View Full Version : What's the worst episode of the entire series?


TMC
11-27-2013, 04:49 AM
I thought about this after going through the most recent entries in the Full House Reviewed blog. As of right now, it's I think on the 18th episode of the 8th/last season. I've noticed that there were several episodes from the last year that gave the notion that the writers were really running out of ideas. In essence, things were extremely low stakes even on a level of a show like Full House. Even if you hated the show for it's corniness/cheesiness and overall, saccharine nature, you could at least expect Full House to at the end of the day, give the audience some morals or values to take away with.

For example, there's an episode about Michelle (it seems like a lot of shows centered on Michelle towards the end) fearing that her feet are growing too big (what's w/ the writers of Full House and feet, we already had the stuff involving how Kimmie's feet smelled bad). Something like that would make more sense as a Halloween episode instead of filler. Then, there's an episode about Jesse having to play in a charity basketball game (and Kareem Abdul-Jabaar even shows up to give Jesse some advice) even though he's lousy at it. You know things are bad when one of the episodes (I believe it was even the Season 8 premiere) concerns the dog, Comet going on a "big adventure" in the streets of San Francisco.

This episode pissed me off more than anything and it's the one (from the 7th season called "A House Divided") in which this wealthy man named Lou Bond, who lived in the Tanners' house as a child offered the clan to purchase it. Everybody is down w/ it except Michelle, who (being the entitled brat that she is) pre to do whatever it takes to sabotage the whole thing. Then, at the end, she gives this BS speech (which makes Danny have a change of heart) about how there are too many memories in that house to just leave it for a new one. If I were Danny, I would've told Michelle that new memories would be made in the new house. Plus, it wouldn't be fair for Jesse, Rebecca, Nicky, Alex and Joey to have to continue to live in the same house as the Tanners. What was the point in making what appeared to be a "series finale" type of scenario only to have the status quo restored at the end of the half hour?

Spark Of Spirit
11-27-2013, 05:10 PM
Any episode where Michelle was a brat and got her way despite it.

JO Sweet Heart
03-10-2014, 01:07 PM
To me, the worst is when Stephanie went riding with them high school boys in the final season. Why the writers had her and Gia become friends, I have no idea. That girl that Stephanie was friends with in the previous season named Micky in my opinion was better.

God bless you always!!! :) :) :)

Holly

Ali Music
04-17-2014, 04:46 PM
The last one...because it was over :(

WonderYearsfan
06-05-2014, 07:43 PM
Mine too is a Season 8 episode. Man there sure were some bad ones that year. But I think the absolute worst is Jesse having a hard time letting go because the twins are starting pre school. I mean seriously? Preschool? Jesse was having a hard time with them starting preschool? Also the subplot to that one about Stephanie's messy room was weak and boring as well. And that was the first episode where her and Gia were friends. Why they became friends I dont know. But it reminds me a lot of how Waldo was the school bully's sidekick in Season 2 of Family Matters but staring in Season 3 he was Eddie's best friends. Since FH and FM have the same writers, i'm thinking they like the idea of a recurring antagonist, becoming a regular, transformed into a protagonist. JMO

HauntedThunderman94
11-17-2014, 02:18 AM
Michelle buying the donkey with her lemonade money was a terrible episode.

Mace Dolex
11-17-2014, 03:38 AM
Listing a worse episode is too easy that the list would consist of every episode. LOL

To be fair for this thread the worst episode has to the pilot episode because it started the trend of cutesy pansy shows with smart aleck kids and dumb adults coupled with wimpy morals at end of each epsidoe with sappy teary music.

Furienna
11-23-2014, 08:59 PM
These are my bottom three episodes, as I remember it.

1: The one where DJ skips school to get an autograph, and it went so far that Joey throws the autograph in a garbage bin and they even had Stephanie get angry with her. I guess it was supposed to give kids some morals about not lying or skipping school, but why didn't Danny just let her miss one hour of one school day?

2: The one where DJ returns from a trip to Spain, and Stephanie and Michelle accidentally end up on a plane to New Zealand. I guess we're supposed to feel like Stephanie and Michelle deserve to be punished, and I don't see how that is fair, as I blame the whole incident on neglective adults. Danny could have stopped nagging on sixteen-year-old DJ for drinking coffee con leche and kept an eye on his two younger daughters instead. How did Stephanie and Michelle get on a plane without a ticket anyway? And why did that stupid stewardess not listen to Stephanie?

