
Who's In It: Kat Dennings, Beth Behrs, Garret Morris, Matthew Moy, Jonathan Kite
What It's About: Co-created by Whitney Cummings and Michael Patrick King, 2 Broke Girls centers on two broke 22-year-olds who tackle life in New York City as they try and accomplish their dreams. (Half-hour multicamera comedy)
When It Airs: Fall; Mondays at 8:30 p.m. on CBS
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BEVERLY HILLS — This isn’t the first time Two Broke Girls star Kat Dennings has worked with executive producer Michael Patrick King.
But Dennings only had a brush with King when she landed a guest-starring role on an episode of King’s Sex and the City.
“I played ‘blow job Bar Mitzvah girl,’ ” she told reporters at the Television Critics Association press tour. “It changed my life.”
King achieved hero status among 30-something single women with overextended credit cards and a closet full of Jimmy Choo shoes. But he cautions that Broke Girls – about two 20-something waitresses living in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn – is not the PG-version of SATC. Whitney Cummings, a former stand-up comedian who stars in an eponymous multi-camera comedy on NBC this fall, is also an executive producer on Broke Girls.
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SATC, said King, “was about girls in the 30s, those girls [had] relationship checklists. These girls barely have [pay] checks.
“The basis of [Broke Girls] is heart,” he added. “When I was on HBO I had full reign to show whatever I wanted. Sex And The City was never pornographic. It was romantic and funny. We don’t go after a joke for shock value.”
King described Broke Girls as “spicy” and “outrageous” with a “contemporary edge.”
Dennings (Thor, The 40-Year-Old Virgin) said she can relate to her character’s hardscrabble situation.
“We didn’t have any money when I was growing up” in Bryn Mawr, near Philadelphia, she said. “I was home-schooled. I used to get all my films from the library. I wasn’t allowed to watch TV growing up.”
Cummings chimed in: “But you were allowed to give blow jobs on Sex And The City?”
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