View Full Version : "Jumping the shark" and the legacy of Happy Days in the future?


TMC
12-05-2019, 04:39 AM
Will there come a time when the only thing remembered about the TV show Happy Days is the phrase “jump the shark?” (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jumping_the_shark) I honestly wonder if there are people out there who have never seen Happy Days, but definitely know the idiom "Jump the Shark". And would people only know the context of the shark jumping episode (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Happy_Days_(season_5)) by looked it up after learning the idiom itself?

PracTz
12-15-2019, 08:31 PM
Oddly enough, the whole episode came about when they asked Mr. Winkler what his offscreen hobbies were and he mentioned waterskiing. Obviously, the Fonz could NOT regularly waterski in Milwaukee (and I doubt few folks if anyone in the early 60's did that on Lake Michigan). So they came up with a plot bringing Fonzie and the Cunninghams to California and a challenge got made JUST so Fonzie could be shown waterskiing!

DEH55
05-20-2020, 04:36 PM
It's weird how this episode is made fun of now but when I was very young all the kids at school loved that episode and were talking about it. To me the show jumped the shark when Ron Howard and Don Most left. Everyone I knew lost interest after that.

TMC
10-15-2021, 03:06 AM
It's weird how this episode is made fun of now but when I was very young all the kids at school loved that episode and were talking about it. To me the show jumped the shark when Ron Howard and Don Most left. Everyone I knew lost interest after that.

I went back and watched the Rowdy Reviewer's video (https://vimeo.com/277183241) on Joanie Loves Chachi. And he said that in his view, the true point of no return moment (https://web.archive.org/web/20061031121718/http://www.jumptheshark.com/h/happydays.htm) for Happy Days wasn't when Fonzie jumped the shark. It was when Fonzie started softening, maturing, and growing as a character, which was pretty much the opposite of what drew the young audience to him in the first place. This was compounded by Chachi being brought him to essentially be Fonzie's replacement as the young, rebellious character and completely taking over the storylines.

TMC
02-05-2022, 01:55 AM
Henry Winkler himself, also said (https://www.metv.com/stories/henry-winkler-adored-fonzies-soulmate-but-said-he-straightened-out-too-much) that he felt that Fonzie's character may have "straightened out" too much:

In the Happy Days episode "Going Steady," Fonzie shocked the world by deciding he was ready to settle down.

This was the moment that signaled the final shift in the Fonz's character, as he falls for Ashley, a single mom played by actor Linda Purl. The actor who played the Fonz, Henry Winkler nearly swooned when he described Purl to the Television Academy as "a beautiful, delicate, majestic young woman. Really fabulous."

He said before Purl came along, Fonzie "was a player," snapping his fingers at women in a macho move that Winkler warns does not have at all the same effect on the ladies in the real world.

But Happy Days fans had already met Purl before she joined the cast in 1982 to play Fonzie's soulmate.

In the second season premiere, "Richie Moves Out," Purl played Richie's love interest, a gum-chewing girl named Gloria. In an interview with Pop Goes the Culture TV, Purl explained how she first got cast on Happy Days as Richie's girl. She said she was already friends with Ralph Malph actor Donny Most, and when she moved to town, he told her he couldn't guarantee that he could help her get a role, but he said, "Well, you know, come on down and meet the casting people."

The casting people liked Purl, and she appeared as Gloria for a handful of episodes in the second season. "It was such a fun set right from the get-go," Purl said.

Then she disappeared, as Richie moved on, which you might just chalk up to the nature of the show. However, Purl said she recalled there was a reason why her character got cut — and it's actually pretty funny.

In "Richie Moves Out," we first meet Gloria sitting on the couch next to Richie. When he goes to make a move, she stops, worried about disrespecting his family in their home.

Richie assures her his parents are sleeping, and here's where she makes the fatal move for the character: Gloria removes the gum she's been chewing in order to make out with Richie.

Purl said there were people at the network just repulsed by this unsanitary display on such a squeaky-clean show. They were completely grossed out by this girl holding a piece of chewing gum onscreen in an otherwise romantic scene.

However, the casting people remained as enchanted by Linda Purl as Winkler was, and when it came time to cast Fonzie's greatest love, she returned to take that second role on the show.

Winkler wasn't exactly fond of how his character went from this rebellious type getting all the girls to someone with the straight-ahead moral compass of Mr. C.

