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|show_name = Weeds
|show_name = Weeds
|image = [[File:Weeds logo.png|240px]]
|image = [[File:Weeds logo.png|240px]]
|format = [[Comedy-drama]]<br />[[Dark comedy]]
|format = [[Comedy-drama]]<br />[[Black comedy]]
|runtime = 26 minutes
|runtime = 26 minutes
|creator = [[Jenji Kohan]]
|creator = [[Jenji Kohan]]
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|website = http://www.sho.com/site/weeds/home.do
|website = http://www.sho.com/site/weeds/home.do
}}
}}
'''''Weeds''''' is an American [[Black comedy|Dark]]<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=6Z1_nhk-itIC&pg=PA5&dq=weeds+%22black+comedy%22&hl=en#v=onepage&q=weeds%20%22black%20comedy%22&f=false Reading Desperate housewives: beyond the white picket fence] By Janet Elizabeth McCabe, Kim Akass</ref> [[comedy-drama]] television series created by [[Jenji Kohan]] and produced by [[Lionsgate Television]], which began airing on the [[Showtime]] cable television network in 2005. The show revolves around Nancy Botwin ([[Mary-Louise Parker]]), a widowed Southern Californian mother of two boys—Silas ([[Hunter Parrish]]) and the younger, Shane ([[Alexander Gould]])—who turns to selling [[cannabis (drug)|marijuana]] to support her family after her husband unexpectedly dies. Over the course of the show, Nancy becomes involved in illegal activities on an escalating scale.
'''''Weeds''''' is an American [[Black comedy|black]]<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=6Z1_nhk-itIC&pg=PA5&dq=weeds+%22black+comedy%22&hl=en#v=onepage&q=weeds%20%22black%20comedy%22&f=false Reading Desperate housewives: beyond the white picket fence] By Janet Elizabeth McCabe, Kim Akass</ref> [[comedy-drama]] television series created by [[Jenji Kohan]] and produced by [[Lionsgate Television]], which began airing on the [[Showtime]] cable television network in 2005. The show revolves around Nancy Botwin ([[Mary-Louise Parker]]), a widowed Southern Californian mother of two boys—Silas ([[Hunter Parrish]]) and the younger, Shane ([[Alexander Gould]])—who turns to selling [[cannabis (drug)|marijuana]] to support her family after her husband unexpectedly dies. Over the course of the show, Nancy becomes involved in illegal activities on an escalating scale.


The first three seasons deal mainly with selling and growing marijuana locally. Seasons four and five follows the Botwin family moving to Ren Mar after Agrestic—their hometown—burns down due to Nancy's competitive dealers' fields catching aflame. In Ren Mar, Nancy gets married to Esteban Reyes, the mayor of [[Tijuana]] and the head of a drug cartel, with whom Nancy had a baby boy, naming him Stevie. At the conclusion of season five, Shane murders Esteban's campaign manager, Pilar, a scornful woman who threatened to kill Shane and Silas. Subsequently, the sixth season follows the Botwin family as they attempt to escape both the federal authority and Esteban's cartel. In the conclusion of season six, Andy, Silas, Shane, and Nancy have plans to escape to [[Copenhagen]] together until Nancy is found by Esteban and Guillermo who plan to bring Stevie back to Mexico and kill Nancy. This forces her to turn herself in to the federal authority in an attempt to save her life.
The first three seasons deal mainly with selling and growing marijuana locally. Seasons four and five follows the Botwin family moving to Ren Mar after Agrestic—their hometown—burns down due to Nancy's competitive dealers' fields catching aflame. In Ren Mar, Nancy gets married to Esteban Reyes, the mayor of [[Tijuana]] and the head of a drug cartel, with whom Nancy had a baby boy, naming him Stevie. At the conclusion of season five, Shane murders Esteban's campaign manager, Pilar, a scornful woman who threatened to kill Shane and Silas. Subsequently, the sixth season follows the Botwin family as they attempt to escape both the federal authority and Esteban's cartel. In the conclusion of season six, Andy, Silas, Shane, and Nancy have plans to escape to [[Copenhagen]] together until Nancy is found by Esteban and Guillermo who plan to bring Stevie back to Mexico and kill Nancy. This forces her to turn herself in to the federal authority in an attempt to save her life.

Revision as of 18:12, 16 January 2011

Weeds
Created byJenji Kohan
Starring
Opening theme"Little Boxes" (episodes 1–38 and briefly in 57)
Country of originUnited States
No. of seasons6
No. of episodes76 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
  • Jenji Kohan
  • Craig Zisk (co-) (season 2) (executive) (season 3–present)
  • Roberto Benabib (co-) (season 1–2) (executive) (season 3–present)
  • Matthew Salsburg (co-) (season 4–5) (executive) (season 6–present)
  • Mark A. Burley (co-) (season 4–present)
  • Scott Ellis (co-) (season 6–present)
  • Lisa I. Vinnecour (co-) (season 6–present)
Producers
  • Lisa I. Vinnecour (associate) (season 1–2) (co-) (season 3–4) (producer) (season 5)
  • Danielle Weinstock (co-) (season 1)
  • Matthew Salsberg (co-) (season 1) (producer) (season 2) (supervising) (season 3)
  • Mark A. Burley (supervising) (season 1–3)
  • Devon K. Shepard (supervising) (season 1–2) (consulting) (season 3)
  • Victoria Morrow (co-) (season 5) (supervising) (season 6–present)
  • Brian Dannelly (consulting) (season 1)
  • Shawn Schepps (consulting) (season 1) (supervising) (season 2)
  • Barry Safchik & Michael Platt (co-) (season 2)
  • Paul Cajero (co-) (season 2)
  • Carla Corwin (co-) (season 3)
  • Rolin Jones (producer) (season 3) (supervising) (season 4)
  • Leslie D. Waldman (co-) (season 4) (producer) (season 5) (traditional) (season 6)
  • Chris Offut (co-) (season 5)
  • Scott Ellis (supervising) (season 5)
  • Vanessa Resein (supervising) (season 5)
  • Jonathan Talbert (associate) (season 5–present)
  • Stephan Falk (producer) (season 6–present)
  • Michael Trim (producer) (season 6–present)
  • Patricia Van Baalbergen (associate) (season 6)
Running time26 minutes
Original release
NetworkShowtime
ReleaseAugust 8, 2005 (2005-08-08) –
present

Weeds is an American black[1] comedy-drama television series created by Jenji Kohan and produced by Lionsgate Television, which began airing on the Showtime cable television network in 2005. The show revolves around Nancy Botwin (Mary-Louise Parker), a widowed Southern Californian mother of two boys—Silas (Hunter Parrish) and the younger, Shane (Alexander Gould)—who turns to selling marijuana to support her family after her husband unexpectedly dies. Over the course of the show, Nancy becomes involved in illegal activities on an escalating scale.

