6 USER REVIEWS
  • star55

    I,LOVE,THIS MOVIE IT MAKE MISS MY BIG MOMMA.WE use to have family days like that also. but now that all is almost gone we no longer get togethermore»
  • star55

    I order the whole series from the library. I really enjoy them all. It like watching your family going through the trials of life. It was something that I could relate to . Something clean and wholesome. Just trying to keep it real on the TV. I really …more»
  • star55

    I have watched season 1 and 2 back to back it makes a difference when you watch them in order. I have season 3 and the last season to buy. I wish they would go on sale.more»
  • star44

    I love this show! I wish i would have watched when it was on TV. Now I have to wait to see what happened. I've watched all the DVD's up to season 3.more»
  • star55

    I didnt get a chance to watch when it was in syndication but KUDOS to BET because this is one of the best shows ever. I never miss an episode. That Boris Kudjoe is a Bad Man!!!!!!!!more»
  • star55

    I think the show is awsome. It shows what happened after the movie i love watching it every day. They act just like my family sometimes. i think Ahmad is fine too. A little crazy but fine.more»

Top Rated Episodes

Life Lessons

Episode 8, Season 2| Length: 0:50:00| Air Date: 08-15-2001

Take Me to the Water

Episode 20, Season 1| Length: 0:50:00| Air Date: 02-21-2001

Clear and Present Stranger

Episode 19, Season 1| Length: 0:50:00| Air Date: 02-14-2001

About The Show

Television series adapted from the 1997 feature film, "Soul Food," about several generations of an African-American family who gather together every week for Sunday dinner. The series follows the lives of the three Joseph sisters -- Teri, a divorced attorney; Bird, a newlywed and salon owner; and Maxine, a housewife -- as they try to keep the family together after their mother's death.

Beautiful and intelligent, Teri is an ambitious attorney with a cool demeanor. Anxious not to repeat the mistakes of her first two marriages, finds herself in love with a younger man, but her blunt and sometimes opinionated attitude tends to alienate anyone who tries to get close to her -- including the rest of her family. Maxine is happily married to Kenny, and the mother of three young children. Possessing the same passion and wisdom as her late Mama Joe, Maxine seems able to hold the family together through all their trials. Bird is juggling a new baby (Jeremiah), a new business and an unemployed husband (Lem) -- and struggling to make it all work. Although see hopes to expand her business some day, for now, she's deep in debt and just trying to focus on keeping her family together.

Kenny Chadway, owner of a small tow-truck business, is married to Maxine and the loving father of three. Underlying all of Kenny's decisions in life is his profound desire to make his family proud. His strong traditional values and expectations sometimes collide with a strong-willed Maxine. Lem Taylor, a hard-edged man from a rough upbringing, is currently on parole, but struggling to be an honest man. He is deceptively smart and analytical and longs to support his wife Bird and son through lawful means. Ahmad, the 12-year-old son of Maxine and Kenny, is an intelligent and quick-witted young man who attends an exclusive Chicago prep school; often called an "old soul" because of the knowledge passed down to him by his grandmother, Ahmad vacillates between adult-like insights and childish naivete.

Television series adapted from the 1997 feature film, "Soul Food," about several generations of an African-American family who gather together every week for Sunday dinner. The series follows the lives of the three …
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Genres

Adaptation, Drama

Airdates

2000-2004