View Full Version : Question about the House Buying Episode


SitcomGyrl1955
12-29-2006, 07:13 PM
When the family found out that the house they wanted to buy was unavailable, why didn't they just go out and find another one? Their loan was already approved. When I first saw this episode back in the 70's, I felt really sorry for them. But now that I'm seeing it as an adult, I'm wondering why they would get so upset over not getting one house, when there were probably dozens of houses out there they could have bought. And the loan officer was stupid for not telling them that.

Ireneparalegal
12-29-2006, 07:18 PM
Good question.

Maybe it was the only one available in the neighborhood and also the only one that fit their budget, as far as a sale price was concerned.

SitcomGyrl1955
12-29-2006, 07:25 PM
Good question.

Maybe it was the only one available in the neighborhood and also the only one that fit their budget, as far as a sale price was concerned.
Ok...I agree that maybe that was the only house that fit their budget, but the only house in that neighborhood? I mean, I know they lived in the ghetto, but I thought their whole reason was to get OUT of the ghetto. Therefore, they should be looking in other more nicer neighborhoods, right? And I'm sure they would have found a house that would fit their budget SOMEWHERE in Chicago.

Ireneparalegal
12-29-2006, 07:58 PM
Ok...I agree that maybe that was the only house that fit their budget, but the only house in that neighborhood? I mean, I know they lived in the ghetto, but I thought their whole reason was to get OUT of the ghetto. Therefore, they should be looking in other more nicer neighborhoods, right? And I'm sure they would have found a house that would fit their budget SOMEWHERE in Chicago.
True. There were many neighborhoods in Chicago that offered more than one house for sale. Funny, after all these years something comes up that makes you wonder. Things that make you go hmmmm.....

Seriously, why didn't the real estate agent say at least that he would continue a search? I mean, that is how they make $$$, by commission. :crazy:

SitcomGyrl1955
01-01-2007, 10:19 AM
True. There were many neighborhoods in Chicago that offered more than one house for sale. Funny, after all these years something comes up that makes you wonder. Things that make you go hmmmm.....

Seriously, why didn't the real estate agent say at least that he would continue a search? I mean, that is how they make $$$, by commission. :crazy:
Exactly! I thought about that very same thing. Then again, maybe they didn't have a real estate agent. They probably just went out on their own and found the house. Which is why I would think they would go out again and try to find another house. Especially since their loan was already approved.

TVFactFan
01-01-2007, 02:11 PM
I could see someone watching this ep in 78 and saying-"DAMM, are they are going to catch a break? LOL

EmpressDR
01-01-2007, 08:03 PM
"You'll Never Get Rich" was the original title of Phil Silvers' show, with Sgt Bilko. His get-rich-quick schemes didn't pay off, except one time, when he was a success, but missed his army life, so gave it up. But he still never stopped trying to get money!
Ralph Kramden couldn't stop being a bus driver nor living in his cold-water flat.

The audience wants to relate to their sitcom characters.

It's just the old sitcom rule that characters can't vastly improve their lot, or else their audience who loved down and out and poor will be mad syndrome.

Didn't Roseanne have a whole last season where her family was rich from a lottery win, then at the finale, wrap up the show, saying that season was a fictional book she wrote/dream/means of coping with it?

On Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman her hubby, Tom got a promotion from a joke job of screwing rearview mirrors onto cars. Well, YES! Who would stay in a job like that? Realistically, that is. But moving on up, as he did, to a white collar job, he was less interesting, and stopped wearing his cute baseball cap and basketball jacket --so he had to lose his good job, and go back to blue collar life, and wear his old wardrobe --but that in itself was a mockery of that old sitcom rule of never changing circumstances for the better, even if it's unrealistic to give up without a real fight.

That sort of thing is unhealthy to believe in, that you can never succeed, and you have to give up something promising
:crying:
:crybaby:

But in a way, some of us ARE mired by our fears of success. Like ME? I feel stuck in the mud, missing numerous chances --the road not taken, because it's risky, so I AM stuck, instead of moving ahead.

The Good Times cast could've all moved to a suburban neighborhood, to stay together, but would it have altered the show for the worse?
Lucy, Ricky, Vivian and Fred moved from NY apt house to suburban California houses, and the storyline possibility increased. It didn't wreck the show, though. It just gave new ideas --like Lucy thinking that she lost her wedding or engagement ring within the mortar of Ricky's new barbeque, so she takes it apart, then puts the crooked mess back together.

Ireneparalegal
01-03-2007, 03:11 PM
I could see someone watching this ep in 78 and saying-"DAMM, are they are going to catch a break? LOL
That was me Solomon! :wave:

ThomasE
01-04-2007, 11:43 PM
LOL. I feel like that we are making our own reality sitcom with these different posts. I will bet that some of the readers say, "hey, will Solomon ever get a break on this board?"

Ireneparalegal
01-04-2007, 11:47 PM
LOL. I feel like that we are making our own reality sitcom with these different posts. I will bet that some of the readers say, "hey, will Solomon ever get a break on this board?"
:lol: :lol: :lol: