Outrageousness by itself isn't necessarily humorous, unless, perhaps, you're 12. The godfather of "shock" comedy, Howard Stern, knows this, as he tries to navigate and upend the male psyche. And Matt Stone and Trey Parker deploy irreverence and bodily functions on "South Park" in the process of skewering American culture. But the off-color material on "Unhitched" doesn't resonate much beyond "Look at how deviant we can be."
The foundation of the show, which is set in Boston, is ordinary sitcom fare about newly single adults and their dating woes. The approach is very much like "Seinfeld," with four friends each having his or her own wacky subplot in each episode. Jack "Gator" Gately (Craig Bierko) is the central character, an everyman of sorts who's having a hard time signing his divorce papers. Next week, he falls for a woman who has a "skin tag" on her back, and he just can't get past it. Like Jerry Seinfeld, he fixates on the little imperfections.
Kate, played by Rashida Jones from "The Office," also struggles with deal-breakers in romance, as tonight she goes out with a guy whose job makes her squirm. Next week, in an extremely similar story line, she once again rejects a suitor after watching him perform on stage. A divorce lawyer, she's likable, ironic, and one-dimensional. Tommy (Johnny Sneed) is the horny, beer-swigging one who has been married three times. He's less than one-dimensional - is quarter-dimensional a word?
And Freddy (Shaun Majumder) is a romantically childlike doctor. Most of his jokes depend on his Indian accent and his misunderstandings of English.
Between its sophomoric gags and singles-sitcom cliches, between all the drunken women and the devious prostitutes, "Unhitched" manages to come up with a handful of successful lines. And the Boston references to the Celtics, Avalon, and the Charles Hotel offer local viewers some small diversion. But the show doesn't ever really develop a comic center, or a heart. It's just a bunch of pointless monkey business.
Matthew Gilbert can be reached at gilbert@globe.com. For more on TV, visit boston.com/ae/tv/blog.