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  1. Apr 4, 2016 · Horace and Pete, Louis C.K.’s drama about a Brooklyn bar that’s been run by the same family for 100 years, came to an end over the weekend, with even less fanfare than it had on arrival.

    • Alan Sepinwall
  2. The bar was owned by the same family since 1916 and was passed down through several generations, always with a Horace and a Pete in charge. The current owners are the 49-year-old Horace Wittel VIII and his 52-year-old cousin Pete.

  3. Apr 3, 2016 · We know how the story goes: Marianne abandons her home in the night with Horace and Sylvia in tow, and leaves Pete behind, but actually seeing what happens throws the reality of the situation...

  4. Apr 4, 2016 · There won’t be another Horace and Pete; the bar is packed up and Pete left no descendants we know of. There is a Horace IX (Angus T. Jones), Horace’s estranged son, to whom Sylvia gives a ...

    • James Poniewozik
  5. Throughout the ten-episode series, Horace struggles with his sense of responsibility for the family business and his relationships with his dysfunctional family. While its predecessor Louie was a dark comedy, Horace and Pete crosses the line into full blown tragedy.

  6. Apr 3, 2016 · Nevertheless, here are three reasons why Horace and Pete is brilliant: 1. It tells a story that feels old and new all at once. I read a tongue-in-cheek elevator pitch-style description of the show in The New Yorker which I thought was right on the nose when it said Horace and Pete was “Cheers meets The Iceman Cometh.” And with its story ...

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  8. Apr 6, 2016 · Horace and Pete is a show that feeds off of freedom. One that liberally shape-shifts between artistic mediums, borrowing tropes from classic television sitcoms, dramatic theater, microbudget filmmaking, and prestige dramas alike, and then fusing these elements together into a strange new form.

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