3: The one where Michelle wants to get the same part in a kindergarten play as both her sisters had played, only to see Joey and Jesse give it to another kid. Yeah, yeah, I know that the moral is that we should all be "team players", bla bla bla... But I feel sorry for Michelle here. She was only like five years old, and even if the other kid was better, I so understand her disappointment. And it was just sickening how she even had to encourage the boy to take on the role, when he suddenly got the stage fright!

JO Sweet Heart
11-23-2014, 10:20 PM
^^^ Amen to all of that. Especially about Michelle being passed over for Yankee Doodle when Jesse and Joey pretty much promised her the role the night before. To me, they were wrong to make such a promise if they had every intention of letting the other kids audition for the spot. Promising Michelle the spot wasn't fair to her or the other kids.

God bless you always!!! :) :) :)

Holly

Furienna
11-24-2014, 03:02 PM
Thank you! I was nearly murdered on IMDB for defending Michelle in that episode. And if Jesse and Joey had actually promised her that she would be Yankee Doodle, it only makes it even worse.

Ihavealife2uknow
01-03-2015, 10:00 PM
Mine is "Kissing Cousins", the one where cousin Stavros comes after Papoulis death and scams the family.

tlc38tlc38
01-04-2015, 11:08 AM
I don't really like the one with Michelle's huge feet. Not really because it's a bad episode but because I've seen it so many times and N@N airs it to death.

70s show watcher
01-04-2015, 05:52 PM
I don't really like the one with Michelle's huge feet. Not really because it's a bad episode but because I've seen it so many times and N@N airs it to death.that ep get my vote for all time worst

TMC
01-06-2015, 03:25 AM
http://mattmajewski.net/fullhouse.html

#10: Those Better Not Be the Days

You know, I'm thinking these women could play the adult Tanner girls. By the way, doesn't the one on the right look like a typical Ashley?
If you’ve ever driven be an accident, it’s hard to look away because you’re curious to know how it happened. This episode is clearly an accident and touch to look away from, but this time it’s just to see how bad it gets. DJ and Stephanie turn into complete brats that take advantage of the adults around. In response, the guys trade places with the girls to show them how difficult they have been. The guys turn into adult Michelles and drive DJ and Stephanie up a wall. I don’t understand how this roleplay could possibly work. (To be fair, the quick gag where DJ eats the corners off of Jesse’s sandwich was funny. Even Candace looked ready to crack up.) Anyway, when two of the likable characters turn into whomever George Michael was singing about in “Everything She Wants,” it’s hard to watch. Naturally, the plan failed, so Danny flashes forward to the girls’ adulthood. The part from the future is simply awful. The acting and costumes on the men and Becky are hideous and the whole skit isn’t written very well. The less said about the grown up girls, the better. Michelle is still a pest, though. Having said that, it’s just a pointless dream of Danny’s, and it wasted ten minutes of our time. They all talk at the end and the girls finally get it. Why in God’s name didn’t that happen before the pointless dream or badly planned lesson? While the episode had a point, most of it felt like filler.

#9: Crushed

So, why were they still making books three years after the show ended? And can you name any Tommy Page songs? I didn't think so.
Stephanie is crushing on Tommy Page, who was a real artist, but if you’ve never heard of him outside of this show, then you’re in the same boat as me. Danny pulls some strings and Page shows up at Stephanie’s tenth birthday party. At the party, the girls dance normally at first, then bust out a dance that was obviously rehearsed. Stephanie is next placed in a chair while Danny sends Page in to surprise her. Page tortures us with some bland pop song, but Steph is eating it up. Tommy and DJ then set up a date. This sets up a conflict between DJ and Stephanie. Why they would fight over a tool like Tommy is anyone’s guess. In the subplot, Michelle enrolls in Joey Gladstone’s Comedy College. Joey (with A as a middle initial, so I’ll call him Jag for this entry) thinks he can make Michelle worth watching. Jag isn’t funny; how could he possibly teach Michelle? Michelle is trying to get Nicky and Alex (this is the only point that those two are worth mentioning on this page) to laugh, which is a wasted effort. She even tried some of Jag’s ideas on Tommy. Really, Michelle, just give it up. When you need Jag to tell you how to be funny, you’ve got no chance. Look, if you’re a fan of Jodie Sweetin, you’ll like the strong performance she gives here. However, you’ll also have to sit through bad music by Page, a subplot that’s stupid and annoying, and an unhealthy dose of unrealistic dialogue.

