TV-sarjan luojat:
Robert BordenKuvaus:
Greg GardinerSävellys:
TranscendersNäyttelijät:
Ben Rappaport, Anisha Nagarajan, Diedrich Bader, Parvesh Cheena, Pippa Black, Rebecca Hazlewood, Rizwan Manji, Sacha Dhawan, Thushari Jayasekera (lisää)Jaksot(22)
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Pilot (E01)
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The Measure of a Manmeet (E02)
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Party of Five (E03)
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Jolly Vindaloo Day (E04)
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Touched by an Anglo (E05)
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Bolloween (E06)
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Truly, Madly, Pradeeply (E07)
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Home for the Diwalidays (E08)
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Temporary Monsanity (E09)
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Homesick to My Stomach (E10)
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A Sitar Is Born (E11)
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Sari Charlie (E12)
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Training Day (E13)
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The Todd Couple (E14)
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Guess Who's Coming to Delhi (E15)
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Take This Punjab and Shove It (E16)
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Todd's Holi War (E17)
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Gupta's Hit & Manmeet's Missus (E18)
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Charlie Curries a Favor from Todd (E19)
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Mama Sutra (E20)
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Rajiv Ties the Baraat: Part 1 (E21)
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Rajiv Ties the Baraat: Part 2 (E22)
Juonikuvaukset(1)
India...a diverse country of exotic cuisine, fascinating cultures, unique social customs...and the home of the Mid American Novelties call center. Unsuspecting management trainee Todd Dempsey is shocked when his job and department are relocated to the chaotic city of Mumbai. With no other career options, the Kansas native makes the jump himself and discovers that his most important work might just be teaching his eclectic group of Indian customer service reps what being American is all about. (jakelijan virallinen teksti)
(lisää)Videot (1)
Arvostelut (1)
I'm basically offended by every minute of this drivel. Building a sitcom on one of the most widespread stereotypes of Indian call centers might not be all that much of a problem, but Outsourced stagnates from the first minute, goes nowhere, and fails to find its own stance on things. The series hasn't even made the slightest effort to use the stereotype to its advantage and learn to juggle it. Moreover, the whole thing looks terribly amateurish, the same goes for the acting, and it's completely pointless to give it any chance whatsoever. There's no pacing and the timing is bad, so all that's left to answer is the basic thesis - once you know that real Indian films are what’s good, there's no compelling reason to take a step back to cautious fumbling. Once you've seen films like The Other End of the Line or Bride and Prejudice (which got you over your stage fright), Outsourced will do nothing for you.. The only thing that kept me going till the end was the soundtrack, largely made up of real Bollywood hits, and its interaction with the script. ()