In the pantheon of "anti-hero" television, we usually talk about Tony Soprano, Walter White, or Don Draper. But let’s not forget the woman who started the car: Nancy Botwin .
I recently finished a re-watch, and honestly? The show is a fever dream that goes completely off the rails, but the first few seasons remain some of the best dark comedy TV ever written. The early seasons are a perfect time capsule of the mid-2000s. Mary-Louise Parker is mesmerizing as Nancy. She isn't a hardened criminal; she’s a soccer mom in Juicy Couture track suits who uses her suburban invisibility as a superpower.
When Weeds premiered on Showtime in 2005, it was a culture shock. Before the opulent despair of Desperate Housewives fully set in, there was Nancy—a recently widowed mother of two in the fictional, sun-scorched suburb of Agrestic (pronounced "a-GREST-ic"), trying to keep her family in their nice house by becoming the neighborhood pot dealer.