A family-friendly, early WB sitcom that chronicles the ups and downs of parenting and family life as experienced by a professor and his wife as they raise their four kids. The series, produced by star Robert Townsend, sometimes tackles tough issues such as single motherhood, gangs, guns and dropping out of school.
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Soapy, romantic drama about twentysomethings wrestling with modern love. They meet in Manhattan after one leaves her groom at the altar and the other's girlfriend asks him to move in.
Brutally Normal is an American television sitcom that starred Mike Damus which aired on The WB Television Network. The series premiered on January 24, 2000 with two back-to-back episodes later airing along with Zoe, Duncan, Jack and Jane. A total of eight episodes were produced with only five of those episodes airing with the show being canceled on February 14, 2000.
This weekly, 30-minute WB sitcom was largely the handiwork of Will & Grace mentors David Kohan and Max Mutchnick. Mark Linn-Baker and Melanie Griffith starred as Alan and Lee Arnold, the parents of 20-year-old twin girls Mitchee (Sara Gilbert) and Farrah (Molly Stanton). Having built up a billion-dollar lingerie company from his own invention, "Breast-o Change-o" (a bra that had started out as a parachute!), the hard-working, intellectually inclined Alan had decided to retire and hand his business over to his daughters. But while Mitchee, a bookish and quick-witted brunette with an engineering degree, was more than capable of carrying on her dad's work, Mitchee's sister Farrah, a dimwitted blonde who made her living as an underwear model, tended to take after her equally scatterbrained (and equally blonde) mother Lee. Basically a new and more blatant variation on the old tickle-and-tease "sexcom" Too Close for Comfort, Twins premiered September 16, 2005.
The title character in this WB Network sitcom was Matt Stewart, played by Full House graduate Bob Saget. A widower, Matt used wisecracks and wry comments to shoulder the responsibilities inherent in raising his two daughters, Sarah (Kat Dennings) and Emily (Brie Larson). Sound familiar? But here's the clincher: Daddy Matt was an English teacher -- in the same high school attended by Sarah and virtually all of her would-be boyfriends. Dispensing the usual sage grandfatherly advice was Matt's own live-in dad, Sam Stewart (Jerry Adler). Part of a Friday-night WB comedy block, Raising Dad (working titles: In Your Dreams and Wake Up Dad) debuted on October 5, 2001, its original September 14 premiere date preempted by continuing coverage of the World Trade Center tragedy.