Rob Will Review app for iPhone and iPad


4.1 ( 931 ratings )
News Entertainment
Developer: Fun At Work
0.99 USD
Current version: 1.2, last update: 7 years ago
First release : 25 Jun 2010
App size: 938.41 Kb

RobWillReview.com is an up and coming entertainment site that is known for its incisive, intelligent, and witty reviews of all sorts of pop culture from TV to film to theatre to books to music.

Want to discover some new shows, films, or theatre to watch, or books to read? Rob Will Review... can help you out! And now, you can have each new review delivered directly to your iPhone with this shiny new app!

Some of Rob Will Review...s most popular features include weekly reviews of hit shows such as…

• Glee
• Doctor Who
• True Blood
• Spartacus: Blood and Sand
• Nurse Jackie
• United States of Tara
• Caprica

Rob Will Review… has been featured on Green Days official site for his review of the new hit Broadway show, "American Idiot," and Showtime’s official site for his review of the first season of "Nurse Jackie"! Here’s what some people have had to say about Rob Will Review…’s reviews of their work:

Larry Weisberg (Production Supervisor for hit film, "How to Train Your Dragon"): ”Thank you for such a great review! As one of the Production Supervisors, we really appreciate it. (And well written, too.)”

Gail Carriger (author of "The Parasol Protectorate"): “An embarrassingly awesome review, over on Rob Will Review. I’m humbled. I swear we have never met and we are not related.”

Mark Chadbourn (author of "Age of Misrule," "The Dark Age"): “To be honest, I don’t read most reviews, even if they’re brought to my attention. I do what I do, and it’s up to readers to take it or leave it. But there are a handful of reviewers I respect, and I listen very closely to their criticism and try to improve my work accordingly. Rob is one of those.”

Chris Roberson (author of "Here, There & Everywhere," "End of the Century"): “I need more readers like Robert William Berg. With a thousand like him, I could take over the world…Berg gets to the heart of what I was trying to do with the novel in a way few reviewers have before him.”