TV spinoffs

What TV show (American, because that’s all I know) had the most spinoffs? (BTW, this is not a riddle, I don’t know the answer).

One of my guesses would be “All in the Family.” The spinoffs include (in no particular order):

The Jeffersons (Bunker’s neighbors)
Maude (Edith’s cousin)
Good Times (Maude’s maid)
Archie’s Place (mostly about Archie and the bar, set after Edith died)
Gloria (about Archie’s daughter and her son; not sure if the show was called Gloria or not)

I remember that Happy Days had a few spinoffs, too:
Laverne and Shirley
Mork and Mindy
Joanie loves Chachi
Blansky’s Beauties
and an animated Happy Days

From this article

Dear Marilyn: What TV show had the most spinoffs, who starred in them and how long were they on?
Steve, Bedminster, Pennsylvania

Dear Steve: All in the Family begot five other sitcoms–Maude, The Jeffersons, Good Times, Checking In and Gloria.

The latter aired from 1982 to 1983 and starred Sally Struthers as single mom Gloria Bunker Stivic. (Mike Stivic left the marriage and went off to live on a commune with a flower child.)

Checking in spun off from the spinoff The Jeffersons in 1981 and was off the air in less than a month. The show starred Marla Gibbs playing her role as The Jeffersons maid who gives up domestic work to become the executive bookkeeper at an upscale hotel.

Then there were three very successful spinoffs: Bea Arthur’s Maude (1972-1978); The Jeffersons (1975 to 1985), with Sherman Hemsley and Isabel Sanford; and Good Times (1974-1979), which spun off from Maude and focused on her maid, Florida Evans (Esther Rolle), and her family.

The Jeffersons had a short-lived spin-off called Checking In, starring the maid character, played by Marla Gibbs. It lasted less than one season and Gibbs returned to the “de-luxe apartment in the sky”. Like Good Times, Checking In can be considered a spin-off of a spin-off.

And Caroll O’Connor’s “sequel” series (his afterFamily, as it were) was called Archie Bunker’s Place. That makes six direct and indirect spinoffs, which is a record as far as I know. monster’s cited article may not choose to count Archie Bunker’s Place, since it’s more of a sequel than a spin-off. The show continued with the same primary character, in the same house, but with a new supporting cast. It’s more of a retooling than a spinoff, one could argue.

Even more debatable is the short-run 1994 series 704 Hauser, which features a black family that had moved into the Bunker’s house in Queens. Judging from the IMDb summary, the combination of liberal parents and arch-conservative son sounds like a rip-off of Family Ties, with racial elements thrown in.

If spin offs of spin offs count then I would vote for All in the Family. The Jeffersons spun off Florence about their maid but it didn’t last a whole season also. My vote would go to All in the Family.

Mary Tyler Moore also had a lot of spin offs but I don’t think it quite compares.

I think it’s All in the Family, too, if you limit yourself to live-action (as one probably should). However, if you count animated spin-offs, then Happy Days has more, because not only was there a Happy Days cartoon, there was also a Mork & Mindy cartoon and a Laverne & Shirley cartoon.

Of course, Happy Days started off as a skit on Love, American Style, so actually that is the show with the most spin-offs.

–Cliffy

Well, the original Dragnet had a few. it had Dragnet 7?, Adam 12 and that Emergency! thing.

In a werid sort of way, I suppose that you could count the Star Trek offspring as “spin offs”. And I think that is at either four or five now, not even counting the movies.

Five, counting cartoons.

–Cliffy

Six, if you count Rescue 911.

Like anyone would have watched that if it didn’t have Captain Kirk on it.