Frasier is one of TV's greatest characters. Started on Cheers where his intended one-off appearance transitioned into a lengthy run. That transitioned into his own series, one of the few spinoffs to ever surpass the source. His long run on NBC between Cheers and Frasier gave us some of the best comedic episodes of all time. The interactions between Frasier and the remaining cast on both shows are classic and timeless. Yes, Frasier the show fell off the beam a little bit at the end when Niles and Daphne finally got together, but it was still one of the best television comedies ever. To the very end it remained consistently enjoyable. The character Frasier was an integral part of two of the most iconic TV comedies in history and spanned something like 20 years.
Now, many years later? How many? I had to look. 19 years. Now 19 years later, Frasier is back. Back in Boston. But without the supporting characters. There's no Sam, Diane, Norm, Cliff, Carla, Woody, and Rebecca to bounce off. There's no Martin, Daphne, Niles, Roz, Bulldog, Gil, Bebe, or even Eddie to counter. There's a new group that includes Niles/Daphne's son, Frasier's son Freddie, an old college pal, a sharkish woman from Harvard, and Freddie's female roommate. Unfortunately not a single one of them has the presence or the comedic chops of any of his past co-stars.
Without a supporting cast that is his equal, an (obviously aged) Frasier has to carry the entire show by himself and it just doesn't work. That's what made Cheers and Frasier so good. Sure, Frasier was a major character and then the main character, but it was the ensemble that drove the shows, not just fussy Fras. That's lost here.
This likely short-lived series (because I'll be surprised if it's renewed) serves as a completely unnecessary and ponderous coda for a character who left on top and in one of the best ways imaginable. The original Frasier series had a perfect ending. Very few shows can stick that landing. Cheers and Frasier both managed it well. Tacking this on now seems..... well.... wrong.
I don't want to revisit Cheers, either.