"The Z-Suite," is a new original scripted comedy from Tubi, of all places. Tubi is one of those, "Freemium," streaming services that has random movies and shows you can watch at zero cost as long as you can put up with some advertisements now and then. They've done some original shows and movies, but this is their first comedy television-style show. All jokes aside about how Tubi originals sometimes appear to have low budgets, "The Z-Suite," does not look cheap. It also has a solid cast! The show focuses on a GenX executive named Monica (Lauren Graham, who is fantastic here) and her assistant Doug (Nico Santos). They end-up fired from an ad agency she's a bigwig at when one campaign hilariously backfires and causes a scandal. The fact that she's awful and can't even apologize to the public makes things worse with her Baby Boomer boss and the GenZ employees who find themselves promoted to Monica's level of power and struggle with this newfound degree of control over a company.
"The Z-Suite," could fall into a pit of stereotypes considering it is about generational conflict, but it manages to avoid doing so thanks to how everyone is a little bit terrible on the show, regardless of their age. The young employees like Kriska (Madison Shamoun), Eliot (Spencer Stevenson), and Clem (Anna Bezahler) might know what is popular and have mastered a lot of new tech, but while they have youthful exuberance they don't always know exactly what's going on and they can be self-centered jerks. Monica is out of touch with a lot of trends and what is hip, but she does have a strong work ethic...despite being a self-centered jerk (you may see a trend). Old or young, we all can think we know everything and refuse to consider other views. "The Z-Suite," walks a tightrope with this idea and manages to pull off a show that has some darkly hilarious moments stemming from misunderstands, miscommunications, and some general silliness too. Plus, at least all the characters can agree that Matt (Evan Marsh) is unsure how he fits into everything as a Millenial--he results in some great moments, however, and I saw a bit more of myself in his awkward quirks than I'd like to admit as a fellow Millenial.

"The Z-Suite," is clever and carefully threads a needle between, "Old people, am I right?" and, "These young folks, you know what I mean?" Nobody comes out looking perfect or without blame because regardless of our age, we all can be terrible or awesome depending on the situation. I applaud, "The Z-Suite," for using humor in pointing this out, and I can't wait to watch the latest episode when the next one drops this Thursday!
5 out of 5 Stars.