Last Chance U (TV Series 2016–2020) Poster

(2016–2020)

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8/10
Good for entertainment, bad for society
harrylosborne27 August 2019
Sports documentaries are a personal favourite, but Last Chance U is a rare example of a sport's true colours shown through big budget filmmaking. Set in the collegiate American football setting of small town America, this show highlights everything inherently wrong with the system and the mindset that goes as standard with the sport. Being premier recruitment colleges for those denied a chance in the major leagues (sometimes through bad luck, sometimes through bad choices), they are breeding grounds for dangerous mentalities in children who genuinely know no better.

It starts with the coaches; men who have lived with the sport their entire lives, but who don't always understand the way teenagers think. On top of this, their academic teachers toil to get them almost unattainable grades to give them that slim chance of success, constantly fighting against a tide of setbacks and resistance. Finally, the students - arrogant, boisterous and over-pressured athletes thrown into stardom from the minute they discovered their talent, now deluded into thinking they are untouchable future stars.

The stupidity is that the cameras only enable these kids to act like superstars. Suddenly they have their inner belief of stardom reinforced by a full film crew following their every move - regardless of whether they win or lose. It's even made clear on the show: every single one believes they are going to make it to the NFL, but only the luckiest ever even get close. The teachers know it and try to make it clear, but nothing will dissuade these students of their dreams. You watch it with mixed feelings of pity and anger; they genuinely know no better, but they act so poorly they must know they deserve nothing from these people who give everything to help them in ways they don't appreciate. The few students who do eventually cross the line and are kicked from school all pretend to repent when the cameras are pointed at them, but the follow-up interviews make it clear some of them are just genuinely bad people.

Whilst this makes entertaining television with its various twists, it also presents the damage this society perpetuates. Whole communities suffer: these isolated towns devote their funds entirely to sportsmen they've never met, sacrificing all other academic students and their pursuits. Moreover, these students then push themselves through potentially life-threatening injuries, convinced they can handle "only another concussion" or a "small loss of feeling in their legs" from being hit repeatedly.

By the close of each season, you wonder if any of those you have seen grow throughout the show will be around for many more years. Some of them cannot resist the vicious cycles of crime and delinquency they have grown up in; others simply can't get the grades needed to take the next step. At the end of the day, the schools only care about the score after 60 minutes.
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9/10
A well executed insight into Junior College Football
boeing1008 August 2016
"Last Chance U" is a fantastic program in many aspects, but shines the most at a human level. The vast majority of these young men have gone through many hardships in their life, and see EMCC as their golden ticket to a potential future to the NFL. Director Greg Whitely did a fantastic job at capturing the highs and lows, both on and off the field of this band of brothers. You quickly get very invested in the different players as you cheer them on at each touchdown. The show also makes you feel like a disappointed sibling, when some of the players miss class, or fall short from some of their training.

Some might argue that Coach Stephens is the centerpiece to this large and complex puzzle, but in my opinion Brittany Wagner, the school's academic adviser, absolutely steals the show. She is the loving and caring mother figure that many of the players desperately need and pours her heart and soul to make sure all of them keep on track for success.

Another absolute must watch from Netflix, which will keep you engaged from beginning to end.
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8/10
Entertaining and Thought-Provoking Documentary
schindler-413135 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
This is an excellent documentary that truly captures what it is to be a part of a football team in the South. Larger than life personalities mingle and clash unfiltered within the setting of the most "Southern" of the southern states, Mississippi, where no two things matter more than Jesus and Football. What makes the South different than most places is that it unabashedly wears its soul on the outside for all to see. It is an impossible Gumbo of compassion, hope, joy, camaraderie and love mixed in with hypocrisy, bombastic narcissism, misplaced priorities, mistrust and deep social issues. At first glance it appears incredibly dysfunctional, but in the end it somehow makes sense. I feel that this documentary captures the reality of the South and of Mississippi.

This documentary also exposes the universal issue of institutions of learning bending to the needs of their Athletic Programs. So often the tail is wagging the dog. Even so it complicates the issue by firmly highlighting that for many Athletics provides the only viable opportunity to escape a life of poverty and violence.