#8: Please Don't Touch the Dinosaur

Go ahead, Michelle. Touch this dinosaur. Let it rip you apart.
Danny and Jesse clash over how to supervise a group of children at the museum. Jesse turns on some music and they start reenacting the dancing from Peanuts. That idiot Aaron is dancing on the couch. Danny enters and the kids split into groups. Jesse is turning his kids loose while Danny’s are at boot camp. Danny is about to send Jesse to the ER. Jesse’s party of five (ok, it’s really eight) is out of control, leading up to Michelle knocking out a bone in the dinosaur’s leg, somehow leading to a collapse instead of tipping over. Michelle and Jesse have so little time (about a New York Minute or so) to fix it that they never do. Later, Jesse tells Michelle it’s all right and that it was an accident. Yeah, right. Sure it was. Crossing the barrier unsupervised and knocking down an expensive artifact while playing tag in a museum is an accident. You oughta know that ain’t right. Meanwhile, Stephanie cleans out Joey’s car and discovers a few baseball cards, including the make it or break it Nolan Ryan card. The card ends up in Steve’s hands. Apparently, that card is worth $2000. Please. It’s Nolan Ryan, the jerk that throws at hitters and they get suspended, not him. I wouldn’t pay a quarter for that card. Steve sells the card for $30. The girls are about to break him in half. Skip this one unless you like yelling at your tv set. (By the way, did you catch the titles of the actors’ other works?)

#7: Luck Be a Lady, Part 1

Readers, get out a shovel to escape the deep pit of bull you’re about to step into. There’s more holes in this plot than there is in a whiffle ball. “Luck be a Lady” takes place in Lake Tahoe, where Danny and Becky are doing a special episode of “Wake Up San Francisco.” With a title like that, shouldn’t the show be taped in…I don’t know…San Francisco? What could possibly be going on in Lake Tahoe that’s important to the city of San Francisco? Either way, it’s obviously a work trip, so why did Danny bring his girls there instead of leaving them and Joey at home? (Edit: Never mind. Would you leave your kids home alone with Joey?) In other events, Jesse spends the episode hitting on Becky in a plot that I don’t care about, all leading up to a Slap Slap Kiss. Meanwhile, Stephanie decides to go play the slots when Danny mentions that that it’s illegal for her to do so. She and DJ walk right by a security guard as he watches them. Joey starts winning, so his message to the girls that “gambling is wrong” has changed to “play until you lose.” The girls don’t care, probably because both messages are stupid. Joey leaves for a change bucket while walking by the buckets right behind him. As he walks away, the girls are told to guard the machine. They guard it by inserting a dollar that the casino owner gave Stephanie and pulling the handle. DJ hits the jackpot. Wait…what? Who let a 12 year old into the casino? How did she get anywhere near a slot machine? How does nobody notice any of this? How did Joey return before the bell rang? Whatever. Later, the owner catches DJ on camera using a silver dollar that HE gave Stephanie. What’s wrong with this guy? I wish there was a scene of him trying to explain to his lawyers of why he allowed two girls to play the slots with his money. That would be hilarious.

#6: Fuller House

As much fun as it is to bash Michelle for being such an annoying runt, she doesn’t deserve it here. Her reaction seems normal for her age. However, the adults’ way of handling it is atrocious. For Jesse, Becky, and Danny to base a major decision on the reaction of a preschooler is absurd. Anyway, don’t forget the rest of the stupidity. See if you caught any of these nonsensical “highlights.”


DJ and Kimmy show superhuman strength by dragging Stephanie’s bed across the room, with her on it. It wasn’t in the room in a later scene.
Jesse somehow rips a wallpaper bunny off the bedroom wall, gets it framed, and gives it to Michelle to remember him. Never mind that he’ll be visiting often and the bunnies were in Stephanie’s room.
Jesse just moves in with his wife, and he immediately starts thinking about Michelle, because no man could make love to his wife until any four year olds he knows are happy with him.
Amazingly, Stephanie gets her fractions down after solving one problem, and no explanation of the concept.
Becky lies about termites and tells Jesse that she hired an exterminator. Jesse makes no mention of the fact that he used to be one. You’d think Jesse would know how to handle pests. After all, he’s lived with two since the first episode. I would say that the writers threw season one out of canon, but there is a flashback to the pilot. Huh?


