A.P. Bio
A.P. Bio is an American television sitcom that premiered on February 1, 2018, on NBC as a mid-season replacement. It aired on NBC for two seasons until June 13, 2019, and moved to Peacock for its subsequent seasons. Set in Toledo, Ohio, the series centers on the everyday lives of the faculty and students of the fictitious Whitlock High School, in particular reluctant AP Biology teacher Jack Griffin, who refuses to teach the subject out of fury that he was denied a prestigious professorship at Harvard University in philosophy. Instead of teaching, he either ignores his students altogether or recruits them into various schemes to help him leave or get revenge. Mike O'Brien created the series and is a recurring writer. O'Brien is also one of the executive producers alongside Seth Meyers, Lorne Michaels, Andrew Singer, and Michael Shoemaker. The show also features a cast of Lyric Lewis, Mary Sohn, Jean Villepique, Paula Pell, and Patton Oswalt.
A.P. Bio was met with mixed reviews on its first season; however, following seasons garnered a much more positive reception. In December 2021, the series was canceled after four seasons.
Plot
When disgraced Harvard philosophy professor Jack Griffin loses his dream job to his rival Miles Leonard, he is forced to return to his hometown of Toledo, Ohio, to work as an advanced placement biology teacher at Whitlock High School and live in his late mother's home. He makes it clear to his class that he will not be teaching them any biology. Realizing he has a room full of honor-roll students at his disposal, he decides to use them to get revenge on Miles. Eager to prove that he is still in charge, Principal Durbin struggles to keep Jack under control. In the second season, Jack uses his students to find out how the people of Toledo find happiness in their daily lives, to gather information for what he believes will be a bestselling book.Cast
Main
- Glenn Howerton as Dr. Jack Carson Griffin, a disgraced, self-absorbed former philosophy professor who reluctantly takes a job as an AP biology teacher while constantly scheming to get out of the job and regain his former glory. He employs his students to help him carry out tasks and promises them good grades as a reward.
- * Tate Birchmore and Olivier Paris play younger versions of Jack
- Lyric Lewis as Stef Duncan, a history teacher who is friends with Jack, Mary, and Michelle. In the series finale, she gives birth to a daughter she names Evelyn Jack Duncan.
- Mary Sohn as Mary Wagner, an art teacher who is friends with Jack, Stef, and Michelle
- Jean Villepique as Michelle Jones, a health and home economics teacher who is friends with Jack, Stef, and Mary
- *Michelle was played by Vanessa Bayer in the original unaired pilot episode
- Tom Bennett as Miles Leonard, a philosophy scholar and professor at Stanford University, and Jack's nemesis
- Patton Oswalt as Principal Ralph Durbin, the principal of Whitlock High School. While kind and working in the school's best interests, he is irresponsible and somewhat childlike. He plays the keyboard and sings, and was in a ska band in the 1990s.
- Paula Pell as Helen Demarcus, Principal Durbin's secretary
Recurring
Students
- Aparna Brielle as Sarika Sarkar, an over-achieving "teacher's pet" who usually opposes Jack's schemes
- Nick Peine as Marcus Kasperak, the student council president in Jack's class. He is noted as being Jack's "least favorite student" and is constantly made fun of by him as a result.
- Allisyn Snyder as Heather Wilmore, a mousy AP Biology student and the daughter of an equally eccentric butcher, who acts as one of Jack's most trusted students/underlings, as she is one of the few initially eager to collaborate with his plans.
- Eddie Leavy as Anthony Lewis, a smart, sassy, effeminate AP Biology student with immense strength and a talent for singing
- Jacob Houston as Victor Kozlowski, an intensely awkward and slow-talking AP Biology student
- Spence Moore II as Dan Decker, a former bully originally from Florida forcibly enrolled into Jack's class as a punishment for throwing Devin's backpack into a pond. He initially is confused about both what the class is and why he is enrolled in it. Early in the series, he becomes kinder and develops a romantic interest in Heather. His classmates admire him for his charisma, as well as for keeping a level head and looking out for them.
- Sari Arambulo as Grace, a cheery AP Biology student. Starting in the second season, she is shown to have a mysterious dark past and frequently makes morbid comments.