There are people like Brittany Wagner (in the documentary), who devote their lives to forging opportunities for others, and their contributions too often go unnoticed. We live in a screwed up world, it is refreshing to see people like her who refuse to give up on the lives of others.
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9/10
Great Documentary, Some Negative Stereotypes
jbrumundsmith12 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
If you like sports documentaries, you are going to love this series. Most people are hesitant to go into a documentary not knowing the subjects, but the filmmakers do a great job introducing you to what you need to know right away. Overall, this a great documentary that is very well put together, but the subjects can certainly aggravate you.

East Mississippi Community College, which you have probably never heard of, is the focus of this documentary. The head coach obviously gets a lot of air time, as well as some of the star players (a few quarterbacks and some other intriguing characters, of course) and their academic adviser. There is no real "star" of the documentary, but the person most people rooting for is that academic adviser, Brittany Wagner. She is the only character who seems to fully understand her role at the college and give her best effort in a meaningful way.

The head coach, Buddy Stephens, is like a combination of every negative stereotype of head football coaches. He is loud, overweight, aggressive, mean, and unable or unwilling to understand that kids make mistakes on the football field. In one instance, he reams out a player for missing a block, reams him out some more, then comes back for a third reaming and pushes the kid. The kid says to the coach that he didn't need to push him, which makes Coach Stephens bench him for the rest of the game. Coach Stephens is your classic bully football coach who sees no problem is publicly humiliating his players for even the most minor of offenses.

Of course there are players on the team who are highlighted as well. All have a different story that lead them to a community college, and seem to really have the same goal in mind: getting out of there to someplace better. Skipping classes and not listening are recurring themes. Some players say they are all about the team, but do not sound genuine about it. Overall they want to win, of course, but seem more interested in where that winning will take them.

The cinematography is beautiful. The setup and layout are beautiful. These filmmakers really know what they are doing. If you love sports and are interested in how athletics have affect human emotions, this series is highly recommended.
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8/10
I don't get it but I loved it
didem_o9 April 2019
As a French woman, living in France I do not get ANYTHING about American football. But I really loved the show and enjoyed the games; even though everything went a little over my head This is a really good show and it made me love American football!
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8/10
A very interesting and touching look at the life of student athletes
BoundingSlinky30 August 2016
This series is more of a documentary than a 'netflix-series', and that's the way you should look at this. If you're just looking for a TV-series to lighten you're mood, then this clearly isn't for you. If you are, however interested in the subject of the importance of education, if you want to have a good look at how the American college system works ( especially if you're not from the US this is interesting), than this series might be exactly what you're looking for.

What sets Last Chance U apart from other 'reality-series' is the different angles where it is coming from. From the grad student, to the renominated coach Buddy Stephens, to the concerned tutor of the college athletes who is desperately trying to get them graduated at the end of the year. You really understand the importance of the situation, the legacy that these young athletes are trying to maintain. It also doesn't really feel like a real documentary-series, although you keep getting reminded that this in fact has really happened before.

However Last Chance has a hard time trying to keep my focus, maybe it was just me but I found myself numerous times being distracted while watching the series. and while this is no doubt a real documentary, I couldn't help myself but finding it all a bit by the books. It almost sounds like a classic football story which you have seen so many times before. I couldn't help myself wondering if some things were really scripted.

Still if you can get yourself invested in the stories of these coaches, students and their surroundings, you do really get a real reward out of it, because it does leave a mark. It really gave me satisfaction to get to know the stories of so many lives in this little Mecca of American football. So if this subject is your niche... you should definitely check it out.

7,5/10 Verdict: A very interesting and touching look at the life of student athletes
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8/10
After Two Seasons of Buddy the Bully.
Veterans-Word8 September 2017
Warning: Spoilers
My review for "Last Chance U" after watching two seasons.

I waited to write this review until I completed the second season of the show because I wanted to see if changes were made by Buddy Stephens. I am glad I waited because I now have even more fuel to throw at that overweight bully. In the first season, Coach Stephens has some choice words for his players after the massive brawl with Delta at the end of the first season. He refers to them as thugs and rednecks. He berates and insults them on a daily basis by telling them to "Shut Up" all the time. This man is no coach and it is obviously he only cares about his status as a coach rather than the players he coaches. Season one ends with EMCC being disqualified from the post season.