#5: The Return of Grandma

Seriously, if you write an episode for a television series, wouldn’t it make sense to watch all of the previous episodes to make sure you don’t break the continuity? That’s the biggest problem here: this episode doesn’t fit the continuity of the show. By itself, it may not have made this list, but knowing the direction the characters took later in the series, it doesn’t fit. The writers of the later episodes must have never watched this one. In this half hour of nonsense, the Tanners are expecting a visit from Danny’s mother. Joey announces that she’s coming at 5:12. She arrives at 12:05. Excuse me, how do you make that mistake? Why is Joey such a moron? Why did Joey have a mannequin that always wore the same shirt as him? Really, that would mean that Joey has at least two of each shirt that he wears. Where does the money for that come from? He’s living in a friend’s house for free and doesn’t have a steady income. Meanwhile, Danny’s mom calls in some backup because the house is too dirty. Come on, is this the same Danny Tanner that was a neat freak and cleaned his cleaning products? Am I to believe that Danny would let that happen? Either way, Claire (Danny’s mom) brings over Joey’s and Jesse’s mothers to supervise grown men like they are on probation. They all yap about what is best for their granddaughters. They don’t consider two facts: a) Danny is a grown man who already is doing what’s best for his girls; and b) Joey is not related to the girls in any way, so neither is his mother. Why is Joey there, anyway? Jesse and Danny can handle this. The mothers then decide that everything is satisfactory, so they fly home to boss around their other offspring. When we see who gave birth to Danny and Jesse in later episodes, the actresses have changed and so has Jesse’s name. How do you justify that, writers? Meanwhile, the girls manage to pull off the impossible: they lose a turtle. What happened: did it run away? I don’t think so. If you choose to watch this, keep in mind that this is out of character for all three guys.

#4: Michelle a la Cart

Man, I hate this one. I don’t know why I put myself through this torture. The writers should be removed from this planet for this mess. Some plot-convenient annoying little boy (surprisingly not Aaron) spouts off some nonsense about how girls can’t work on cars. Michelle then recruits Becky, at which point, Danny and Jesse step out of character and make fun of Becky, discouraging Michelle in the process. Meanwhile, Joey is learning ballet downstairs in a plot that has no reason to exist except to parallel Michelle’s plot and to make sure Jodie Sweetin appears somehow. It’s pointless. Then, after all that pain, the episode goes “downhill.” How does it get worse, you may ask? Well, Danny does a sudden, complete reversal without any prompting beyond Michelle’s disappointment. But forget that. For the crowning moment of failure, let’s go to the soapbox derby. There are three heats in the first round, all conveniently won by plot-relevant characters. Next, Denise (whose presence is surprising given the nature of the plot) loses to Kenny, setting up Kenny’s final race against Michelle. Michelle, of course, wins it, hammering home the lesson they hit us over the head with. Thanks, writers. We knew twenty minutes earlier that she would win, but amazingly that’s not even the main tragedy here. She won “by a rose.” She stuck a flower on the front of the car. What the **** kind of derby is this? How is that flower considered part of the car? Aren’t there rules on how long the car can be? How is Michelle not disqualified? And why can’t they edit out the part where Saget shakes his rear for the camera? Yuck.

#3: You Pet It, You Bought It

Good God, Michelle buys a flipping donkey with the money she raised selling lemonade to construction workers that Stephanie, Becky, and she have no business fawning over. Later, Danny allows Kimmy to take Michelle to the candy store. For some reason, the Tanners seem to inexplicably show a lot of trust in Kimmy, even though she often lets them down, and this is no exception. Why did Kimmy stop by the petting zoo, anyway? Worse, why didn’t anyone get on Kimmy’s case for allowing this to happen? Kimmy allowed Michelle to waste her money and should know that Danny would never allow a donkey (well, besides Joey) into the house. Once Shorty is brought home, what took everyone so long to realize that it was trouble? They let the path of destruction go too long. By the way, why would a traveling zoo be on the Tanners’ block on its way to Seattle? None of this makes any sense and I have no way of explaining the amazing series of coincidences that take place here. On top of that, Jesse sings the “Three’s Company” theme in about half of the scenes, and he doesn’t even know all of the flipping words! So, to summarize: a 7 year old talking about hot men, highly improbable coincidences, a loud and obnoxious donkey, and a lot of repetitive singing. This one will test your suspension of disbelief.

