A guardian angel who called Amy, forming unlikely friendship with Allison, a young kind doctor, as she tries to help her looking at her life well. At the beginning of the season, we see Amy tries to persuade Allison to help her by giving her life lessons, but Allison doesn't believe, until she gives her the most important secret in her life that her boyfriend dates her best friend.
Lynch can be as goofy-delightful here as in the ensembles of Party Down and Glee. But she's all over everything, all the time, in a show that just won't let up.
There is a concept behind Angel From Hell... that could kick it into "good" territory, making it potentially more than just a throwaway time-waster that viewers use to tell their bodies when its bedtime. And of course, that might be exactly why it fails.
There is certainly enough charm and setup in Angel From Hell to build up a laugh-out-loud series, but whether audiences will want to stick with it during a jam-packed midseason schedule after just an okay pilot remains to be seen.