The first three seasons deal mainly with selling and growing marijuana locally. Seasons four and five follows the Botwin family moving to Ren Mar after Agrestic—their hometown—burns down due to Nancy's competitive dealers' fields catching aflame. In Ren Mar, Nancy gets married to Esteban Reyes, the mayor of Tijuana and the head of a drug cartel, with whom Nancy had a baby boy, naming him Stevie. At the conclusion of season five, Shane murders Esteban's campaign manager, Pilar, a scornful woman who threatened to kill Shane and Silas. Subsequently, the sixth season follows the Botwin family as they attempt to escape both the federal authority and Esteban's cartel. In the conclusion of season six, Andy, Silas, Shane, and Nancy have plans to escape to Copenhagen together until Nancy is found by Esteban and Guillermo who plan to bring Stevie back to Mexico and kill Nancy. This forces her to turn herself in to the federal authority in an attempt to save her life.

The first three seasons take place in the fictional town of Agrestic, California. The primary locale of seasons four and five is the fictional beachside border town of Ren Mar. During the sixth season, the Botwin family relocates to Seattle, Washington and then to Dearborn, Michigan, as a result of Shane's incident. The title plays on the word "weed", a slang for cannabis.[2] The title sequence of the first three seasons features the song "Little Boxes",[3] while seasons four and after depict intertitles.

The show first aired on August 7, 2005, and is currently in its sixth season, which premiered on August 16, 2010.[4] The first season of the series delivered Showtime's highest ratings, and the debut of the fifth season had Showtime's highest viewership for a show with 1.3 million watchers. In 2005, Parker won a Satellite Award and, in 2006, she was awarded a Golden Globe for her performance on the show. In 2006, Kohan earned a Writers Guild of America Award for her work on the pilot episode, with Gould receiving a Young Artist Award in 2006 for his supporting role. Justin Kirk—an ensemble cast member, who portrays the boys' uncle Andy Botwin—won a Satellite Award in 2008 for his performance. In 2010, series' director and director of photography Michael Trim won an Emmy Award for his cinematography contributions. The show has also been nominated for nine Emmy Awards, five Satellite Awards, four Golden Globes, and two Screen Actors Guilds. The show has been renewed for a seventh season.[5]

Production

Stevenson Ranch, California, a filming location for Weeds.

The exteriors for the show's first two seasons were shot almost exclusively in Stevenson Ranch, a suburban area of Santa Clarita Valley, California. The shot of the large fountain and Agrestic sign seen in the introduction of seasons 1–3 was shot at the corner of Stevenson Ranch Parkway and Holmes Place.[6] The name "Stevenson Ranch" was digitally replaced with "Agrestic" initially (and with "Majestic" in later episodes). The overhead, satellite picture displayed at the beginning of the show's introduction (seasons 1–3) is of Calabasas Hills, a gated community in Calabasas, California. The shot of the "It's A Grind" coffee shop in the introduction (seasons 1–3) is of an It's A Grind in Castaic, California.[7]

A version of this Wikipedia page served as the introduction for the season 5 episode titled "Where the Sidewalk Ends".

Season synopses

Season 1

The series' fictional Los Angeles, California, suburb of Agrestic is home to Nancy Botwin, whose husband Judah died of a heart attack while jogging with their younger son,[8] a few weeks before the series' pilot. Nancy's children, Silas and Shane, both attend Agrestic's public school system in the early seasons of the show. During season 1, Silas was 15 years old and Shane was 10.

To support her upper middle class lifestyle, Nancy begins dealing marijuana to her affluent neighbors and friends. Andy Botwin, Judah's younger brother, moves into the house after Judah's death to help Nancy out, though he also seems to be there to freeload, and often disrupts Nancy's life. Nancy's supplier is Heylia James, a major distributor in Los Angeles' West Adams district whom she met through Heylia's nephew, Conrad (who is Andy's friend).[9] After losing customers to a medical store, Nancy begins baking and selling pot-laced brownies. Acting on the advice of her accountant, city councilman Doug Wilson, she opens a retail bakery, stocked with Costco baked goods, as a front for her drug sales. Silas begins dating Megan, an attractive deaf girl at his school. Shane, troubled by his father's death, acts out, such as biting the foot of another child in a martial-arts tournament, earning him the nickname "Strange Botwin" from his fellow classmates.

Nancy's chief antagonist is her neighbor, Celia Hodes, a manic, image-obsessed, and manipulative person. Celia is president of the Agrestic PTA, and does not get along with her cheating husband Dean, nor does she get along with her sexually active 15-year-old daughter, Quinn (Silas' previous girlfriend), whom she sends off to boarding school in Mexico after the pilot. Her younger daughter, 11-year-old Isabelle, is overweight and constantly the target of her mother's passive-aggressive comments, though Isabelle seems to be mature for her age, and confident. Isabelle reveals late in the season that she is a lesbian, much to her mother's chagrin. Toward the end of the season, Celia is diagnosed with bilateral breast cancer. The brush with her own mortality softens her abrasive personality and leads her to treat her own daughter with more courtesy and respect for a time. She quickly returns to form after her recovery. However, before her surgery, she meets Conrad and has sex with him. After Andy is notified to report immediately for his previously agreed-on military service (where he will be trained and then sent to Iraq) or be sentenced to a military prison, he announces that he is studying to become a rabbi as a dodge to avoid his military obligation.

Drug dealing turns out to be more difficult than Nancy thought, as she discovers when she expands her customer base to Valley State College and is threatened by a rival drug dealer who considers it his territory. She then has a brief sexual encounter with him. Also at Valley College, her entire stash of product is stolen by a campus security guard during a fake arrest, threatening the survival of her lifestyle and family. Unbeknownst to her, Conrad and some of his friends pay a visit to the security guard, attacking and severely beating him. The net result is that the guard politely returns the marijuana to a puzzled Nancy, apologizes profusely, and offers to assist her and her business in any way he can. Nancy and Peter Scottson, the single father of the kid bitten by Shane in a karate tournament, develop a mutual attraction, and they end up sleeping together. There is also a mutual attraction between Nancy and Conrad, much to Heylia's annoyance. The season closes with Conrad convincing Nancy to expand by becoming a grower as well as a dealer. They form a "team" that includes Doug, Dean, Sanjay, Andy, and Alejandro. However, Nancy then encounters a shocking complication: she learns that her new boyfriend Peter (Martin Donovan) is a DEA agent.