Season two opens with Buddy Stephens giving his "Woe is Me" speech and saying how he is going to change after viewing himself in the first season. He even goes as far and doing push ups for cursing. (That won't last long). After a few episodes he continues to berate his players by constantly telling the to "shut up" and goes as far as to tell his own coaching staff that they are terrible. The running back gets a serious injury, concussion, and is treated properly but when he sprains his ankle the coaches call him weak and punish him for being hurt. Coach Stephens is a horrible coach, he doesn't care about his players. He only cares about his National Championship, is JUCO Buddy not the NCAA, relax. At the end of the second season, the finale game, Buddy is shown having a one way conversation with Coach Wood, he is yelling and cursing at him, in front of the players mind you, and kicks him off the sideline. This guy kicked his own OC off the sideline. The show is good but Buddy Stephens is a real piece of work and terrible person. The loss in staff shows you he is impossible to work with and the only sad thing about the second season was Ms. Wagner leaving.
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10/10
JUCO Life & Football
funnygurl6154 August 2018
Although I routinely read the user reviews for shows and movies, I have never written one. After reading some of the reviews of this sports documentary I felt compelled to make a comment. :Last Chance U" provides great insight to how life is at Community College and the athletes in the sports programs.

As a life long football love the series didn't catch my interest right away and I really regret that fact, because its an awesome show. The student athlete stories are told with great detail and the directors add just the right amount of game action for balance.

My concern with the comments about the players seem stereotypical. Seems some people really do not understand these players circumstances even after watching the show. A lazy student is not the same as one that is ill equipped as a product of a poor educational system. Some have no idea how to study and have not ever learned study skills. Many students simply are not prepared for college after graduating from high school. Brittany Waggoner makes the same assessment after leaving the show that this problem is prevalent and not confined to Mississippi.

I also noticed that she didnt understand why some of the players would basically give up and leave. The feeling of being overwhelmed and behind with trying to catch up is stressful. Many students leave college but their experiences are based on harsh realities that must be dealt with in a caring manner. She does come across and genuinely caring for the students but fails to identify what life is really like for them. I love the show and look forward to watching more seasons !!
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8/10
Seasons 1 - 3 uplifting, Season 4 depressing
laurenMagoo23 July 2019
Great to see the ups and downs with the sport, but man season 4 is depressing.
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7/10
Freakishly Fateful Ending was Riveting
dansview26 August 2016
The director made sure there was never too long without some game action, or at least some conflict. That was key to keeping our attention.

This film of course did not reflect well on football players in general. They come across as lazy, self-absorbed, irresponsible, and feeling entitled. Football is not supposed to simply produce or nurture great athletes. It is supposed to build solid men.

The counselor woman had a tough choice. Because the guys were already getting the tough cop routine from their coaches. So she probably didn't want to be too tough on them. She either chose the mom/buddy approach, or it just came naturally, or perhaps we didn't see the tougher side of her off camera. At times I felt frustrated that she wasn't tougher on the players.

One thing this show made me realize, is that pro football should have a minor league. Why should guys who have no interest in school, be forced to attend, just so they can continue playing? It's absurd. Just create a minor league, like baseball has.

A person could have a career in the minor league, or play in the Arena League, or Canada, etc. There are plenty of options. Why do you need college?

Needless to say, this piece of work does not reflect well on African Americans, rednecks, or the South. The coach is a beast, the players seem almost lobotomized, and the culture looks bland and hopeless. The physical geography looked very inviting however.

Lesson to be learned: You can't just swear, fight, lie, and screw, and then say an "Our Father," and wash it all away. You have to try not to do those things in the first place.

But what made the whole thing worth it, and what I never came close to predicting, was how a bizarre chain of events redeemed and jettisoned the career of one player, who seemed to be almost out of the picture.
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9/10
A solid sports reality series
gwnsystems21 April 2018
Warning: Spoilers
This was on my watch later literally forever, before I decided to jump in.

