Ten years from now, no one will remember today’s sitcoms and the lengths they went to garner cheap laughs, but they will remember DJ Tanner’s first zit, Wilson’s face being obscured by a well-placed fence, Geoffrey zinging Uncle Phil with a perfectly-timed fat joke, and Screech getting struck by lightning.
Estimated reading time: 3 min
Ten years from now, no one will remember today’s sitcoms and the lengths they went to garner cheap laughs, but they will remember DJ Tanner’s first zit, Wilson’s face being obscured by a well-placed fence, Geoffrey zinging Uncle Phil with a perfectly-timed fat joke, and Screech getting struck by lightning.
Estimated reading time: 3 min
Recited from Marcel Wichmann
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parti Jesse♥
Ten years from now, no one will remember today’s sitcoms and the lengths they went to garner cheap laughs, but they will remember DJ Tanner’s first zit, Wilson’s face being obscured by a well-placed fence, Geoffrey zinging Uncle Phil with a perfectly-timed fat joke, and Screech getting struck by lightning.
Estimated reading time: 3 min
Recited from Marcel Wichmann
Marcel Wichmann The death of innocence. Why we need more Uncle Jesse and less sex jokes.
Pëll Dalipi When I think of 90s sitcoms I think of Seinfeld, Friends, Frasier and Roseanne. Sure, Tim Allen had nice tools and the Olsen twins were cute and all, but isn't this just nostalgia? Uncle Jesse, I love him, but he's no Kramer. In ten years kids are going to remember their own nostalgic shows, being Hannah Montana, Drake&Josh and iCarly. As parents don't sit their kids down for Barney Stinson, they didn't show them Al Bundy either.
Or to say it in the words of the Full House theme song: What ever happend to predictability? / The milk man, the paper boy, evening T.V / You miss your old familiar friends,…
steveanorizz I don't remember anything of that.