Season 2

The second season, while still comedic, has a much darker tone, as Nancy becomes increasingly involved in the more dangerous aspects of the drug world. In season 2, Silas was 16 years old and Shane was 11. Ignoring Heylia's advice, Nancy and Conrad start their own small-scale growing operation and eventually rent a suburban "grow-house"—a place where they can grow marijuana indoors using artificial light and hydroponics. She welcomes other people into her business, including her brother-in-law Andy and accountant (and customer) Doug. During this season, Peter Scottson tells Nancy he knows she is a drug dealer, but considers her too small time to be worth busting, and the two are married as part of a deal to legally protect Nancy from Peter testifying in a court of law. While Nancy's drug activities increase, Celia runs for, and wins, Doug's spot on the town council. Her victory is due to the incompetence of her husband Dean (a lawyer), who forgot to file Doug's paperwork, leaving him off the ballot. She immediately launches a drug-free campaign across Agrestic complete with drug-free zone signs and surveillance cameras. Doug and Celia share a strong desire for revenge on Dean, which inspires a brief sexual liaison.

Silas and Megan's relationship threatens to split apart once she leaves for college (she, a very serious student, has gotten into Princeton, while mediocre student Silas is going to a local school). Silas attempts to get her pregnant to prevent this, but instead his success leads to an abortion and a violent confrontation with Megan's father, ending the relationship. Andy tries to develop a relationship with an attractive, sexually formidable administrator, Yael Hoffman, at his rabbinical school, but the relationship falls apart once he drops out due to an incident at the grow house where a dog bites off two of his toes, which he thinks will invalidate him for military duty.

As the season progresses, Nancy's children become more aware of her illegal activities, though the two sons deal with the issue in quite different ways. Shane continues to have problems fitting in at school and his friends begin to ridicule him for his sexual inexperience, though being hypocritical. To solve this problem, his uncle Andy takes him to a massage parlor to get a "happy ending" hand job. Gaining confidence, Shane joins the debate team in order to get closer to Gretchen (a girl Shane kicked in the hallway), who later becomes his girlfriend. But he later breaks up with her because of an obsession with Andy's crazy ex-girlfriend, Kat. Silas, on the other hand, takes out his frustrations by committing acts of vandalism, most notably stealing Celia's drug-free zone signs and cameras, which he sees as helping his mother. Meanwhile, Nancy has received threats from an Armenian group of dealers who have grow houses all around hers and see her as encroaching on their territory. Nancy tells Peter, and he has them all arrested.

Nancy and Conrad's drug business becomes a hit as Conrad's strain of plant (which Snoop Dogg dubs "MILFweed" during a chance meeting at a recording studio) pleases their customers; but their high profile causes trouble. Initially, Nancy's marriage to a DEA agent keeps her on top while her Armenian rivals were busted, but her marriage to Peter deteriorates after she tips off Heylia when the DEA plans to raid her house and Peter pressures her to quit dealing. For Nancy, the final straw is when Peter comes over for dinner and manhandles Silas. Nancy calls Conrad and tells him that she doesn't love Peter but will string him along until the current harvest is done; Peter hears the conversation with wireless surveillance. Meanwhile, Doug and Celia plan to leave their spouses. Celia tells Dean, but Doug refuses to leave his wife, Dana,stating that "she's a sweetheart". Their affair ends. Dean kicks Celia out of the house and demands a divorce.

The season concludes with a complex series of betrayals, as Peter demands of Nancy and Conrad all of the cash from a quick sale of their crop. Secretly, Heylia hires Armenian mobsters to kill Peter as she believes Peter is planning to kill Conrad after the deal. Nancy's buyer, U-Turn (Page Kennedy), demands the entire crop of weed at gunpoint. Having just killed Peter, the Armenian mobsters arrive at the same time and expect the proceeds from the big sale to pay for their hit, but finding that U-Turn plans on stealing the weed and that there is no money, decide they will take the weed instead. Only then does Nancy discover that Silas has decided to force his way into the business through having stolen the entire batch of weed, and then demanded to be part of the business. Having just hidden the batch in his car trunk, he is approached by Celia and a police officer for the theft of the drug-free zone signs and surveillance cameras, as Celia has footage of Silas stealing the last camera. This leaves Nancy at the grow house, in a Mexican standoff with both the gangsters and the mobsters pointing guns at her in a season-ending cliffhanger.

Season 3

The third season of Weeds begins with several subplots involving the fallout from the botched drug deal of the season 2 finale: Celia finds and destroys the entire harvest; U-Turn pays the mobsters to leave Nancy to him alone; Silas is arrested and sentenced to community service; Sanjay (Maulik Pancholy), comes out of the closet, but U-Turn forces him to have sex with a woman who becomes pregnant with his child. During season 3, Silas and Shane remain the same age, however, as the series goes on Shane turns 12.

During the first half of the season, Nancy works to pay off her debt to U-Turn based on Celia's destruction of an entire pot harvest and U-Turn saving her life. Nancy also gets a legitimate job working for Sullivan Groff (Matthew Modine), a crooked developer from the neighboring community of Majestic, and she soon becomes his lover. Celia, who has also been intimate with Groff, resents Nancy for this.

Silas begins selling pot for his mother using the alias Judah and meets Tara (Mary-Kate Olsen), an evangelical Christian who enjoys smoking pot and helps him sell it too. Shane and Isabelle become outcasts at the heavily-religious Majestic summer school and form a friendship. Shane is also having conversations with his dead father, who he insists is really there, as familial stress increases. Nancy gets called in by the DEA, and is terrified that she is being busted. But it turns out that they've found out about her marriage to Peter Scottson, and have a hefty life insurance policy to give her.

At U-Turn's behest, Conrad and Heylia start a grow business. U-Turn sees talent in Nancy and trains her to be his lieutenant, while simultaneously starting a war with rival Mexican dealers. When U-Turn has a heart attack while jogging, Marvin suffocates him to death and becomes the new boss of U-Turn's crew. Marvin botches an attempted truce with the Mexicans, allowing Nancy to clear all debts for her and Conrad and end the gang war.

Debt-free, but feeling lonely, Nancy attempts to befriend Peter's ex-wife, Valerie. The two bond over their screwed-up lives.Their friendship turns sour when Valerie demands the money from Peter's life-insurance payout, which she feels she is earned by her years married to her and the child they have together. Nancy promises to give it to her, but has to first use most of it to replace the money Doug "borrowed" from the Agrestic treasury to help Nancy get back in business, pay his divorce lawyer, and get laser eye surgery. Despite giving her several smaller payments, Valerie believes that Nancy will never give her her full due and that Peter had an off-the-books stash of cash of which Nancy knows the location, so she hires a private investigator to trail Nancy. The investigator finds out Nancy is a drug dealer and blackmails her for most of the remaining life-insurance money in exchange for not telling Valerie or the DEA. Nancy pays the money but ensures the investigator won't come after her again by blackmailing him for blackmailing her. Nancy confronts Valerie by telling her that she would have gotten the money despite Nancy having no obligation to give it to her, but that now, due to Valerie's investigator, Nancy no longer has any money to give Valerie.