#2: The Apartment

The best thing about this episode is that Michelle is barely in it. Of course, she still managed to anger me, Danny, and Stephanie by the end of her second scene. If I had a little sister who was collecting leaves and she put the leaves with bugs on my bed, first I’d tell, and if that didn’t help, I’d take care of her myself, and that won’t be pretty. Anyway, Danny rips DJ a new backside when she falls asleep at Steve’s place. Never mind that she’s proven herself trustworthy from the start. Danny goes so far as to spy on her, as if DJ and Steve have no judgement. Please. So DJ gets yelled at for staying over too late, but she and Steve can DUMP CEMENT through the kitchen window, and that just gets a talk? Yes, cement. What’s worse it that it’s even more ridiculous than it sounds. Danny was popping a vein yelling at DJ, which kept him from noticing the mess that Michelle created. As usual, Michelle gets off easy. Later on, DJ and Steve hit a switch on the dump truck, breaking the window and covering the floor with cement. See if you can cement the cracks in the plot:

How does Joey not hear, see, or feel anything? He doesn’t hear Danny or Jesse? Feel cement on his shoes? See them running around yelling?
How are the kitchen window fixed and the floor cleaned by the next episode?
Why didn’t Danny go outside to shut the truck off, or turn the cement away from the kitchen?
Why wasn’t the truck locked knowing that there are children around?
In the talk afterward, why does Danny apologize, and where does DJ get off saying that he owes Steve’s landlord $30? Shouldn’t he make Steve pay that?


#1: The House Meets the Mouse, Part 1

It’s only fitting that the worst episode of the series mercifully put an end to the abysmal sixth season. Season six started with “Come Fly with Me,” an episode that deserves dishonorable mention for thinking we’d believe that Stephanie and Michelle somehow stowed away on a plane to New Zealand. The other bookend was this steaming pile of feces. Now, to be fair, I refuse to watch the second part because the first is so bad, so I can’t rate it. Anyway, this episode reeks of executive meddling. I bet someone under the Disney umbrella insisted their shows take place in Disneyworld, and I wouldn’t be the least bit surprised if that person said to center it on Michelle. Thanks, Disney. What did we do to deserve this? Back to the plot, or at least the part I suffered through, Jesse and Becky are going to celebrate their anniversary at Disneyworld. However, this is Full House, where the entire family just has to go, plus Joey and Kimmy. The family splits up once they get there, anyway, so it’s pointless to have everyone there. While Danny bores us with some plot with Vicki, the real pain comes from the girls’ story. Stephanie stands in line to rub a lamp to become a princess for the day. As good as that sounds, Michelle weasels her way in front of Stephanie, and the stupid writers make the little runt a princess. Stephanie is pissed off, almost as much as I am. It’s at this point that I turn this show off. This is the only episode I refuse to ever watch again, so some details may be lacking. If you decide to watch this to see how awful it is, challenge yourself to last more than 15 minutes into it.

Furienna
01-06-2015, 04:47 AM
^^^
I'm sorry, but I just can't understand this guy's motivation to do that list. He seems to hate everything about this show, and still he sits down to make a bottom 10 list. If I had hated a show that much, I would never sit through it again just to complain about it afterwards.

JO Sweet Heart
01-06-2015, 08:28 PM
^^^ To me, a person who knows so much about something has to be a closet fan compared to what it is that they want the rest of the world to think. A real hater would not spend so much time on something that they can not stand.

God bless you always!!! :) :) :)

Holly

tlc38tlc38
01-06-2015, 09:02 PM
^^^ To me, a person who knows so much about something has to be a closet fan compared to what it is that they want the rest of the world to think. A real hater would not spend so much time on something that they can not stand.

God bless you always!!! :) :) :)

Holly
That could somewhat be true but I've always been taught that if you're going to bash something, educate yourself on it first so you can fight back with intelligence.

