Anonymous wrote:It was the 80s ... I was born in 86 and remember my friend and I riding in the trunk of my parents' station wagon with no seatbelts ... we were just in that big trunk area having fun. I think our dog was there too.
Anonymous wrote:I noticed the carseat recently too!
Anonymous wrote:The part that gets me is that in some of the early episodes, they're celebrating Danny's 30th birthday. A few episodes later, DJ mentions she's 11. He was a teen dad, but now he lives in one of San Francisco's painted ladies? What?
Sounds like he must have a ton of family money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The milkman, the paperboy, evening TV
Wait... isn't it The milkman, the paperboy, and even MTV?
Have I been singing it wrong for decades?
That's how I sang it too!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Ha ha ha! I had no idea it was "evening" TV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The milkman, the paperboy, evening TV
Wait... isn't it The milkman, the paperboy, and even MTV?
Have I been singing it wrong for decades?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, having kids ruins frivolous TV. I keep waiting for Little Ricky to scream bloody murder from the room he is always playing in quietly alone while Lucy and Ethel plot out something. And talk about reliable childcare - Mrs Trumbull was always available to babysit at a moment's notice.
Why aren't all kids like TV kids?
I know! I want TV kids! I was watching an episode of "7th Heaven" and the two younger kids are quietly playing in their room with no TV when the mother comes in with open cups of milk and a huge plate of cookies and asks them to please stay in their room while she and the father entertain a guest. Like my kids would ever do that especially after all the sugar from the cookies and spilling milk all over!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The milkman, the paperboy, evening TV
Wait... isn't it The milkman, the paperboy, and even MTV?
Have I been singing it wrong for decades?
Anonymous wrote:The milkman, the paperboy, evening TV
Anonymous wrote:I am watching Fuller House on Netflix right now (don't judge- my husband does enough). Tommy is always just wandering the house alone, being "watched" by children, etc. DJ wanders in and kisses him and then goes out for hours. Those Tanners...
Anonymous wrote:At least she was in a car seat! They used to just put babies on the floor of the backseat surrounded by pillows and blankets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I totally felt like having a kid ruined Mrs Doubtfire for me. The wife was definitely a douche to Robin Williams after they got divorced (she should've just let him take care of the kids after school from the beginning), but I totally understand why she was pissed at him. Letting a petting zoo into their super fancy San Francisco house, especially when the kid wasn't supposed to have a big birthday party because his grades were bad?! Ridiculous. Plus, she went to the effort to get him a cake and was going to have a small party for him anyway. When I saw that movie as a kid, I thought the dad was the coolest. Now I think he was a nice dude, but totally not a responsible husband at all.
She absolutely should've let him take care of the kids. He wasn't an adulterer, alcoholic, or drug addict...he was just immature. That bothered me as a kid and it still bothers me.
Anonymous wrote:I totally felt like having a kid ruined Mrs Doubtfire for me. The wife was definitely a douche to Robin Williams after they got divorced (she should've just let him take care of the kids after school from the beginning), but I totally understand why she was pissed at him. Letting a petting zoo into their super fancy San Francisco house, especially when the kid wasn't supposed to have a big birthday party because his grades were bad?! Ridiculous. Plus, she went to the effort to get him a cake and was going to have a small party for him anyway. When I saw that movie as a kid, I thought the dad was the coolest. Now I think he was a nice dude, but totally not a responsible husband at all.