"I think he straightened out too much toward the end," Winkler said. "He became a teacher. He kind of settled down. I changed my T-shirt from white to black."

Other than that, though there was still plenty of Fonz left in the end, he said. "I think basically he stayed the same," Winkler said.

TMC
01-28-2026, 09:43 PM
8TOEecurY6Q

Fonzie jumping the shark on Happy Days is one of the most famous moments in TV history — and also one of the most misunderstood.

For decades, “jumping the shark” has been used as shorthand for the moment a great show supposedly starts to fail. But when you look at what actually happened with Happy Days — the ratings, the audience reaction, and the ripple effects across television — the story isn’t what most people think.

This video breaks down the real context behind Fonzie’s shark jump, why the moment became mythologized, what Jon Hein’s original definition actually meant, and how this single episode reshaped TV storytelling, Saturday-night programming, and pop-culture language forever.

If you love classic television, behind-the-scenes TV history, and misunderstood pop-culture moments, this one changes how you see it all.

NDHappyDaysFan
02-17-2026, 03:00 PM
Happy Days "jumped the shark" when Fonzie put on a cow costume with Richie to sneak onto a farm to see a girl. (season 7 opener, I believe) That was the worst episode of Happy Days ever and the peak of the bad writing of seasons 6 and 7. After rewatching Happy Days as an adult, I will argue that the writing after Ron Howard left was actually BETTER than those last 2 seasons with him because they seemed like they were trying again instead of doing stupid things.

TMC
03-01-2026, 02:19 AM
_sYWsJrn808

Happy Days gave us leather jackets, drive-ins, and one of the most famous moments in TV history — “jumping the shark.”

But what if that wasn’t the real reason the show declined?

In this deep dive, we break down the real rise and fall of Happy Days: how it was built around Richie Cunningham, how Fonzie became the breakout icon, why the power shift changed the show’s identity, and what actually caused the long erosion of one of television’s biggest sitcoms.

From George Lucas and American Graffiti to the Mork & Mindy spin-off, behind-the-scenes tension, and the departure of Ron Howard, this is the full story of how nostalgia turned into a television machine — and why it couldn’t last forever.

Was it really the shark? Or was the ending already written long before that jump?

Let me know what you think was the true turning point.

CJMD03
03-05-2026, 08:37 PM
The show tanked when they started to change the format from the first two seasons. It got to the point of being brain dead in the final seasons.

Duster76
03-08-2026, 11:04 PM
The show tanked when they started to change the format from the first two seasons. It got to the point of being brain dead in the final seasons.

The problem with your assertion is this, the network was not interested in doing a third season of that series, it was for all practical purposes cancelled. We all know what happened next, no need to rehash it. Ron Howard is a competent actor but he is not a lead actor, he could have played Potsie, but not the lead character. So here's the question, if a more dynamic actor was cast in the role of Richie would the original Happy Days been more popular. I think the answer is potentially yes. Would it have been a much better series, yes, would it have been as popular as the Fonzie led Happy Days, no. I think it would have drawn enough of an audience to run four or five seasons. So to me the key reason Happy Days failed in its original form was the casting of Ron Howard, in a sense the show jumped the shark before it came on the air.

TMC
03-22-2026, 07:14 PM
How Henry Winkler Accidentally Created The Fonz's Most Memed Happy Days Moment (https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/tv/articles/henry-winkler-accidentally-created-fonzs-171200352.html)

We mostly remember The Fonz for being cool ... but one of the silliest things he ever did changed the way we talk about TV shows to this very day.

CJMD03
03-23-2026, 08:37 AM
The problem with your assertion is this, the network was not interested in doing a third season of that series, it was for all practical purposes cancelled. We all know what happened next, no need to rehash it. Ron Howard is a competent actor but he is not a lead actor, he could have played Potsie, but not the lead character. So here's the question, if a more dynamic actor was cast in the role of Richie would the original Happy Days been more popular. I think the answer is potentially yes. Would it have been a much better series, yes, would it have been as popular as the Fonzie led Happy Days, no. I think it would have drawn enough of an audience to run four or five seasons. So to me the key reason Happy Days failed in its original form was the casting of Ron Howard, in a sense the show jumped the shark before it came on the air.

The show became wholly inane. If I were Howard, I would have bailed way before he did.