Shows with more than two adults living under the same roof
- The Brady Bunch
- The Waltons
- My Two Dads
- The Addams Family
- Three’s Company
- New Girl
- Golden Girls
- The Real McCoys
Shows with more than two adults living under the same roof
Shows with more than two adults living under the same roof
Shows with more than two adults living under the same roof
“Living” being subjective.
pass
NEXT: Shows where a character has, intends to have, or reveals having had, an abortion, and is not punished or expected to apologize for it; in the second case, there is no indication the character changes her mind, it just happens off-camera.
A woman (played by Veronica Cartwright) is kidnapped and held bound by her ex-boyfriend to prevent her having an abortion. The squad search for her as the clearly wronged party, and arrest the ex as the criminal he is. There’s even some dialogue about getting to her “in time,” which since the kidnapper doesn’t intend to kill her, probably refers to “in time to get a legal abortion,” but having seen it a few decades after the first airing, I’m not positive.
Shows where a character has, intends to have, or reveals having had, an abortion, and is not punished or expected to apologize for it; in the second case, there is no indication the character changes her mind, it just happens off-camera.
In the two-part episode “Maude’s Dilemma”, airing in 1972.
Shows where a character has, intends to have, or reveals having had, an abortion, and is not punished or expected to apologize for it; in the second case, there is no indication the character changes her mind, it just happens off-camera.
Shows where a character has, intends to have, or reveals having had, an abortion, and is not punished or expected to apologize for it; in the second case, there is no indication the character changes her mind, it just happens off-camera.
Shows where a character has, intends to have, or reveals having had, an abortion, and is not punished or expected to apologize for it; in the second case, there is no indication the character changes her mind, it just happens off-camera.
Erica Kane (Susan Lucci) has daytime TV’s first legal abortion. Her abortion was because she didn’t want to have the child.
Lacey reveals that Harvey, jr. was “almost not her firstborn.” But she was just too young, and the guy was not there for her. No apologies.
“Nah, I can’t go for a run because I had an abortion yesterday,” Mimi-Rose tells Adam.
Shows where a character has, intends to have, or reveals having had, an abortion, and is not punished or expected to apologize for it; in the second case, there is no indication the character changes her mind, it just happens off-camera.
Troi is impregnated by some alien energy field and considers having an abortion, which is clearly her choice under Federation law, but the fetus reaches viability and she gives birth very, very quickly.
I did check to make sure there were 10, but I guess that was still a hard category, sorry guys.
Here’s a easier one:
Secondary & Tertiary characters who steal most of the scenes they’re in
Secondary & Tertiary characters who steal most of the scenes they’re in
You see him sitting off in the background a lot because he has to be there, and it’s no big deal. But let him say something, and it’s pure gold.
Secondary & Tertiary characters who steal most of the scenes they’re in
Secondary & Tertiary characters who steal most of the scenes they’re in
Secondary & Tertiary characters who steal most of the scenes they’re in
Secondary & Tertiary characters who steal most of the scenes they’re in
Secondary & Tertiary characters who steal most of the scenes they’re in