The first two seasons follow the East Mississippi Community College Lions, a junior college football team in the less than 1,000 person town of Scooba, MS, not far from the Alabama state line.

The team is a veritable powerhouse, with core players recruited from Division 1 programs, after being dismissed, or leaving of their own accord. The players are predominantly black, poor, from places you've not heard of and struggling badly with college life, particularly academics. A fair number are in Scooba because there is literally nothing to do but play Madden, go to Subway, or meet girls, which for most of them, is far less trouble than they knew before. The viewer, if paying attention, will literally want to throttle at least two players an episode.

Besides the players, two people feature prominently in each episode. Buddy Stephens, the head coach, is a "large and in charge" type, who suffers nothing and is all about two interrelated things, winning, and getting players NCAA offers, to ensure new recruits for next season, to keep winning. In the 2nd season, Stephens is somewhat upset with the way he acted during the first and resolves to better himself, although it's not clear how successful he is.

Brittany Wagner, the academic advisor, is probably the most easily liked person on the show, as she basically pushes a boulder uphill in trying to get the players to maintain the GPA they need to be NCAA eligible. It's hard work, players skip classes, don't submit assignments, argue with teachers and so on. It is literally all she can do to get some of them to take a pencil and notebook to class.....in college.....really! By the end of season 2, Wagner clearly is becoming frustrated, but never stops genuinely caring about the players she's paid to help.

The film itself is a well shot documentary, where the crew is able to keep a good handle on the drama within the team week to week. You see a team that wins, making no friends along the way, then that animus boil over, then the team pay for it for the next year and a half. By the end of season two, Wagner is planning to leave EMCC, as are both co-ordinators and a few other coaches, as Stephens' attempts at personal development don't progress very considerably and he begins to openly resent the presence of the film crew. The players mostly get their offers, some don't and one of the main players in Season 2 now stands accused of a murder. I more or less binged 2 seasons(6 and 8 episodes of around an hour each) in a week and a half. Season 3 just wrapped up shooting.....at a JC in Kansas. I'd highly recommend this and eagerly await next season.

Update:

Seasons 3 and 4 feature Independence Community College in Kansas. The production team succeeded in finding a place to pick up right where they left off. The coach has issues, so do some players, some are decent kids who are struggling hard and the whole thing boils over soon enough. I don't have the recency to be any more thorough, but it's on par with seasons 1 and 2.

Season 5 features Laney College in Oakland. The coach is a bit more mellow, the players are are a little less intense than before, but the same issues are largely present. It's a good watch as well.
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7/10
Surprisingly good show. Terrible sports system though, shameful really.
garnet-suss21 July 2021
So far I've seen seasons 1, 2 and 5.

The documentary is really interesting and surprisingly well done. It's really disheartening though. Talk about a horrible system that these kids come up in. Also, all the preaching done by the coaches is despicable. They should be disciplined for that, and fired if they don't stop. Lastly, the head coach in season 5 says a lot of terribly chauvinistic things that perpetuates rape culture. He often compares winning a game to having their way with a woman..."go out there and get that a**!!!" and something like "shove your dick up there and don't ask permission!" are a couple of the many things he says, and, of course, the players repeat and mimick that type of talk every time. Those quotes aren't verbatim, but that's the gist of it. That coach should be fired, it's terrible that he's been allowed to coach for 40 years.

The coach for East Mississippi (S01 &S02) is so verbally abusive ,it's unreal.

Good docuseries that highlights a lot of negative aspects of college sports, and there are MANY to highlight.
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Rankings of all seven seasons including basketball
joefishel3 April 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Here are the rankings of all seven seasons (including basketball) based on the entertainment value, with a brief summary of each season.

1) Basketball season 1 Due to the roster of a basketball team being much smaller than that of football, this season became the most engaging because the viewer got to learn about everyone that was part of the program. The ending of this season was the most dramatic of any season. It was a heartbreaking end to the ELAC season.

2) Football season 1 Perhaps due to the fact that this was the first season and the format of the series was an unknown commodity, the viewer quickly got pulled into the drama of the EMCC football program. It was hard to hit the stop button after each episode.

