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Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed shows.
Lock 'n Load
EMAILPRINTSERIES: Showtime, Wednesday 8:00p (30 minutes)

Mixed or average reviews
Based on 10 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 15 votes
Read user comments
Rate this show >
Show Info
Genre(s): Reality (Non-Competitive)
Created By:
Josh T. Ryan
Tony Lawrence
First Air Date: October 21, 2009
Summary
Starring Josh T. Ryan
The reality show uses hidden cameras to capture the reasons behind customers' purchases at actor Josh T. Ryan's family-owned gun shop.
Episode Guide & More Info: More about this show at TV.com
Also On The Web: Official Show Site
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
Entertainment WeeklyKate Ward
NRA enthusiasts might be the target audience for this reality show about a Colorado gun shop, but Lock manages to have mainstream appeal, thanks to its focus on the store's quirky customers (a shank-holding old lady, a gun-loving pastor, etc.).
Read Full Review >Boston GlobeJoanna Weiss
Lock ’n Load treats Wayne and many fellow customers as curiosities, and occasionally smacks of condescension. (The “Amazing Grace’’ sequence, in particular, crosses a line.) But the series also takes pains to avoid making judgments, and offers a parade of gun owners so vast that we end up with a broad view.
Read Full Review >Miami HeraldGlenn Garvin
Watching Logan hand small children assault rifles for inspection will no doubt amuse gun nuts and enrage anti-gun nuts. And both camps are likely to blink at one of the (surprisingly numerous) female customers who--jokingly asked if she's carrying a weapon--whips out three concealed knives.
Read Full Review >Los Angeles TimesRobert Lloyd
Ryan prompts the patrons to talk, but the stories don't really develop into much; and although the arms-buying demographic is indeed wider than one who has not spent much time in a gun store might imagine, their reasons for buying tend to be variations on the same few themes: I was robbed; I don't want to be robbed; guns are fun to collect and shoot.
Read Full Review >Kansas City StarAaron Barnhart
For whatever reason, it’s hard for me to treat Lock ’n Load as mere entertainment. But maybe that’s not a bad thing.
Read Full Review >SlateTroy Patterson
Though the seeming intent of Lock 'N Load is to glorify firearms--in one scene, a pastor takes target practice to the tune of "Amazing Grace"--it's sometimes tough to tell which consumers are motivated by valid concerns and which are unreasonable fruitcakes. Consequently, the show is something an ink-blot test.
Read Full Review >New York Daily NewsDavid Hinckley
Ultimately, though, the stories here are too brief and, frankly, too ordinary to sustain the viewer's interest for very long.
Read Full Review >VarietyBrian Lowry
Given the edginess generally associated with pay TV's forays into reality--focusing on things like whorehouses and bail bondsmen--this is a surprisingly toothless affair, as if Showtime bought a concept, wound up with nothing to show for it and figured what the hell, let's take a shot, as it were, by airing the episodes.
Read Full Review >NewsdayVerne Gay
We get some slightly bent soccer moms and dads debriefed by an impossibly cheery, cheesy, chummy game-show host. Showtime must have thought there would be great humor and irony in the mundane exchanges recorded here. But it miscalculated. Badly.
Read Full Review >New York PostLinda Stasi
The truly terrible, Lock 'N Load, a six-parter debuting tonight on Showtime, is possibly the worst-taste reality series since "The Littlest Groom"--and it took some serious doing on the part of Showtime to manage that.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this show is 8.2 (out of 10) based on 15 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
