EPISODE
SEASON
Dice - Season 1
The series focuses on comedian Andrew Dice Clay (played by himself) as he moves his family to Las Vegas in hopes of making a comeback while dealing with problems from his family, his ex and his finances.
20 March 1973, Burnsville, Minnesota, USA
15 April 1971, Westchester County, New York, USA
1972, Ireland
26 March 1966, Mount Vernon, New York, USA
14 September 1971, Chicago, Illinois, USA
2 December 1970, Ozone Park, Queens, New York City, New York, USA
1969, Seattle, Washington, USA
5 December 1970, Camp Hill, Pennsylvania, USA
April 13, 2016
Clay's disbelief at, and arguments with, the world and society at large suggest a man who is indeed attempting to grow with the times, but is also failing regularly.
April 08, 2016
Dice is mostly a warmed-over attempt to ape Larry David's Curb Your Enthusiasm.
April 07, 2016
Hickory dickory dock, this review won't come as a shock. The show is bad, the star a bit sad, his shtick as old as a rock.
April 10, 2016
Dice blurs the line between life and art, but its stories let down a winning cast led by the funnyman in a confident comeback.
April 08, 2016
Strengthen or ditch most of the supporting cast (and go Louie-style with a rotating ensemble) and Dice could become something really special. As is, it's still an interesting chapter in a return of a once-superstar that most of us never saw coming.
April 19, 2016
Dice (sort of) makes a comeback in curse-filled comedy.
April 11, 2016
This being Dice's show, most people onscreen lap it up... but you don't have to. Unless that's your thing of course.
April 08, 2016
The smartest thing Dice creator Scot Armstrong does is stack the deck with a strong supporting cast to counteract Clay.
April 08, 2016
The six episodes don't feature enough laughs to rank it among the essential comedies, even if the writing in specifics is pretty solid. A handful of jokes land every episode. Few miss. The tone is consistently light.
April 05, 2016
Being the Dice Man was all about never having to say you're sorry, and Dice is too much a spineless apology.