3) Football season 3 This season was the third most entertaining mainly due to the lunatic that was the head coach, but he actually seemed to care more about the kids in his program than the coach at EMCC.

4) Football season 2 The second season with the EMCC program was not as good as the first.

5) Football season 4 Although he was still very entertaining in a trashy reality tv-type way, the continuing shenanigans of the head coach began to get tiresome and boorish as the season progressed.

6) Basketball season 2 Due to COVID, basketball season 2 covered three different school years in some capacity. It seemed as if the coaches were over having cameras in their faces at all times during the course of this season. In addition, the players in basketball season 2 lacked the charm of those in season 1.

7) Football season 5 This was not a bad season at all, but the head coach and program were too normal to be very entertaining. No one wants to see a smooth flow of traffic, they want to see a trainwreck. Being a former college football player, if I had to choose a coach and program to play for from the four schools highlighted in the Last Chance U. Seasons, it would be the one at Laney College highlighted in this season. The other coaches (especially the football coaches at the first two schools) just had way too much drama in their programs and it seemed as if they often lacked institutional control of their teams. A trainwreck is entertaining, being in a trainwreck is not.

My rankings should not be interpreted as those at the bottom were not entertaining or engrossing. Each season was solidly put together and very engaging, but some were just more interesting (in an often bad way) than others.
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3/10
Uhhg
shadowxassassin16 August 2016
A decent documentary, but the content upsets me to no end. Pretty much sums up everything that's wrong with college in the US. Having been a college student at one point. Its upsetting to see the amount of resourced devoted to people who have to business being in school. the fact that there are peoples jobs who are entirely devoted to keeping the athletes in school by basically babysitting them every moment of the day makes me as an educator doubt that any of my students deserve to be in school, or that a college degree means anything at all. And that the coach can do an say things that would get any of my professor colleagues fired 50 times over further illustrates the difference between athletes and students, and why schools should not put a huge portion of their funding to athletics in areas where they will never see that kind of profit. so 6/10 for film-making and 1/10 for subject matter
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8/10
Covering the Wasteland of JUCO
view_and_review12 December 2019
I have a love hate relationship with this show. I love football and I love documentaries, but I don't like this coach (season one and two coach) and I don't even like some of these players. As for those that I do like, I want to see them succeed. But that's not always the goal of a documentary anyway--to get you to like someone or something. A documentary brings the viewer information about a subject they didn't know before or were never even aware of.

I consider this show a documentary and not a "reality show" because it's not about false narratives or fake drama with a soft script. It's just documenting these young men as they try to make something of themselves in the wasteland of junior college. And junior college is a wasteland.

High school is where you get started. That's where you learn, grow, and display your skills for recruiters. A four-year university (preferably a D1 school) is where you're at the next best thing to the NFL and it's your best chance to get noticed by the NFL. JUCO is where you go when you've screwed up. Either you've screwed up in high school or you've screwed up at your four-year university. So, to see this no-man's-land of education and football on screen is fascinating.
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8/10
Great documentary with a suspenseful match every episode
jonathan1995-746-92693911 August 2018
The layout of most episodes follows like this:

  • Players train up for a match and you get to follow their lives and the backstory of a bunch of players that the documentary focuses on. Especially the coach.
  • You get an insight in what their studies is like and what hardships they face.
  • The episode finishes with a football match that is edited with suspensefulness like a movie.