- Marisa Baram as Marissa, an AP Biology student. Despite appearing in all seasons, she is not given much characterization until the third-season finale, in which she bonds with Jack over their disdain for Toledo's annual "Katie Holmes Day"
- Jacob McCarthy as Devin, a quiet, brooding AP Biology student whom Jack calls "Prince of Darkness"
- Tucker Albrizzi as Colin McConnell, an AP Biology student
- Miguel Lee as Eduardo, Victor's childhood best friend who transfers to Jack's class
- Jacob Timothy Manown as Caleb, an AP Biology student also in the drama club. He writes in his free time and is a fan of Principal Durbin's old ska band.
- Yuyao Deng as Yuyao, a Chinese AP Biology student who gains a speaking role in the third season
Others
- Collette Wolfe as Meredith, Jack's ex-girlfriend
- Charlie McCrackin as Coach Dick Novak, a gym teacher who coaches the Whitlock Rams football team
- David Neher as Dave Pugh, a friendly but clumsy science teacher constantly mocked and teased by the other teachers
- Brendan Jennings as Dale, the school's custodian, later promoted to "head custodian" by Durbin in the second season
- Patricia Belcher as Superintendent Bullard, the no-nonsense head of Toledo's municipal education department
- Elizabeth Alderfer as Lynette Marie Hoffstadter, a payroll accountant who befriends Jack as she challenges his views and later becomes his love interest
- Jaime Moyer as Joyce, Lynette's coworker who spends much of her time talking to her social media followers on her smartphone
- Brad Morris as Keith, Michelle's husband
- Cheryl Lynn Bowers as Rosemary Griffin, Jack's late mother appearing in flashbacks. In life, she was a devout Catholic, although the irreligious Jack never takes down any of the iconography around her house.
- Jane Morris as Rhonda
- Ashley Tapia and Chloe Csengery as Ashley
- Allison Bills as Trudy
- Hayley Marie Norman as Shayla Howard, Jack's new girlfriend after Lynette breaks up with him
Guest stars
Episodes
Season 1 (2018)
Season 2 (2019)
Season 3 (2020)
Season 4 (2021)
Production
Development
The series was created by Mike O'Brien for NBC, to debut during the 2018–19 [United States network television schedule|2017–18 television season]. On January 23, 2017, NBC officially ordered the pilot. The series was greenlit on May 11, 2017. It was announced the premiere of the series on February 1, 2018 at 8:30 p.m.On May 8, 2018, NBC renewed the series for a second season, which premiered on March 7, 2019. On May 24, 2019, NBC canceled the series after two seasons. In July 2019, NBC reversed this decision and renewed the series for a third season, which premiered on NBCUniversal's streaming service, Peacock, on September 3, 2020. On December 17, 2020, Peacock renewed the series for a fourth and final season, which premiered on September 2, 2021. On December 6, 2021, Peacock canceled the series after four seasons.
Casting
In February 2017, it was announced that Mary Sohn and Lyric Lewis had joined the pilot's main cast. In March 2017, it was reported that Aparna Brielle, Glenn Howerton, Patton Oswalt, Nick Peine and Jacob McCarthy had joined the cast in their main roles. On June 12, 2017, it was announced that Tom Bennett had joined as a series regular. On August 1, 2017, it was announced that Jean Villepique had joined as a series regular.Reception
Critical response
The first season holds a score of 66% with an average rating of 6.34/10 on the review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 32 reviews. The site's critical consensus states, "A.P. Bio has some genuine laughs, but audiences have already seen plenty of authority figures behaving badly—and have a right to expect more from this promising premise and talented cast." Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the series a score of 59 out of 100 based on 17 critics.Writing in The Hollywood Reporter, Daniel Fienberg commented that A.P. Bio had a good cast and "the only thing holding it back is the small quibble that it's not actually all that funny." Margaret Lyons of The New York Times called A.P. Bio "an abrasive sitcom that isn't merely unfunny, it's also deeply unpleasant." Jen Chaney of Vulture said the series had bright spots but was "conceptually played-out" overall.