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Full house season 1 episode 8
Full house season 1 episode 8





  1. Full house season 1 episode 8 full#
  2. Full house season 1 episode 8 tv#

What could possibly be the lesson here? Don’t forget where you put stuff? After 155 episodes, we still can’t tell which Olsen twin is which in a scene. Michelle reports her bike stolen, and the whole family pitches in to find it… until she realizes, 22 minutes later, that she left it at a friend’s house. Dear God, we must be in worse shape than we thought. Their insights make us realize that, as sickeningly sweet and annoying as the sitcom often was, it had its heart in the right place and meant a lot to the kids who watched it.

Full house season 1 episode 8 full#

They grew up watching Full House and have fond memories of the show, down to which obnoxious sweater Stephanie wore in a particular episode. Worn out and almost unable to go on, we are momentarily rescued by four visiting female friends. The spectacle is enough to cut through our mounting fatigue and numbness… barely. The Beach Boys show up again, this time to help Jesse and his band the Rippers record a cover of ”Forever.” The episode concludes with a fully produced 2 1/2-minute video featuring a half-naked John Stamos, a church filled with candles, and creepy superimposed images of Jesse’s newborn twins. Tanner” would be a good name for a rapper. In our loopy state, all we can learn from this heartwarming interaction is that ”D.J. Soon thereafter, her illness is cured by a gentle lecture from Danny. develops an eating disorder and collapses after over-exercising on a treadmill.

Full house season 1 episode 8 tv#

singing ”Lollipops & Gummi Bears” might be the most hilariously bad three minutes in the history of TV Stephanie’s (Jodie Sweetin) ”Love Shack” dance routine followed by D.J. Staff talent-show alert! Joey does stand-up and Jesse rocks out with the Beach Boys’ Mike Love, who mumbles his way through his scene. When people describe FH as so-bad-it’s-good, they’re thinking of this: Danny hosts a charity telethon. It is seemingly the umpteenth time that a character has undergone a complete transformation for 20 minutes and then learned to be normal again at the end. Predictability is alive and well on Full House, as in this episode in which Danny feels he’s too uptight and overcompensates by being a slob at a poker game. The lyrics pose the question, ”Whatever happened to predictability?” The answer: nothing. The opening theme song is starting to get really irritating. The disc resumes moments later, just in time for the first utterance of baby Michelle’s (Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen) catchphrase, ”You got it, dude!” Nick is starting to seriously doubt he can handle two more days of this. The weaker one of us (okay, it’s Joe) nods off, leaving Nick to panic when the DVD suddenly stalls mid-episode. Brian Wilson looks uncomfortable throughout most of the scene. (Candace Cameron), wins tickets to a Beach Boys concert, the entire band inexplicably arrives at the Tanner household to sing ”Kokomo” in the living room.

full house season 1 episode 8

We just compared a Full House episode to a Kurosawa film. Maybe the fatigue is getting to us already. While burning calories, we enjoy a solid season 1 episode in which Jesse and Joey bicker over a mutual love interest, rendered in Rashomon-style flashbacks. We set up a Gazelle exercise machine purchased solely to offset the long-term health effects of watching television for four days straight. Then, six minutes in, Joey does his first Popeye impression.

full house season 1 episode 8

The pilot, in which recently widowed Danny Tanner (Bob Saget) welcomes brother-in-law Jesse (John Stamos) and best friend Joey (Dave Coulier) into his home to help care for his three daughters, surprises us by opening with some genuinely funny moments.

full house season 1 episode 8 full house season 1 episode 8

That’s eight seasons, 192 episodes, 75 hours. In honor of the release of Full House: The Complete Series, EW challenged self-proclaimed champions of unironic television Joe Pickett and Nick Prueher to watch it all in one sitting. Intrepid reporters, er, TV watchers Joe Pickett and Nick Prueher camp out on the couch for a three-day journey through the 192-episode world of the so-bad-it’s-good sitcom Its quite hysterical, and I felt their ambitious efforts deserved to be included after the jump. I’d been meaning to post this since I read it an Entertainment Weekly a few weeks back, but two of their reporters watched all 192 episodes of Full House (at once) and posted a diary on EW.com.







Full house season 1 episode 8