Meanwhile, the nearby Christian community of Majestic has been attempting a hostile takeover of Agrestic, with Doug leading the charge due to the large amount of money it will bring in. But Groff's gift—a new house in Majestic—to Celia leads to jealousy, and Doug begins sabotaging the Majestic city infrastructure, although it is already too late, as Celia brings it to a public referendum. To get back at Groff, Doug steals the giant cross from Majestic's megachurch, eventually putting it inside the growhouse. Meanwhile, Dean has a motorcycle accident, which forces Celia to take care of him against her will. Heylia and Conrad are forced to move the grow operation and Nancy negotiates the use of Celia's off-the-books house in Majestic. Andy has a brief excursion into the pornographic film industry, also at Celia's off-the-books house, and later befriends a group of bikers while trying to score with one of its female members; they want him to start selling their weed. Nancy and Conrad become lovers while hanging out at the growhouse, but Conrad realizes he has no future with her. Nancy turns to Guillermo—the leader of the Mexican dealers—to get protection when the bikers threaten her family after she refuses to sell their low-quality "ditch weed". Guillermo decides to burn down the biker's marijuana field, causing a huge fire which spreads to the Agrestic area. At that time, thermal cameras spot the stolen cross and the DEA moves in.

Nancy, meanwhile, takes advantage of the fire and pours gasoline throughout her house and lights it with a match, ensuring that she and her family will be leaving and moving on, and there will be no evidence of their drug activities.

Season 4

On November 5, 2007, Showtime ordered 13 new episodes for a fourth season of Weeds.[10] The fourth season started on Monday, June 16, 2008 and concluded on Monday, September 15, 2008.[11] The season opener "Mother Thinks the Birds are After Her"[12] was the last episode with "Little Boxes" as the theme song. The opening credits of subsequent episodes, after a recap of previous episodes, begin with a video title card unique to each episode. For the second episode of the season, for example, a highway sign reads "Weeds", "Created By", and "Jenji Kohan"—the embedded text used for all title cards since the show's inception. Each title card also has a prop or part of the setting morph into a marijuana leaf. In the highway sign example, a downward arrow designating a lane becomes a slightly larger pot leaf. In season 4, Silas was 17 and Shane was 13.

Having lost both her Agrestic grow house and her residential house in fires, Nancy relocates her family to the fictional California town of Ren Mar immediately north of the San Diego/Tijuana border.[13] They move in with Andy and Judah's father in Ren Mar, while Guillermo has Nancy smuggle asthma inhalers over the border by car, but Nancy discovers that it was a dry run to test her abilities. Celia, in jail for being the official lessee of Nancy's burnt-down grow house, and implicated by all involved, bargains for her release in exchange for spying on Nancy. After Guillermo's men catch Celia spying, Nancy convinces them to spare Celia's life. Andy enters a coyote partnership with Doug, who has recently moved to Ren-Mar to evade questions about Agrestic's finances. Isabelle, unenthusiastic about moving with her father to Detroit, pesters her mother Celia until she agrees to let her live with her in Ren Mar. Silas sets up a grow room in the rear of a gourmet cheese shop owned by his new ten-year-old neighbor's mom. She is an attractive woman, who is in her thirties, and despite being aware that Silas is underage, consummates their business and sexual relationships. After revealing that her interest is purely financial and physical, a heartbroken Silas spurns her advances and ends their business relationship. Meanwhile, at his new school, 13-year-old Shane attacks without provocation the most popular boy at school and acquires a fearsome reputation, attracting the admiring attention of Simone and Harmony, two of the more dangerous girls at school, to whom Shane loses his virginity in a threesome.

Guillermo's as-yet-unidentified boss sets up Nancy in a maternity store in a San Ysidro mall, through which she thinks she can launder money. But in the back of the store Nancy finds an underground tunnel opening, and is told it is exclusively an endpoint for transporting marijuana from Tijuana. But Nancy later learns that it is used for smuggling other controlled substances as well as guns and apparently trafficking in women for what looks to be unwilling prostitution. A shocked Nancy informs DEA Captain Roy Till of the tunnel despite an ongoing sexual relationship with Guillermo's crime boss Esteban Reyes (Demián Bichir), who is also Mayor of Tijuana. The resulting DEA raid and shootout at the maternity shop ends with most of the Mexican drug runners arrested.

While working at Nancy's store, Celia's polysubstance abuse disorder is worsened by the easy availability of drugs from the back of the store. Isabelle and Dean stage an intervention leading Celia to embrace rehab and vowing to make amends to her family. Dean rejects her apology and insists that she apologizes directly to her oldest daughter, Quinn, whom Celia sent during the show's first episode to Casa Reforma, a Mexican boarding school. Since graduation, Quinn has been living with a Mexican revolutionary, Rudolfo. Celia agrees to travel south to make amends, but upon her arrival, an unforgiving and violent Quinn has her drugged and captured. Quinn plans to ransom her mother for $200,000, telling Rudolfo she would give none of the money to his "faggy revolution", but would instead move to Belize.

In the season finale, Esteban discovers that it was Nancy who had alerted the DEA to his smuggling tunnel, and he captures her—probably to be followed by killing her as a lesson to others. But he lets her live after she tells him that she is pregnant with his child, and that it's likely to be a boy (he has only daughters.) At home, Shane steals Silas' weed and, with Simone and Harmony, begins selling it to classmates at school. Doug had fallen for an illegal alien he names "Mermex" as she unsuccessfully tried to enter the United States by beach. After much searching, Doug locates her and uses his coyote enterprise to get her into California. Instead of gratefully rewarding Doug's efforts, Mermex is repelled by his unapologetic nature and his genital warts. She instead falls in love and sleeps with his Coyote partner Andy, who has become a folk hero known as "El Andy". Scorned and hurt, Doug turns Mermex into immigration. Realizing that poverty denies those pursuing anything of any money, Doug writes his estranged wife, daring her to take him to court in a pseudo-suicidal note, and then prepares to hang himself. Andy wonders if he is in love with Nancy and questions why he has stayed with the family for so long.

Season 5

The season 5 debut attracted 1.2 million viewers, with a rerun on the same night adding another 500,000 viewers for a cumulative 1.7 million. In season 5, Silas was 18 and Shane was 14.

After Nancy informs Esteban that she is pregnant, she is allowed to live, but Esteban has bodyguards assigned to her and forces her to undergo a chorionic villus sampling to be sure the baby is a boy and his. Anxious for her younger son's safety, Nancy sends Shane to her sister, Jill Price-Grey (Jennifer Jason Leigh), with Andy in Northern California. In the latter, Jill arrives back with Shane and Andy. Jill explains that Shane took pictures on his phone of Andy and her together having sex in the laundry room. Meanwhile, Nancy's older son Silas draws up a new plan to start a legal medical marijuana business, which Nancy funds. The bodyguard mysteriously disappears and Nancy panics because he was probably murdered.

