Fans and Cast React to Netflix Cancelling 'One Day At A Time'

The show has been canceled after three seasons.

one day at a time
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one day at a time

For just about its entire existence, it's felt like the One Day at a Time reboot was on the chopping block. Die-hard fans of the Norman Lear-reimagining —which replaces the original working class family at the heart of the '70s sitcom with a similarly hardscrabble immigrant family living in Los Angeles— have been touting its importance to all who will listen and the show has repaid them with thoughtful takes on immigration, mental illness, homophobia, and racism. 

Those same boosters were crushed today when they learned that Day is the latest Netflix series to be unceremoniously axed. And unlike the people freaking out because, well, they just really liked The Punisher, this cancellation woe carries a bit of weight with it. Day offered a rare glimpse into the dynamics of a Cuban-American family while giving legendary actress Rita Moreno to the sort of wide-reaching platform she deserves. (She's an ACTUAL EGOT holder, y'all.) 

The cast shared their own heartache on social media before opening the floor to fans.

💔 pic.twitter.com/pm3H8ev4Yu

— Mike Royce (@MikeRoyce) March 14, 2019

I’m so grateful to have played Penelope Alvarez. I don’t even know how to begin to express my gratitude to everyone. Truly, I am so honored that we got to tell our stories .Yes it was a Latinx family but it was a universal story about family and love. An American Familia ❤️

— Justina Machado (@JustinaMachado) March 14, 2019

Actress Isabella Gomez dangled a bit of hope.

Annnnd, we might find #ODAAT another home. This isn’t over yet. https://t.co/lCB0vSnCWF

— Isabella Gomez (@Isabella_Gomez) March 14, 2019

Given the importance that ran through everything the show did, news of it's cancellation hit hard and they are letting Netflix hear about it on Twitter. 

Hey, @Netflix, in a time where we are still putting children in literal cages just for seeking asylum in our country, maybe telling a story centered around a Cuban immigrant family is more important than whatever BS criteria you used to cancel #ODAAT.

— Devon (@KDevNic) March 14, 2019

The irony and hypocrisy of this tweet. YOU are very much indicating stories like this aren’t important by not renewing #ODAAT and you CAN EASILY find a way to continue this show by simply investing in this instead of paying $100 million for that crappy Friends show https://t.co/NjSeJDlHA5

— alex👽 (@wallflowerr23) March 14, 2019

I heard about #ODAAT through word of mouth. I never saw ads or ANYTHING for it. So the only one to blame for it not getting the views Netflix wants is Netflix.

— Lainey ✨️Ted Lasso spoilers✨️ (@StarrySyndulla) March 14, 2019

Bad decision to cancel one of the best examples of diversity and representation on TV. You really missed the mark here, Netflix. #ODAAT https://t.co/PLgbZ99gsw

— Fandomopolis (@Fandomopolis) March 14, 2019

The show was extremely poorly promoted. The amount of Netflix originals released is getting ridiculous, and even the new season felt buried on my page shortly after it came out. This is a garbage decision in a string of garbage decisions. #ODAAT #BringBackODAAT https://t.co/m4aEI6ReVw

— Sara Daniele Rivera (@sdr_arts) March 14, 2019

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