Wildchats
01-31-2015, 06:06 PM
Full House is one of my favorite shows, but there were some stupid stories including Michelle. The Donkey episode was pretty dumb.

Blackout
01-31-2015, 09:12 PM
To me, the worst is when Stephanie went riding with them high school boys in the final season. Why the writers had her and Gia become friends, I have no idea. That girl that Stephanie was friends with in the previous season named Micky in my opinion was better.

God bless you always!!! :) :) :)

Holly

yeah Gia was the cigarette girl from the episode Steph met Mickey

TMC
03-25-2015, 03:00 AM
Mine is "Kissing Cousins", the one where cousin Stavros comes after Papoulis death and scams the family.

I quite frankly hate it when sitcoms have "gimmick" episodes which serve as an excuse for one of the cast-members to play a dual-role. It seems like an elaborate excuse for said actor to show off his or her "acting range".

Schmoopie
03-25-2015, 03:41 AM
I'd have to think about this for a while since I haven't seen them all in forever, but I didn't like the later episodes as much. I don't think there are any that I absolutely hated though. It was a good show but some seasons are much better than others.

mets82
03-25-2015, 05:11 PM
Maybe the last two seasons for me. I mean Michelle turns my stomach in most of them. I mean I have a list somewhat:

Super Bowl Funday: Its the one where Michelle acts like a brat and insists on taking her to the museum Super Bowl Sunday. Man, she's so annoying in this.

The Donkey episode. I mean what's left there to say about that one?

When the house was going to be sold. Michelle sticks her nose where it doesn't belong.

The House meets the Mouse. What really got me was that Becky and Jesse were supposed to go and everybody just self invited themselves which really pissed me off. Not only that, but Stephanie has a right to be angry. Not only did Michelle cut in line but then she acts like a bigger brat by running away. :mad:


I have to also mention the one where Jesse was going to graduate and it just so happens that they take a subway and it gets stuck. Sorry, I don't by that Jesse and co. love subways all of a sudden. Btw, same plot happened on Boy Meets World for there New Year's Eve episode where Cory, Topanga, Eric and Angela got stuck on a subway. I think her name was Angela. She's actually the girl that played Ms. Dupree on USA High.

I mean the plots got stupid. By the later seasons we get it. Jesse wont cut his hair, the twins are out of control, Michelle's a brat and Joey's a pig.

Furienna
03-25-2015, 05:15 PM
Super Bowl Funday: Its the one where Michelle acts like a brat and insists on taking her to the museum Super Bowl Sunday. Man, she's so annoying in this.
It has been years since I last saw that episode, but I believe that Joey and Jesse had already promised to take Michelle and her friends to the museum that day. You make it sound like Michelle came up with the idea that very day just to be mean, and that is not the case.

mets82
03-25-2015, 05:23 PM
Well, you know what. Joey and Jesse can change there mind. I mean I think that was a problem with the show. Everybody cowtows towards Michelle.

Furienna
03-25-2015, 05:43 PM
But they promised to take not only Michelle, but several other children as well, on a field trip. It wouldn't have been right to back out on their responsibility, just because they suddenly remembered that it was Super Bowl weekend. I think your delusional Michelle hate has clowded your judgement here...

Mace Dolex
03-25-2015, 06:07 PM
I also hated how Bob Saget had his hair during the '91-'92 season, yeah of all the things to hate on the show I chose Danny Tanner's hair because he looked like a pansy.

clytie
03-25-2015, 06:50 PM
"Fuller House" always kinda creeped me out.

TMC
01-25-2022, 01:01 AM
I came across this comment (https://www.autismforums.com/threads/rip-bob-saget.38440/#post-820958) and I'm in total agreement that the main problem of the episodes, is that they would be resolved a bit too perfectly. And they were always somewhat happy to the point that it was just unrealistic.

JO Sweet Heart
01-25-2022, 05:50 AM
Maybe the last two seasons for me. I mean Michelle turns my stomach in most of them. I mean I have a list somewhat:

Super Bowl Funday: Its the one where Michelle acts like a brat and insists on taking her to the museum Super Bowl Sunday. Man, she's so annoying in this.

The Donkey episode. I mean what's left there to say about that one?

When the house was going to be sold. Michelle sticks her nose where it doesn't belong.