Quinn's attempt to extort money from Celia's family or friends fails, since none of them are willing to pay any ransom, and her later plan to kill Celia and sell her organs doesn't pan out due to her having had cancer. This leads to an internal dispute between Quinn and Rudolfo, and their relationship ends. Celia tries to get Rudolfo to let her stay with him but he drugs her and puts her on a bus to Texas. With nowhere else to go, she ends up squatting in Nancy's garage, where she finds the body of the missing bodyguard. The new bodyguard catches DEA agent Captain Roy Till and Nancy calls Esteban, who has Till killed. Andy suggests that he and Nancy have an abortion and flee with US$180,000 he found in Judah's old bank account, because she will never be free if she has a baby with a Mexican drug lord. Nancy instead leaves a note for Andy, saying she, Shane, and Silas have moved in with Esteban.

Six months later, Esteban proposes to Nancy and she accepts, but a woman from Esteban's past, Pilar (Kate del Castillo), surprises Esteban with a visit. After a heated discussion regarding Nancy's effect on his political ambitions, he tells Nancy that their engagement is off. Cesar, Esteban's chief aide, arranges a birthing room in the house, so there will be no record of the baby's birth. Escaping Esteban's house with Andy's aid, Nancy gets to her obstetrician, Dr. Audra Kitson (Alanis Morissette), who takes her to the hospital and delivers the baby. To protect his political career, Esteban will not sign the birth certificate. Nancy moves back in with an increasingly distrustful and leery Andy, who agrees to sign the birth certificate, hoping she'll free herself from Esteban; he also gets Nancy to give the baby a Bris, much to Esteban's dismay, as Andy is culturally Jewish but Nancy and Esteban are not. Esteban wants to see his son and comes to Nancy's door to ask her to marry him again. At the same time, an assassin trying to kill Nancy accidentally shoots Shane in his left shoulder. Nancy confronts Cesar, who admits that he was involved, and that Nancy was the intended target of the attempt ordered by Pilar. The hit was not completed because Cesar could not bring himself to do it. Nancy keeps the betrayal from Esteban in exchange for shooting Cesar in the arm, like Shane had been. Esteban finds himself replaced as a candidate for governor, but with encouragement from Nancy, he runs as an independent.

Meanwhile, Shane's problems relentlessly increase. He witnesses violence at the hands of Esteban's bodyguard. He is more aware than Nancy of the violence inherent in his new stepfather's character and business, and seems frightened that he could be killed at any time. He continues to sell pot at school and when a teacher steals a bunch of product, Shane reacts violently. Shane goes to the teacher's apartment and kills his pet bird with a gun. Silas refuses to go abroad to study, expressing worry that Shane is going to "crack up". After Shane is unexpectedly shot in the arm, Shane eschews painkillers, saying he prefers the pain. Instead, he begins drinking alcohol—sneaking it from the refrigerator as desired.

Silas and Doug's shop is having problems; as Doug keeps eating their products, he is stoned all the time, and does not keep up his work responsibilities. The policeman in their pay begins demanding more money or he will cause them troubles. But then, they are raided by a sting set up by Internal Affairs against the cop, and they lose all of their pot. They go to Dean to help them get it back. Meanwhile Celia, who had been working in retail at the mall, gets a job as a cosmetics seller for a Mary Kay-like company. Unable to sell the products, Celia gets Dean to give the pot to her and starts selling it packaged with the cosmetics. Doug finds out that Celia stole their pot and he and Dean plot revenge.

Meanwhile, Andy begins a relationship with Audra, with the family moving into Esteban's house, as Nancy and Esteban get married at home. Nancy visits Guillermo in prison to have him arrange the assassination of Pilar in exchange for Nancy getting Guillermo extradited to Mexico. Esteban becomes the front-runner for governor despite Pilar's rejection, but he is arrested in Mexico for suspicion of conspiracy, racketeering and tax evasion. Nancy and Cesar go to get Esteban from jail, but they find out on national television that Esteban had been already released and is rerunning for governor. Pilar had had him arrested and is blackmailing him into joining her ticket and becoming her puppet in exchange for being freed, while letting Esteban free despite the evidence Pilar has on him. Pilar confronts Nancy and tells her that she and Esteban must do everything Pilar dictates. Andy announces that he is going to propose to Audra, with his mother's ring, previously given to Nancy by her late husband Judah. Nancy is upset and initially refuses to give Andy the ring, but later relents.

Thereafter, Celia gathers Doug, Dean, Sanjay, Ignacio, and Isabelle—teaming them up to sell marijuana in a deliberate echo of season one when Nancy did the same. Pilar discreetly, but forcibly, escorts Nancy from a fund-raising party. As they walk by a pool on the outside deck, Pilar reveals to Nancy that she was aware of her actions. Pilar then suggests that the unfortunate deaths of Shane and Silas, appearing to be accidental, would generate a sympathy vote for Esteban. Nancy then warns Pilar that she will kill her if she takes such attempts toward her children. Without warning, Pilar is hit in the head by an unseen third party and ends up floating face down in the pool bleeding profusely from the head. Shane appears next to Nancy, holding the croquet mallet he just used to murder Pilar.

The fifth season finale episode premiered on Monday, August 31, 2009, averaging 1.3 million viewers, up versus season 4's finale that averaged 1 million.[14]

Season 6

The sixth season premiered on Monday August 16, 2010 at 10ET/PT on Showtime.

The Botwin family flees north in the wake of Shane's killing of Pilar. Andy joins them after Audra breaks off their relationship. Being unable to cross the Canadian border without the baby's birth certificate, Nancy, Andy, Silas, Shane and Stevie assume new identities as "The Newmans" (as Nathalie, Randy, Mike, Shawn and Avi, respectively) and settle in Seattle. Silas is 19 in this season with Shane, 15, the same age as Silas at the beginning of the series. Stevie would be 1 considering time frames.

Nancy, Andy and Silas take menial jobs as scab labor at a local hotel, where Nancy discovers the resident drug dealer to be on strike. Seeing an opportunity to fill that void, she seeks out a local distributor (Hamilton) and, realizing she does not have enough money to buy much marijuana, she instead buys up the seller's trimmings and produces hashish, using the hotel's laundry equipment. While the rest of the family works, Shane babysits Stevie. Back in southern California, Esteban tasks Cesar and Ignacio with finding Nancy and bringing back his son. While looking for clues at the Ren Mar house, they encounter Doug and coerce him into helping find the Botwins.

