I can’t help think that having Benjamin as a tenant 10 years before made him not like many straight male tenants.
Is it? Batman and Robin. Robin Ventura (baseball player). Robin Hood. Robin Williams. The only Robyns I know are actually female.
Was never a fan of the show. And now I have that stupid theme song stuck in my head.
BENNY HILL, oh lord. My father used to watch that, I can still hear the theme song in my head. So awful but kinda funny but so… ugh lol
Priscilla Barnes (Terri on Three’s Company) had a recurring role on Jane the Virgin. I was delighted to see what a good actress she is. She plays a very unflattering, hilarious role, about as far from a sexy roommate as you can get.
Did he pronounce it right?
There was an episode of “Step by Step” in which the mom was going to meet a friend at a bar in Mequon. Not only did they murder the name the dad went on about how rough and tough of a town Mequon is.
FYI, even the poorest people in Mequon are at least upper middle class.

There was an episode of “Step by Step” in which the mom was going to meet a friend at a bar in Mequon. Not only did they murder the name the dad went on about how rough and tough of a town Mequon is.
FYI, even the poorest people in Mequon are at least upper middle class.
Somebody already mentioned this in post#3.
Well, i wasn’t going to reread a 9.5 year old thread.
I think she was on Dallas for a bit also playing one of jr’s scheming side floozies …

See a loopy landlady in a caftan? Mrs. Roper may be romping through your town
Did Mrs. Roper really wear caftans? I always thought they were muumuus.
Still, her wardrobe paled in comparison to Mr. Furley’s horrible polyester belted vests.

Even when I was eleven, though, I saw that the show had precisely two alternating plots:
Plot 1: Someone tells a lie and enlists the other roommates to play along to pull one over on the landlords, and it spins out of control.
Plot 2: Something is overheard and misunderstood, and the rest of the show is double-entendres as characters talk at cross-purposes about it.Those together made up easily 96% of the episodes.
Plot 1 didn’t necessarily involve duping the landlords; it was just as commonly one of the kids (usually Jack) lying to a date, friend, employer, family member, or even one another. I’m pretty sure they did more than one episode where Jack accidentally books two dates on one night and then enlists the others to cover for him.
But apart from that detail, yeah, those two plots probably cover most of the episodes.