Shows with “Jury Duty” episodes that DID NOT reference 12 Angry Men
Yes, Dear: Christine keeps changing her vote while serving on a sequestered jury, because she is enjoying the break from her husband and kids.
Modern Family: Mitchell irritates his fellow jurors by overthinking and overexplaining everything
Leverage: Parker winds up on the jury for a wrongful-death lawsuit against a nutritional supplement company; the rest of the Leverage team works to thwart the defense’s attempts to buy a verdict in their favor.
Shows with “Jury Duty” episodes that DID NOT reference 12 Angry Men
Yes, Dear: Christine keeps changing her vote while serving on a sequestered jury, because she is enjoying the break from her husband and kids.
Modern Family: Mitchell irritates his fellow jurors by overthinking and overexplaining everything
Leverage: Parker winds up on the jury for a wrongful-death lawsuit against a nutritional supplement company; the rest of the Leverage team works to thwart the defense’s attempts to buy a verdict in their favor.
Malcolm in the Middle: Lois serves on a jury and make the other jurors lives miserable, changing her vote to prevent unanimity in order to make the other jurors take it seriously only to realize she is using the defendant as a metaphor for her son and so has to excuse herself for bias.
[quote=“Buck_Godot, post:8265, topic:972711, full:true”] Shows with “Jury Duty” episodes that DID NOT reference 12 Angry Men
Yes, Dear: Christine keeps changing her vote while serving on a sequestered jury, because she is enjoying the break from her husband and kids.
Modern Family: Mitchell irritates his fellow jurors by overthinking and overexplaining everything
Leverage: Parker winds up on the jury for a wrongful-death lawsuit against a nutritional supplement company; the rest of the Leverage team works to thwart the defense’s attempts to buy a verdict in their favor.
Malcolm in the Middle: Lois serves on a jury and make the other jurors lives miserable, changing her vote to prevent unanimity in order to make the other jurors take it seriously only to realize she is using the defendant as a metaphor for her son and so has to excuse herself for bias.
Happy Days: In the episode ‘Fonzie for the Defense’ (a reference to the TV series ‘Judd for the Defense’), Howard and Fonzie are on jury duty for a motorcyclist accused ot theft; Fonzie uses his knowledge of the design of a specific brand of motorcycle to prove the innocence of the accused.
Shows with “Jury Duty” episodes that DID NOT reference 12 Angry Men
Yes, Dear: Christine keeps changing her vote while serving on a sequestered jury, because she is enjoying the break from her husband and kids.
Modern Family: Mitchell irritates his fellow jurors by overthinking and overexplaining everything
Leverage: Parker winds up on the jury for a wrongful-death lawsuit against a nutritional supplement company; the rest of the Leverage team works to thwart the defense’s attempts to buy a verdict in their favor.
Malcolm in the Middle: Lois serves on a jury and make the other jurors lives miserable, changing her vote to prevent unanimity in order to make the other jurors take it seriously only to realize she is using the defendant as a metaphor for her son and so has to excuse herself for bias.
Happy Days: In the episode ‘Fonzie for the Defense’ (a reference to the TV series ‘Judd for the Defense’), Howard and Fonzie are on jury duty for a motorcyclist accused ot theft; Fonzie uses his knowledge of the design of a specific brand of motorcycle to prove the innocence of the accused.
Modern Family: Now a naturalized US citizen, Gloria is impaneled to serve on a jury but her enthusiasm gets her removed, much to her disappointment.
Yes, Dear: Christine keeps changing her vote while serving on a sequestered jury, because she is enjoying the break from her husband and kids.
Modern Family: Mitchell irritates his fellow jurors by overthinking and overexplaining everything
Leverage: Parker winds up on the jury for a wrongful-death lawsuit against a nutritional supplement company; the rest of the Leverage team works to thwart the defense’s attempts to buy a verdict in their favor.
Malcolm in the Middle: Lois serves on a jury and make the other jurors lives miserable, changing her vote to prevent unanimity in order to make the other jurors take it seriously only to realize she is using the defendant as a metaphor for her son and so has to excuse herself for bias.
Happy Days: In the episode ‘Fonzie for the Defense’ (a reference to the TV series ‘Judd for the Defense’), Howard and Fonzie are on jury duty for a motorcyclist accused ot theft; Fonzie uses his knowledge of the design of a specific brand of motorcycle to prove the innocence of the accused.
Modern Family: Now a naturalized US citizen, Gloria is impaneled to serve on a jury but her enthusiasm gets her removed, much to her disappointment.
Designing Women: Julia has jury duty, and gets sequestered when Charlene first reads out loud a story about the case, then reports Julia for having outside discussions about the case.
Yes, Dear: Christine keeps changing her vote while serving on a sequestered jury, because she is enjoying the break from her husband and kids.
Modern Family: Mitchell irritates his fellow jurors by overthinking and overexplaining everything
Leverage: Parker winds up on the jury for a wrongful-death lawsuit against a nutritional supplement company; the rest of the Leverage team works to thwart the defense’s attempts to buy a verdict in their favor.
