Follows the lives and families of three adults living and growing up in the United States of America in present and past times. As their paths cross and their life stories intertwine in curious ways, we find that several of them share the same birthday - and so much more than anyone would expect.
This tv show contains 39 potentially triggering events.
In season 6 a character says a cat is going to get hit by a car and Jack laughs like it’s funny and then just leaves. There is no resolution on the cats future.
11:20 - Deja is opening a can & slices her hand open. If open wounds/blood bother you then skip to 12:05. She calls her mom but she doesn’t answer so she goes to the ER. you don’t miss anything by skipping ahead
There is a storyline of one of the characters who tells that they were SA as a child, it’s not a big part of the plot, it’s just an explanation of one of her decisions
i cant remember which episode but its not graphic. zoe vomits onto a tree after kevin and her arrive back from Vietnam.
In s5 an episode where young kevin is going to a football camp yet again not graphic but it cuts suddenly to him with his head in the toilet. its when he says he needs to go to the bathroom after being in a bar area
Season 6 episode 10, officer is about to book teenagers for tresspass and alcohol use but one of the teens has a quiet word and he let's them go with a 'happy thanksgiving.'
Veteran PTSD comes up several times, along with associated insomnia, flashbacks, substance use and other related difficulties. It is handled, imo, sensitively and well.
i cant remember which episode exactly (i think it's around early s2) but during the pearson's court case to adopt randall, the judge explains to them in private that he thinks randall should be raised in a black household. during this speech he tells them about when a "a white man called me a [n word]" yes, he does say the actual word. not sure why the majority here is no
in s5 Tess is dating 'Alex' who uses they/them. beth struggles at first to use the correct pronouns but does get there in the end and it is never intentional
A main character is shown developing Alzheimer's around season 5, and in season 6 the other characters navigate the illness. The person with the disease is treated with respect and dignity the entire time. As someone whose loved one died of this disease, I really appreciated the compassionate way they depicted it.