Recent Articles



































Married with Children



         


Married... with Children (1987-1997) was an American sitcom about a white trash family (the Bundys) living in Chicago. The show depicted Al Bundy, a formerly glorious football player turned shoe salesman; his wife Peggy, a tartish, uneducated, sex-hungry homemaker; and their two children: Kelly, their slutty, airheaded daughter (she attended high school at the start of the series), and Bud, their dweebish, unpopular and girl-crazy son (he attended junior high school at the start of the series). The show's theme song is Frank Sinatra's "Love and Marriage." Married... with Children first aired on April 5, 1987, on the FOX Network and aired its final episode on April 20, 1997. The show has been in heavy syndication ever since its first run.

The show first aired in 1987 to very negative press. It was a very low-brow comedy that centered entirely around toilet humor and sex farce. The characters were one-dimensional parodies of actual people. However, viewers quickly embraced the show because despite its obvious shortcomings it reflected a huge part of the populace that was not represented on television. The concept of an unhappily married couple whose life was, essentially, a complete failure had never been explored. Suddenly people were confronted with an arguing and unhappy, trashy married couple and their underachieving, smart-mouthed children. (It's interesting to note that the role of Peg Bundy was originally offered to Roseanne, who turned it down only to do a show of her own about a struggling, realistic lower class family.)

What was important about the show, and what likely allowed it to survive for as long as it did, is that inevitably the characters (including next-door neighbors and friends the D'Arcys) would come out supporting and defending each other. No matter how much they bickered and claimed to despise their familial ties, when one of them was put into a tough situation, the others would come out fighting on their side.

Eventually the show's humor (as well as the cast's acting) improved. Critics began to actually praise the show for taking on issues like racism, women's rights and sexual promiscuity in a way that was accessible to just about any viewer. By the time the show ended every cast member was immediately recognizable to the public as their Married... with Children persona. Although several worked on other projects during the run of the series, only Applegate had any major success (due largely in part to her consistent appearance in publications for teenagers.)

The series is remembered as FOX Network's first successful program, and was one of the only shows to survive the network's troubled first season. It also established FOX's reputation as a low-brow network, an image it continues to alternately support and fight to this day.

The first season, consisting of 13 episodes, was released in October 2003 on Region 1 DVD. The second season, consisting of 22 episodes, was released in March 2004, also on Region 1 DVD. Both box sets were released by Columbia TriStar Home Entertainment.

The show is one of a handful of US comedies that have been remade for Britain (compare the much longer List of British TV shows remade for the American market). The show made no great impact, perhaps because of the questionable use of wholesome family comedian quarterback for Polk High School's football team, bound college on a n athletic scholarship, up until he met Peg. Afterwards, he broke his leg, lost his scholarship, his life fell apart, and he was stuck from then on working as a shoe salesman in a local mall. His misery with his life and his reminisces about his glory days ("Four touchdowns in one game!") is the main focus of the show's humor.

[Top]

Cast

[Top]




  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License