bengay
08-02-2016, 03:09 PM
Hello everyone,
As many of you are aware, Netflix has gone re-boot crazy with rebooting such iconic TV classics as "Full House" & "Gilmore Girls."
That being said, IF Netflix were to reboot "Growing Pains," would anyone watch? If they did, would it become a hit once again?
MY answer to both questions: Yes!
Here's how I would reboot "Growing Pains": in the Pilot Episode, I'd have Kirk Cameron & his real-life wife (as their respective "GP" characters) move into the Seaver family home in Long Island, New York with their 2 teenage boys and a 10-year-old daughter.
I'd have Mike Seaver, Jr., age 14, be the eldest teenage son, a junior version of his own father in the original series--a "hormone with feet," as Mike's mother Maggie referred to him in the original series' pilot; meanwhile, 12-year-old Humphrey would be the little brother who looked up to his big brother, idolizing him to the point of wanting to be JUST like him; the 10-year-old daughter, Katie, would be a rising 5th-grader struggling to fit in with her peers and classmates.
As the 1st-season progresses, I'd have episodes focus on misadventures in the NEW Seaver household, with special guest appearances by Alan Thicke, Joanna Kerns, et al as their original series characters.
Is this a good idea or what?
As many of you are aware, Netflix has gone re-boot crazy with rebooting such iconic TV classics as "Full House" & "Gilmore Girls."
That being said, IF Netflix were to reboot "Growing Pains," would anyone watch? If they did, would it become a hit once again?
MY answer to both questions: Yes!
Here's how I would reboot "Growing Pains": in the Pilot Episode, I'd have Kirk Cameron & his real-life wife (as their respective "GP" characters) move into the Seaver family home in Long Island, New York with their 2 teenage boys and a 10-year-old daughter.
I'd have Mike Seaver, Jr., age 14, be the eldest teenage son, a junior version of his own father in the original series--a "hormone with feet," as Mike's mother Maggie referred to him in the original series' pilot; meanwhile, 12-year-old Humphrey would be the little brother who looked up to his big brother, idolizing him to the point of wanting to be JUST like him; the 10-year-old daughter, Katie, would be a rising 5th-grader struggling to fit in with her peers and classmates.
As the 1st-season progresses, I'd have episodes focus on misadventures in the NEW Seaver household, with special guest appearances by Alan Thicke, Joanna Kerns, et al as their original series characters.
Is this a good idea or what?