Viewing figures In the United States, the episode was watched live by 10.56 million viewers, making it the second-most-watched show of the night in terms of number of viewers, behind only
NCIS. It was the most-watched show of the night in terms of 18-49 rating, with a 2.4, and in terms of ratings share, with a 10. Within seven days, the episode was watched by a total of 13.65 million viewers. The viewership on the episode was considerably lower than that of the tenth season of
Roseanne, which averaged 17.85 million viewers over its nine episodes, though it is currently the most watched episode of
The Conners.
Critical response Kimberly Potts with
Vulture said, "I’m still not totally sold on whether or not
The Conners can continue to have a reason to exist without Barr. But the premiere shows they know why we’ve loved these characters for three decades now, and why we’re interested in seeing how they, as individuals and as a family, will maneuver their grief, evolve through it. That’s enough of a reason for the Conners, and
The Conners, to soldier on, and enough to keep me tuning in." She also gave the episode 5 out of 5 stars. Scott Collura with
IGN said, "
The Conners successfully moves on without Roseanne, focusing squarely on the family of the title who were always essential to the original show anyway. Do things feel different without Roseanne? Sure. Does
The Conners suffer from her absence? So far, not at all." He also gave the episode an 8.3 of 10.
Accolades Editor Brian Schnuckel was nominated for a
Primetime Emmy Award, in the category of
Outstanding Multi-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series, at the
71st Primetime Emmy Awards, for his work on the episode. ==References==