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Weeds is an American comedy-drama television series created by Jenji
Kohan, produced by Lionsgate Television for the Showtime network.
The plot revolves around a widowed housewife (Mary-Louise Parker) from
an affluent California suburb who becomes her neighborhood's marijuana
dealer to make ends meet. The title is a play on words, referring to
both the slang term for marijuana and widow's weeds, it also refers to
the tendency of American suburbs to grow quickly and pervasively, with
the dwellings and their residents being almost as indistinguishable as
weeds; this is mirrored in the show's theme song "Little Boxes" and
opening credits, and is a recurring theme of the show itself. The
theme song changes in the second season. The change consists of a
different version every week.
Weeds currently comprises five seasons that began airing in August
2005. It was the highest rated series for Showtime its first year; 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.[citation needed] Showtime announced on July 18, 2008
that two more seasons of thirteen episodes each will be produced.[1]
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.
Mary-Louise Parker won a Golden Globe for her performance on the show,
and Jenji Kohan won a WGA award for her screenplay for the pilot
episode. The show was notably nominated for 15 Emmy Awards and 10
Golden Globes.
The final episode of the show's fifth season aired on August 31, 2009.
The sixth season is not yet scheduled, but will air in 2010.
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