Honestly, I had the opposite reaction. The collection of characters was fairly clichéd. The caring ex-wife that our hero still pines over. His two young daughters that wandered off of a CW show set. Some heavy handed stuff. Some strange inconsistencies (he decries the use of a metal detector at the school, but soon after someone shows up to the school with a gun & directly undermines his moral position), and some painfully bad dialogue. They presented the town or neighborhood as very rough but then it just looked like a nice neighborhood in Vancouver. Overall, an uneven presentation.
Far from authentic, it came across to me as a bunch of white writers trying to present the setting and characters as authentic, but their frame of reference wasn't real people but just other, better tv shows (like The Wire).
My other primary problem was that it was largely humorless. I don't think the superhero conceit works well without at least some humor (though they can go overboard). I think Arrow at it's peak did the humor best, while Flash is more of a comedy (and works with the character and presentation), and Legends is almost primarily an action-comedy (again, it works for that show).
I like the adult actors, especially Cress Williams who is much better than the material he was given. The younger actors just weren't very good and presented with little depth.
I appreciate the desire to take this show in a different direction than the other CW hero shows, but I think it really needs to find a core that's both compelling tv, a little more mature than the typical CW product, and a little more fun than what they delivered. If the show stays with this presentation, it will have a difficult time getting to season 2 and it won't get o season 3.
Did anyone else think that "Inspector Henderson" was a deliberate homage/nod to the original Inspector Henderson?
Nice touch if deliberate, nothing if a coincidence.