The House meets the Mouse. What really got me was that Becky and Jesse were supposed to go and everybody just self invited themselves which really pissed me off. Not only that, but Stephanie has a right to be angry. Not only did Michelle cut in line but then she acts like a bigger brat by running away. :mad:


I have to also mention the one where Jesse was going to graduate and it just so happens that they take a subway and it gets stuck. Sorry, I don't by that Jesse and co. love subways all of a sudden. Btw, same plot happened on Boy Meets World for there New Year's Eve episode where Cory, Topanga, Eric and Angela got stuck on a subway. I think her name was Angela. She's actually the girl that played Ms. Dupree on USA High.

I mean the plots got stupid. By the later seasons we get it. Jesse wont cut his hair, the twins are out of control, Michelle's a brat and Joey's a pig.
Forgive me if this is a dumb question, but what is it that made Joey a pig in your opinion?

God bless you always!!!

Holly

Furienna
01-25-2022, 03:30 PM
I came across this comment (https://www.autismforums.com/threads/rip-bob-saget.38440/#post-820958) and I'm in total agreement that the main problem of the episodes, is that they would be resolved a bit too perfectly. And they were always somewhat happy to the point it’s just unrealistic.
Some people don't seem to get that not all TV shows have to be gritty and edgy.
Some TV shows will be made for families with young kids.

JO Sweet Heart
01-25-2022, 04:47 PM
^^^ Amen to that. There being people of different ages on the show is one of the many things that made the show as good as it is.

God bless you always!!!

Holly

TMC
02-25-2022, 04:27 AM
Maybe the last two seasons for me. I mean Michelle turns my stomach in most of them. I mean I have a list somewhat:

Super Bowl Funday: Its the one where Michelle acts like a brat and insists on taking her to the museum Super Bowl Sunday. Man, she's so annoying in this.

The Donkey episode. I mean what's left there to say about that one?

When the house was going to be sold. Michelle sticks her nose where it doesn't belong.

The House meets the Mouse. What really got me was that Becky and Jesse were supposed to go and everybody just self invited themselves which really pissed me off. Not only that, but Stephanie has a right to be angry. Not only did Michelle cut in line but then she acts like a bigger brat by running away. :mad:


I have to also mention the one where Jesse was going to graduate and it just so happens that they take a subway and it gets stuck. Sorry, I don't by that Jesse and co. love subways all of a sudden. Btw, same plot happened on Boy Meets World for there New Year's Eve episode where Cory, Topanga, Eric and Angela got stuck on a subway. I think her name was Angela. She's actually the girl that played Ms. Dupree on USA High.

I mean the plots got stupid. By the later seasons we get it. Jesse wont cut his hair, the twins are out of control, Michelle's a brat and Joey's a pig.

The whole plot of that episode (https://therealfullhousereviewed.wordpress.com/2013/11/08/season-8-episode-14-super-bowl-fun-day/) makes (https://web.archive.org/web/20140417054850/http://forums.televisionwithoutpity.com/topic/1823519-full-house/page-157#entry11876746) absolutely no (https://web.archive.org/web/20140417054850/http://forums.televisionwithoutpity.com/topic/1823519-full-house/page-157#entry11877167) sense. First and foremost, who in their right mind schedules a college interview or anything else of that matter on Super Bowl Sunday? I mean, are you telling me that DJ nor anybody else in her family knew a big deal the day is for almost everyone else in America.

Incidentally, the very year that this episode originally aired, was the year that the San Francisco 49ers were playing in the Super Bowl (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Bowl_XXIX). So if Full House explicitly mentioned actual real world current events, there would be within reason to believe that the Tanner/Katsopolis/Gladstone bunch would be even more invested since their home town team was in the biggest football game of the year.

Also, who in their right mind, takes a bunch of pre-teens like Michelle and her classmates to a bar? Then again, why is Michelle having a field trip on a weekend let alone Super Bowl Sunday in the first place?

JO Sweet Heart
02-25-2022, 10:47 AM
In my opinion, what stands out about the Super Bowl episode is Joey being the person that is so invested in the game when we normally never saw him with so much interest in football. In season three we see him in a golf setting at least twice, the Hawaii trip first and then when Jesse is shown how to play. Later on, it was nothing but hockey where Joey was concerned except for the basketball episode which actually wasn't far from the Super Bowl episode.

God bless you always!!!

Holly