Tim Allen’s Grumpy TV Persona Redeemed In Shifting Gears Season 2

Shifting Gears is finding a smoother lane in its sophomore season when it comes to updating Tim Allen’s signature gruff everyman persona. The premise of Shifting Gears is changing for the better, as centering a classic network sitcom around grief is a tall order.
Allen’s character Matt Parker began the series isolated as a widower, completely estranged from his daughter, never having met his teenage grandkids. Matt’s relationships with all the characters in Shifting Gears has grown, grounding Matt and softening his harshness that made critics respond negatively to Shifting Gears season 1.
Season 2, episode 4 centers on Matt’s relationship with Carter, his 16-year-old grandson, a pairing the show hasn’t yet explored. Carter’s sweet slowness sharply contrasts with Matt’s aggressive energy, but Carter helps Matt have a breakthrough about his own father (Carter’s great-grandfather), which adds a much-needed dimension to Allen’s character.
Matt’s Heart-To-Heart With Grandson Carter Adds More Dimension To Tim Allen’s Character

Tim Allen has leaned on a similar grumpy persona through Home Improvement and Last Man Standing, but Shifting Gears needed to add layers to Matt Parker to make his character work in 2025. Shifting Gears season 2, episode 4 beautifully gives Matt emotional depth by forcing him to confront how his upbringing shaped him negatively.
Matt pressures his Carter to face his fears when dealing with a raccoon, only to lash out when Carter freezes. Their clash — Carter insisting that trying is good enough, but Matt insisting “you either do or you don’t” — reveals a generational divide. Carter feels he’s not “man” enough for his grandfather.
When Carter points out that Matt’s dad’s tough love caused Matt pain, it finally clicks. Matt’s lifelong drive to toughen others up stems from a father who never let him be himself or express his desires. In a rare moment of introspection, Matt apologizes, promising not to repeat those mistakes. It’s a quietly powerful pivot that transforms Allen’s Shifting Gears character from a one-note curmudgeon into a man finally learning compassion — both for others and for himself.
Shifting Gears Needed To Recalibrate The Writing (Though Not Allen’s Performance) For 2025

Shifting Gears season 2 makes a deliberate and necessary course correction, recalibrating both Matt’s character and the show’s overall tone. Tim Allen’s performance hasn’t changed—he’s still the same gruff, old-school, conservative-leaning everyman he’s been playing since 1991 —but the writing around him finally has.
The show now surrounds Matt with relationships that challenge and soften him, like his daughter Riley or his girlfriend Eve. These dynamics turn Shifting Gears from a sitcom about a man refusing to evolve into one about a man trying—however begrudgingly—to catch up with the world around him because he has people he cares about.
Audiences have always loved Tim Allen – Shifting Gears season 1 broke viewership records – but his trademark persona needed a refresh to stay relevant. In one clarifying scene, Matt laments how male idols have shifted from traditional masculinity, like Clint Eastwood and John Wayne embodied, to a more modern, sensitive masculinity in Timothée Chalamet.
It’s a perfect encapsulation of Shifting Gears‘ new tone: gently mocking Allen’s outdated worldview while finally letting his character navigate the turns of modern life without stalling his churlish charm.