Andy asks Nancy to romantically free him, as he cannot do it himself. He begs her to tell him it will never happen, to which she replies with an inconclusive answer. As Nancy and Andy begin to leave the weed dealer's house, they are confronted by two police officers and asked about the unpaid parking tickets from the stolen license plates on Andy's minivan, resulting in the decision that the family would flee again. Cesar and Ignacio receive a phone call from OnStar about the location of the van (which blew a tire when Andy tried to remove the police boot with a blowtorch). Cesar, Ignacio, and Doug then travel to Seattle and search for clues in the van. After Nancy convinces Silas to steal his girlfriend's car, she spots Doug tied up in the back of Cesar's car at the motel and Cesar arguing with the manager. As she panics and hysterically tries to gather the family, a series of bizarre problems occur, culminating with Shane calling to tell her he'd been kidnapped by Cesar and Ignacio.

Cesar negotiates a trade with Nancy: Shane for Stevie. Despite agreeing, Nancy meets Cesar with Gayle's crossbow hidden in a bassinet, then shoots Cesar in the leg. She receives a phone call from Ignacio, who unintentionally tells her about his run in with her three sons, Andy, and Doug at the local diner. When Nancy arrives there, she joins the group at the table and attempts to negotiate with Ignacio by holding a gun under the table. Ignacio calls her bluff - Shane then takes the gun. Ignacio reluctantly folds to Shane. Now the Botwin family and Doug continue off-the-grid living according to Andy. During the flee, they stop at a carnival (much to Andy's disapproval). They end up winning a RV, but without proper identification they are unable to claim it. Liking the idea of RV travel, they purchase an older used RV and travel to an out-of-the-way trailer park. Andy and Doug pose as a preacher and assistant, taking appropriate donations. A frustrated Nancy goes to a bar and has sex with the bartender. The next day she finds out the bartender has a wife who is also her neighbour and they are subsequently chased out of town.

As the Botwins continue their nomadic lifestyle on the run in their RV, they stop in Colorado. They continue to bargain for the trimmings of other dealers' weed. In Aspen, Nancy and Andy drop off Silas and Shane to sell hash. When Stevie's feces are an abnormal colour, Nancy decides he needs a pediatrician. Shane discovers Silas wants to apply for college, and Silas in turn learns Shane doesn't have any of his own back up plans. At the pediatrician's office, Nancy sees herself on the TV listed as a missing person. The doctor says Stevie is fine, but suggests the baby may not be bonding with her, and that the baby's lifestyle could be a factor, making her rethink their way of life. Andy suggests moving to Denmark, with which Nancy agrees.

The group travels to Nancy's hometown, Dearborn, where they stay with Nancy's former high school teacher Mr. Schiff (Richard Dreyfuss), with whom she had a sexual relationship from the age of 14. Silas discovers that Judah is not his father, but rather Nancy's former boyfriend Lars is. The Botwins are found by an investigative journalist named Vaughn, who is writing an article about Nancy. She gives him the information he needs to write her story in exchange for cash to buy passports. Doug returns to Agrestic, retitled Regrestic after the fire, where he tries to win back his wife. Mr. Schiff steals money from a post office for plane tickets to Copenhagen for the family, himself included. Silas says goodbye to Nancy, intending to stay behind with Lars. Nancy goes to meet Vaughn a final time before leaving, only to find his room has been ransacked with Esteban and Guillermo waiting for her.

Esteban and Guillermo take Nancy to the airport, where they plan to find Stevie. Nancy makes contact with Andy, telling him they are going to use "Plan C". After Esteban threatens Silas and takes Stevie, Nancy agrees to leave the airport with them, and they tell her that they intend to kill her. Andy, Silas, Shane and Mr. Schiff board the plane to Copenhagen (via Paris), but Mr. Schiff is arrested for robbing the post office. As Nancy leaves the airport, the FBI are waiting for them outside. As part of "Plan C", she confesses to the murder of Pilar, thus saving her own life after ensuring the safety of her family, in particular, Shane.

Overnight ratings for the season six finale showed the show on 990,000.

Season 7

The show has been renewed for a seventh season.[15] Taken from an interview with TV Guide on Nov 16, 2010; [Interviewer: Has the network given any indication that it will be the final season?] Kohan: In my mind, it is. Everyone's contract is up next year, the actors and mine. Seven years is a good run, and I'd rather leave while on top. I'd never say never, but I have a feeling this might be it. [TV Guide Editor's note: A Showtime spokesperson says any decision on an eighth season will not be made until next summer.][16]

Cast and characters

The cast of Weeds during Season 2, Left to Right: Romany Malco, Tonye Patano, Mary-Louise Parker, Kevin Nealon, Elizabeth Perkins, and Justin Kirk. This image was also used for the Season 2 DVD box set.

The leading character is Nancy Price Botwin (Mary-Louise Parker), a housewife from southern California who becomes a cannabis dealer after her husband Judah dies. Although her drug-dealing career only achieves mixed success, she eventually rises to the highest levels of an international drug-smuggling cartel. Nancy remarries twice during the series. First, she has an under-the-radar wedding with Peter Scottson, a DEA agent, who was later killed. In later seasons, she marries Esteban Reyes, the fictional mayor of Tijuana and leader of a cartel. In the wake of Judah's death, Nancy has her brother-in-law and Judah's brother, Andy (Justin Kirk), to help by living with her. Andy is initially a fun-loving slacker but later emerges as a primary father figure in the Botwin household.

Nancy begins the series with two sons, and post-Judah's death, they are raised haphazardly. The eldest, Silas (Hunter Parish), who was sexually promiscuous since the show's debut, later follows in his mother’s footsteps as a cannabis dealer, grower, and dispensary operator. Shane (Alexander Gould) is an intelligent boy who is poorly socialized and deeply affected by his father’s death, which causes him to have conversations with his dead father by the conclusion of the third season. He was also bullied in his local public school during the first three seasons, and subsequently, upon moving to Ren Mar, Shane loses his virginity and becomes a temporary alcoholic. By the fifth and sixth seasons, he becomes a "psychopath"; in other words, he executed Esteban's campaign manager with a croquet mallet by the pool deck, days after she "put a hit on [his mom] and took a shot at [him]". In the fifth season, Stevie Ray Botwin was born to Nancy and Esteban.

Celia Hodes (Elizabeth Perkins) was Nancy’s friend and principal antagonist. She is obsessed with her personal image and alternatively manipulates or ignores those around her that do not fit neatly into that image. She has a distasteful marriage with Dean (Andy Milder), whom she regards as a “loser asshole;” they divorce in the latter. Many other characters also despise her. Her older daughter, Quinn, kidnaps her as revenge for shipping her to a reform school in Mexico. She is demanding and manipulative over her youngest daughter, Isabelle's “weight problem” and is critical over her decision to be gay. Celia had an openly hostile relationship with Doug Wilson (Kevin Nealon). By the end of season one, she has breast cancer and is cured with chemo therapy. Doug Wilson (Nealon) begins the series as an accountant and city councilman for the town of Agrestic. However, due to poor choices and misfortune, he loses his privileged lifestyle and becomes a drifter who follows the Botwin family during seasons four through seven. Doug is friends with many characters in the series including Andy and Dean.

