpooler was dentist Laird (Jerry O'Connell), who was in the middle of a divorce from his spouse Joannifer (played on a recurring basis by O'Connell's real-life wife Rebecca Romjin). The third member of the foursome was Aubrey (Jerry Minor), who eagerly looked forward to his daily 90-minute round trip as a brief respite from his lazy, overbearing wife and his seven repulsive children. The youngest and least jaded of the carpoolers was Dougie (Tim Peper), recently married to sweet Cindy (Allison Munn) and the father of an adorable baby son named Reggie. An agreeable if not hilarious harkback to the "ensemble" sitcoms of old, Carpoolers debuted October 2, 2007. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Fred Goss, Jerry Minor, (more)

- 2006
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Debuting with two back-to-back episodes on March 8, 2006, the half-hour ABC sitcom Sons & Daughters was clearly influenced by Fox's Arrested Development in its depiction of a large, extended, and extremely dysfunctional American family. Series co-creator Fred Goss headed the cast as human-resources rep Cameron Walker, who lived with his second wife, Liz (Gillian Vigman), and their two children, eight-year-old Ezra (Noah Matthews) and four-year-old Marni (Lexi Gold Jourden). The "spoiler" in the Walker household was Henry Walker (Trevor Einhorn), Cameron's profoundly embittered 14-year-old son from his previous marriage to the bipolar Paige (Melinda Allen). Elsewhere, Cameron's sister, Sharon (Alison Quinn), was mired in a sexless marriage with Don Fenton (Jerry Lambert), an auto-parts salesman and frustrated actor. Sharon's stepsister, Jenna (Amanda Walsh), a single mom struggling to make ends meet as a waitress, seemed to have a gift for invariably choosing the proverbial wrong guy. Rounding out this family group were Cameron and Sharon's high-strung and highly judgmental parents, Colleen (Dee Wallace Stone) and Wendal (Max Gail), and their outspokenly anti-Semitic aunt Rae (Lois Hall). To maintain a semblance of spontaneity, each episode was only partially scripted, allowing the actors to ad-lib and improvise within the framework of the story (Fred Goss had previously employed this technique on his Bravo network series Significant Others). Sons & Daughters was executive produced by Saturday Night Live's Lorne Michaels. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Fred Goss, Gillian Vigman, (more)

- 2005
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When a vacation video reveals that her husband is having a secret affair, the family camcorder becomes a weapon of truth for a married suburban housewife. Betty (Wendel Meldrum) was poring over her family vacation video when she realized that a telephone conversation captured on the tape revealed her husband's infidelity. Later, as Betty makes the transformation from typical housewife to single mother, the camera becomes her constant companion. Videotaping everything from gynecological exams to blind dates, Betty begins to realize the importance of editing her work as her archives become increasingly unruly. But while Betty's new obsession may seem strange to her family and friends, it doesn't take long to realize that there's no denying the truth when it's captured on camera. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Wendel Meldrum, Luke Humphrey, (more)

- 1991
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