Critical reception Time magazine called the show "engaging", noting that its use of old clips was "a clever gimmick [that] perks up familiar material" and later called the second season of the "decidedly adult sitcom...better than ever."
The New York Times had mixed opinions about the show. In their first-season review, John J. O'Connor said
Dream On was not "different from ordinary network fare...except for, as might be expected, the more freewheeling language and treatments of sex"; by the season's third episode, the show's
protagonist is "already becoming just another nice bachelor father, not all that different from the one
John Forsythe played
on television several decades ago." About a year later, O'Connor said, while the show "has its weak spots, most notably in a pointless tendency to be smarmy" with "clips... that are sometimes less witty than painfully obvious. But
Dream On takes unusual chances and has a habit of turning out to be refreshingly original."
Awards and nominations ==Home media==