There is much to like about this series as you see the team spirit throughout and beyond the team to the town folks.
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9/10
Great
spongedanis30 July 2020
Season 1-2-3 were great! Season 4 was good. But season 5 was just boring for me. Didn't seem like i was watching Last Chance U.
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10/10
I can't believe I watched this!
kjessex8 August 2020
First of all, I never understood why people played or even liked football. Personally, it's just comes across as violent. So, I watched Last Chance U to try to gain some insight. Well, I gained that and so much more. Besides Game of Thrones, I have never watched something so intensely. I really gained a true understanding of why players play and why people watch. I caught myself riding the highs of winning and feeling the lows of loosing. For someone who doesn't really watch sports, I found it extremely entertaining. I couldn't stop watching! Now, will I start watching football on a regular basis? Probably not, but this documentary made me understand the passion behind the sport and I gained an appreciation that I didn't have before. A great documentary!!!
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8/10
So much going on
bartkow29 July 2020
I enjoyed this show right from episode one. I enjoyed Scooba the most of the three programs that were highlighted. Coach Brown was a roller coaster at Independent, and you really jump from being on board with him, to hoping he gets sent on his way. I believe he most likely let the excitement of the cameras dictate his actions and do things that maybe would have been too far prior. Season 5 overall didn't live up to the others for me, although there were some really good stories and characters to cheer for. And so happy that the coaches wife was able to get out of San Diego cos there "were too many white people and people of privilege". I'm sure they were happy to get rid of that attitude to be honest.
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10/10
Love it
anthonyt1418 July 2019
I'm in love with this show. It has so many amazing things in it. Talented kids with big dreams in need of a lifeline. I love being able to see these kids develop in front of the cameras and some of the teachers shown are truly amazing to be able to get the best out of them. You don't even need to understand football to be able to watch it, but that part makes it even better.
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7/10
Season 3
dansview26 July 2018
This one was way better than the other two seasons. That's because the coach had heart and made some interesting and thoughtful statements. He swears just as much as the guy from the other seasons, but he has a sympathetic personal back story, he's younger, and he's quite intelligent. One thing that strikes me as odd is how locals take pride in the team, when none of the players or the coach are from the town, or even from the state. Essentially they are just a bunch of guys renting the field in town, with little or no interest in the town or the school or classes. Yet the locals refer to them as "we." That's the irony of college and pro sports fan culture. The lady English teacher seems nice, but she doesn't have anything interesting to say, and seems kind of obsessed with ethnic pride. I'm not sure what being the English teacher has to do with counseling these knuckleheads anyways, and surely teaching them ethnic pride is not in her job description. But she tries. Look, she did say one good thing, if not grammatically correct. Which is ironic since she is the English teacher. "Everybody does not make it to the NFL." It would have been better to day, "Not everyone makes it." Anyways, these kids are lazy and stupid. Some of it is the fault of circumstance and some of it is their own fault. But I don't think many will make it to the big league. Some may play in Canada or Europe. But they are entitled dopes either way and that's a darn shame.
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8/10
Get back to Scooba
jdcarron28 July 2019
Love this show but they should not have left EMCC. ICC is boring, Coach Brown was not entertaining, the whole 4th season was a depressing train wreck.
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Re: ugggh
oneeyedrat26 August 2016
I've only watched the first episode so far, and I'll watch the rest. But I am so dismayed about your frustration with the community college culture. My husband was a music teacher in a CC, and realized that these kids just need a little more discipline, a bit more maturity and maybe a different leader than the parents could provide. He also knew that if you go to a CC, and then are more mature to handle the stresses of a full University, he may have changed the trajectory of an entire family.

When my daughter was graduating from high school, my state was in a huge recession and my income dropped by over 50%. She had to go to a local CC while all her friends went to University. I told her that she was a little too social, and had not gotten good enough grades, nor had any athletic or musical talent to get a scholarship. But, not to worry, most of her friends would be back and going to CC after their first year.

And they were. She is a very successful news journalist now. Many kids just need to mature and catch up a bit, before they tackle the strain of discipline without parents.

I feel so bad for these kids! They have bad parents, a bleak life, bad education....BUT, athletic talent. This is the ONLY way for them to not repeat the sins of their fathers.
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7/10
Fascinating character study
Torchy244 August 2019
Although I'm baffled how and why EMCC chooses to focus so much on religion instead actual education, the young men, their families and coaches are all coming from their own unique backgrounds, with their own struggles, gifts, goals and abilities - and the uniquely middle-American obsession with football connects them all. It's a slice of Hoop Dreams served up on a plate of Friday Night Lights.
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2/10
UGH....
jesswshows28 August 2018
A bunch of street thugs who wont take responsibility for their life and decisions, what could go wrong there. The last chance they had to make it to a college, and by default, the possibility of a Pro football career AND an education...all of them are a bunch of entitled cry babies.
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