The show has a changing cast of major supporting characters. Heylia James (Tonye Patano) and her family play a key role during the first three seasons. They are wholesalers who supply marijuana to Nancy, who in turn distributes to retail customers. When Nancy moves to Ren Mar, the characters in Esteban’s drug cartel take a leading role. Other key characters included Nancy’s housekeeper, Lupita; rival drug dealers; DEA agents including her second husband, Peter; romantic interests of Andy, Silas, and Shane; and the residents of Ren Mar. This trend continues during the sixth season; however, as the story sees Nancy on the run, most introduced characters have only minor roles and only appear in one or two episodes. An exception to this is Warren Schipp (Richard Dreyfuss), who also has an affectionate love for Nancy after being her math teacher in high school, and allows Nancy reside at his house for the final part of the season.

Episodes

As of November 15, 2010, 76 original episodes of Weeds have been produced and broadcast. The first season began August 8, 2005 and consisted of 10 episodes. The second season premiered on August 14, 2006, airing 12 episodes. The third season debuted on August 13, 2007, airing 15 episodes. The fourth season began June 16, 2008, and the fifth season on June 8, 2009, each with a total of 13 episodes. The sixth season, with 13 more episodes, began airing in August 2010. Creator Jenji Kohan has written 15 of the episodes, including each season's premiere and finale.

Some of the show's episodes encountered leaks. It had appeared on the Internet prior to their showing. Creator Jenji Kohan has stated that she does not mind episodes being distributed on the internet in this way, saying, "Revenue aside, I don't expect to get rich on Weeds. I'm excited it's out there. Showtime is great, but it does have a limited audience."[17]

In 2006, before Season 2 started airing on Showtime, the first few episodes were leaked online.[18] Before the third season began the first two episodes appeared online on July 22, 2007 (nearly a month before the August 13 premiere date). The third episode appeared online on July 24, with the fourth appearing just three days later. The fourth episode was, however, an incomplete version—among other things, some dubbed lines were not complete (notably part of a voice mail message by U-Turn is spoken by a distinctly different actor), and a card simply reading "End Credits" was inserted instead of the actual credits. On August 1, 2010, the first episodes of season 6 leaked online. Due to the high quality of the leaked episodes, downloaders of the torrents speculated that they were leaked intentionally to garner interest in the show and to create internet buzz.[18] Episode leaks of other Showtime programs such as Californication and Dexter were seen as giving weight to this theory.[18]

Media

Opening music

"Little Boxes" is the opening song for the first three seasons of the show; the version recorded by Malvina Reynolds is used during the first season. In seasons 2 and 3, the song is performed by various artists. In season 4, the Malvina Reynolds version opens the first episode. Thereafter, the original titles and music are replaced by a short clip, different for each episode, which bears relevance to the plot or some scene later in the episode.

Soundtracks

The music supervisors for the show include Gary Calamar (along with music coordinator Alyson Vidoli) (27 episodes), Amine Ramer (4 episodes), and Bruce Gilbert (3 episodes). The original score is provided by composers, Brandon Jay and Gwendolyn Sanford.

DVD and Blu-ray releases

DVD Name # of Ep Release dates
Region 1 Region 2 Region 4
Season One 10 July 11, 2006 September 3, 2007 July 18, 2007
Season Two 12 July 24, 2007 January 7, 2008 May 28, 2008
Season Three 15 June 3, 2008 May 26, 2008 July 8, 2009
Season Four 13 June 2, 2009 November, 2009 March 17, 2010
Season Five 13 January 19, 2010 TBA November 24, 2010
Season Six 13 February 11, 2011 TBA TBA

The Region 1 Season One DVD is only available in 4:3 pan and scan format. The Region 2 and 4 releases are all in anamorphic widescreen. Season One was released on Blu-ray on May 29, 2007, and Season Two was released on July 24, 2007. Both seasons include all episodes in 1080p widescreen with Dolby Digital EX sound and either DTS-HD (Season One) or LPCM (Season Two), as well as extras exclusive to the Blu-ray release. Season Three was released on Blu-ray on June 3, 2008. Seasons One to Three on Blu-ray are multi-region discs, but Season Four has been region-locked to region A only. This is due to a lack of broad international pick-up by non-US broadcasters at the time of release, meaning Showtime does not wish to prejudice any future transmission rights negotiations by having the season available to own before it could be broadcast in the countries concerned.

In late 2009, Weeds Season Four and Season Five have been aired in at least one region B country, namely The Netherlands.[23] Subsequently, a region 2 DVD of Season 4 has indeed been released.[24][25] However, the region 2 DVD release was not accompanied by a region B Blu-ray. Showtime have not commented on whether they ever anticipate releasing a region B Blu-ray version, whether or not any further non-US transmission rights are agreed. The same region locking has been applied to Blu-ray Season Five.[26]

An extra feature on the Season Two DVD was rejected by the British Board of Film Classification since it was regarded as "likely [...] to promote and encourage the use of illegal drugs".[27][28]

Books

On August 7, 2007, Simon Spotlight, a division of Simon and Schuster, published In the Weeds: The Official Guide to the Showtime Series by Kera Bolonik, which features interviews with the show's creator, its writers and crew, and the entire cast. It also features detailed character and plot descriptions, recipes, trivia and behind-the-scenes information.[29]

Reception

In its first year, Weeds was the highest rated series for Showtime. Its fourth-season premiere attracted 1.3 million viewers to Showtime, the channel's highest-ever viewership; the season as a whole averaged 962,000 viewers. Season 5 premiered to 1.2 million viewers, with a rerun on the same night adding another 500,000 viewers for a cumulative 1.7 million. The final episode of the show's fifth season aired on August 31, 2009 and attracted 1.3 million viewers.[14]

Slate magazine named the character of Nancy Botwin as one of the best on television and one of the reasons they were looking forward to the return of the show in fall 2007.[30] Time magazine's James Poniewozik named it one of the Top 10 Returning Series of 2007, ranking it at #9.[31] The New York Times opined the show is "transforming for Showtime."[32] Metacritic scored season two, four and five a score of 78, 67 and 73 respectively.