Malcolm in the Middle: Lois serves on a jury and make the other jurors lives miserable, changing her vote to prevent unanimity in order to make the other jurors take it seriously only to realize she is using the defendant as a metaphor for her son and so has to excuse herself for bias.
Happy Days: In the episode ‘Fonzie for the Defense’ (a reference to the TV series ‘Judd for the Defense’), Howard and Fonzie are on jury duty for a motorcyclist accused ot theft; Fonzie uses his knowledge of the design of a specific brand of motorcycle to prove the innocence of the accused.
Modern Family: Now a naturalized US citizen, Gloria is impaneled to serve on a jury but her enthusiasm gets her removed, much to her disappointment.
Designing Women: Julia has jury duty, and gets sequestered when Charlene first reads out loud a story about the case, then reports Julia for having outside discussions about the case.
The Dick Van Dyke Show: The defendant flirts with Rob and he falls for it, albeit she appears very guilty-- in a twist, she turns out to be innocent after all.
Just trying to move things along-- didn’t realize how hard it would be to think of episodes that didn’t reference 12 Angry Men!
Yes, Dear: Christine keeps changing her vote while serving on a sequestered jury, because she is enjoying the break from her husband and kids.
Modern Family: Mitchell irritates his fellow jurors by overthinking and overexplaining everything
Leverage: Parker winds up on the jury for a wrongful-death lawsuit against a nutritional supplement company; the rest of the Leverage team works to thwart the defense’s attempts to buy a verdict in their favor.
Malcolm in the Middle: Lois serves on a jury and make the other jurors lives miserable, changing her vote to prevent unanimity in order to make the other jurors take it seriously only to realize she is using the defendant as a metaphor for her son and so has to excuse herself for bias.
Happy Days: In the episode ‘Fonzie for the Defense’ (a reference to the TV series ‘Judd for the Defense’), Howard and Fonzie are on jury duty for a motorcyclist accused ot theft; Fonzie uses his knowledge of the design of a specific brand of motorcycle to prove the innocence of the accused.
Modern Family: Now a naturalized US citizen, Gloria is impaneled to serve on a jury but her enthusiasm gets her removed, much to her disappointment.
Designing Women: Julia has jury duty, and gets sequestered when Charlene first reads out loud a story about the case, then reports Julia for having outside discussions about the case.
The Dick Van Dyke Show: The defendant flirts with Rob and he falls for it, albeit she appears very guilty-- in a twist, she turns out to be innocent after all.
New Girl - Jess is sequestered for several episodes to accommodate actor Zooey Deschanel’s preganancy.
Shows with “Jury Duty” episodes that DID NOT reference 12 Angry Men
Yes, Dear: Christine keeps changing her vote while serving on a sequestered jury, because she is enjoying the break from her husband and kids.
Modern Family: Mitchell irritates his fellow jurors by overthinking and overexplaining everything
Leverage: Parker winds up on the jury for a wrongful-death lawsuit against a nutritional supplement company; the rest of the Leverage team works to thwart the defense’s attempts to buy a verdict in their favor.
Malcolm in the Middle: Lois serves on a jury and make the other jurors lives miserable, changing her vote to prevent unanimity in order to make the other jurors take it seriously only to realize she is using the defendant as a metaphor for her son and so has to excuse herself for bias.
Happy Days: In the episode ‘Fonzie for the Defense’ (a reference to the TV series ‘Judd for the Defense’), Howard and Fonzie are on jury duty for a motorcyclist accused ot theft; Fonzie uses his knowledge of the design of a specific brand of motorcycle to prove the innocence of the accused.
Modern Family: Now a naturalized US citizen, Gloria is impaneled to serve on a jury but her enthusiasm gets her removed, much to her disappointment.
Designing Women: Julia has jury duty, and gets sequestered when Charlene first reads out loud a story about the case, then reports Julia for having outside discussions about the case.
The Dick Van Dyke Show: The defendant flirts with Rob and he falls for it, albeit she appears very guilty-- in a twist, she turns out to be innocent after all.
New Girl - Jess is sequestered for several episodes to accommodate actor Zooey Deschanel’s preganancy.
Jury Duty - any and all episodes. “The inner workings of an American jury trial through the eyes of one particular juror, Ronald Gladden. Gladden is unaware the entire case is fake, everyone except him is an actor and everything that happens — inside the courtroom and out — is carefully planned.”
Shows you wish they’d reboot
Candid camera
Sure the Alan Funt days were classic but audience sophistication has increased over the years. However, shows like ‘The Carbonaro Effect’ prove folks can still be fooled.
Candid camera
Sure the Alan Funt days were classic but audience sophistication has increased over the years. However, shows like ‘The Carbonaro Effect’ prove folks can still be fooled.
Concentration
A board was divided into 30 or so tiles. Each contestant called two tiles and saw them flip around with the name of a prize. If the flip sides matched, the contestant won the prize and the tiles were removed, revealing part of a rebus. The contestant got the opportunity to guess what quote the rebus represented.