Awards and nominations

Won

Award Title Credit Year
Satellite Awards Actress in a Series, Comedy or Musical Mary-Louise Parker 2005
Golden Globe Awards Best Performance by a TV Actress in a Musical or Comedy Mary-Louise Parker 2006
Writers Guild of America Episodic Comedy Jenji Kohan 2006
Young Artist Awards Best Supporting Young Actor - Television Series Alexander Gould 2006
Satellite Awards Actor in a Series, Comedy or Musical Justin Kirk 2008
Emmy Awards Outstanding Cinematography for a Half-Hour Series Michael Trim, Director of Photography 2010[33]

Nominated

Golden Globe Awards
Best TV Series-Comedy (2006, 2007, 2009)
Best Actress in a Supporting Role in a Series, Mini-series, or TV Movie Elizabeth Perkins (2006): Best Performance by a TV Supporting Actress Elizabeth Perkins (2006, 2007)
Best Performance by a TV Actress in a Musical or Comedy Mary-Louise Parker (2005, 2007, 2008)
Best Performance by a TV Supporting Actor Justin Kirk (2007)
Screen Actors Guild
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Comedy Series Mary-Louise Parker (2006, 2007, 2008, 2009)
Ensemble In A Comedy Series (2007, 2009)
Satellite Awards
Outstanding Actress in a Series-Comedy Elizabeth Perkins (2005)
Best Actress in a Supporting Role in a Series, Mini-series, or TV Movie Elizabeth Perkins(2006)
Best Actress in a Series, Comedy or Musical Mary-Louise Parker (2006, 2008)
Best Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series, Mini-Series, or TV Movie Justin Kirk (2007)
Best Television Series, Comedy or Musical (2007, 2008)
Emmy Awards
Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series Elizabeth Perkins (2006, 2007, 2009)
Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series Craig Zisk, for the episode Good Shit Lollipop (2006)
Outstanding Casting for a Comedy Series (2006, 2007)
Outstanding Main Title Design (2006)
Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series, for the episode Good Shit Lollipop (2006)
Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series Mary-Louise Parker (2007, 2008, 2009)
Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series, for the episode Mrs. Botwin's Neighborhood (2007)
Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series, for the episode Crush Girl Love Panic (2007)
Outstanding Comedy Series (2009)

References

  1. ^ Reading Desperate housewives: beyond the white picket fence By Janet Elizabeth McCabe, Kim Akass
  2. ^ "Weed". Merriam-Webster, Incorporated. Retrieved September 15, 2010.
  3. ^ Halperin, Shirley (May 22, 2008). "'Weeds' goes theme song-less for new season". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved September 13, 2010. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  4. ^ "Sixth Season Of "Weeds," Three New Series To Premiere On Showtime". All Headline News. March 23, 2010. Retrieved March 25, 2010.
  5. ^ http://www.hitfix.com/articles/showtime-renews-weeds-the-big-c
  6. ^ Google Street View http://c-it.co/hu7zRx
  7. ^ Calabasas Hill location: 34°08′12″N 118°39′21″W / 34.136655°N 118.655798°W / 34.136655; -118.655798
  8. ^ "You Can't Miss the Bear". List of Weeds. Season 1. Showtime. Vaneeta: Can you imagine though? Boy out, jogging with his Daddy, having a good time. Then boom, Daddy drops. That would fuck a kid up. {{cite episode}}: External link in |transcripturl= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |transcripturl= ignored (|transcript-url= suggested) (help)
  9. ^ Nancy: Give me a little respect. I'm the biggest game in the private community of Agrestic. Heylia: Drugs sell themselves, biscuit, you ain't shit. [...] Take that crap off my money. You not giving me a present, you're paying me for weed."You Can't Miss the Bear". List of Weeds. Season 1. Showtime. {{cite episode}}: External link in |transcripturl= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |transcripturl= ignored (|transcript-url= suggested) (help)
  10. ^ Kimberly, Nordyke (November 24, 2007). "Showtime Deals 'Weeds' a Fourth Green Light". Archived from the original on April 10, 2008. Retrieved February 26, 2008.
  11. ^ "Showtime Cultivates 'Weeds' in June - Fourth season paired with 'Secret Diary of a Call Girl'". Zap2it.com. February 13, 2008. Retrieved June 3, 2009.
  12. ^ "Showtime - Weeds Episodes". Archived from the original on August 22, 2008. Retrieved September 20, 2008.
  13. ^ "Ausiello Scoop: Albert Brooks Joins Weeds - Ausiello Report | TVGuide.com". Community.tvguide.com. April 14, 2008. Retrieved June 3, 2009.
  14. ^ a b http://tvbythenumbers.com/category/ratings/nielsen-top-cable-tv-show-ratings
  15. ^ "Showtime orders more 'Weeds' and 'The Big C'". ew.com.
  16. ^ "Weeds Finale Post-Mortem: Creator Jenji Kohan Says Show May End After Next Season". TV Guide.
  17. ^ "Weeds creator loves illegal downloads of show". TVSquad.com. August 7, 2007. Retrieved June 3, 2009.
  18. ^ a b c "Massive Leak of Pre-Air TV Shows: Piracy or Promotion?". TorrentFreak. July 24, 2007. Retrieved July 24, 2007.
  19. ^ "Weeds 1st season music". Showtime. Archived from the original on August 22, 2008. Retrieved September 15, 2008.
  20. ^ "Weeds 2nd season music". Showtime. Archived from the original on August 22, 2008. Retrieved September 15, 2008.
  21. ^ "Weeds 3rd season music". Showtime. Archived from the original on May 31, 2008. Retrieved September 15, 2008.
  22. ^ "Weeds Season Three Soundtrack Set for Digital-Only Release June 3, 2008". Top 40 Charts.com. April 22, 2008.
  23. ^ http://www.comedycentral.nl/tv/programma/122/weeds.html
  24. ^ http://www.bol.com/nl/p/dvd/weeds-seizoen-4/1002004007168405/index.html
  25. ^ http://www.wehkamp.nl/Zoeken/ArtikelDetail.aspx?SC=BOX&ArtikelNummer=178429
  26. ^ http://dvdworldusa.com/shopexd.asp?id=71115
  27. ^ Chris Summers (June 20, 2008). "What is obscene these days?". BBC News. Retrieved June 21, 2008.
  28. ^ "Weeds - Season 2 - Cream of The Crop - DVD Extra Rejected by the BBFC". British Board of Film Classification. June 22, 2007. Retrieved 18 August 2010.
  29. ^ Bolonik, Kera (2007). In the Weeds. Simon Spotlight Entertainment. p. 288. ISBN 1416938788.
  30. ^ Turner, Julia (September 21, 2007). "Oh, How We've Missed You!". Slate magazine. Retrieved September 23, 2007.
  31. ^ Poniewozik, James (December 9, 2007). "Poniewozik, James; Top 10 New TV Series;". Time.com. Retrieved June 3, 2009.
  32. ^ Pope, Kyle (August 6, 2006). "For Showtime, Suburban Angst Is Fast Becoming a Ratings Delight". NYTimes.com. New York Times. Retrieved June 3, 2009.
  33. ^ "2010 Emmy Nominations: Outstanding Cinematography for a Half-Hour Series". Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. 2010. Retrieved September 15, 2010.