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Married... with Children

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Married With Children
Genre Comedy
Running time 22 minutes
Starring Ed O'Neill
Katey Segal
Christina Applegate
David Faustino
Amanda Bearse
Country of origin
Original run 1987–1997
No. of episodes 263


Contents

[edit] Cast and characters

[edit] Al Bundy

The leader of the Bundy Family, Al (Ed O'Neill) is practically doomed to fail in everything he does because of the 'Bundy curse'. Once a promising fullback for fictional Polk High School (his proudest moment in life was running for four touchdowns in a single game), he was on his way to college on a scholarship—until he got his girlfriend pregnant, married her, broke his leg, and ended up a shoe salesman at Gary's Shoes in the New Market Mall. Al spends most of his time trying to recapture old glory, but is usually foiled in spectacular fashion by his bad luck and poor judgement just as things seem to be going his way. He considers his family to be the root cause of his failures, and his resentment of them (and fear of having sex with his wife) provides for much of the humor in the show. However, Al is still attached to them, given that he constantly beats up Kelly's boyfriends, once threatened a male stripper that "if my wife loses anything down your pants, so will you", once gave his entire paycheck to Bud to enjoy at the nudie bar on his 18th birthday, and generally putting up with a miserable job to put food on the table. Despite his yearning for "the touch of a beautiful woman", he always passes on the rare occasions he is tempted by one, explaining once that "I actually kinda like my family." He constantly visits "nudie bars" and strip joints with his friends. However, the only thing that seems to consistently put him in the mood for his wife is watching her do manual labor, which practically never happens. Al has extremely severe foot odor, prefers the escapism of television and bowling over his dysfunctional family and life of drudgery and starvation (Peg refuses to cook), and is often seen in his trademark couch-potato pose — seated on the sofa with one hand stuck under the waistband of his pants.

[edit] Peggy Bundy

Margaret "Peggy" Bundy (née Wanker) (Katey Sagal) is Al's very lazy, high school drop-out house wife. She refuses to cook for the family or to clean the house. She prefers shopping for new clothes over washing them and doesn't even think of having a job. During the day she likes to watch all the daytime talk shows, sitting on the beloved family couch and eating tons of bonbons (amazingly, without getting fat). Her favourite TV shows are Oprah and The Phil Donahue Show, but she also likes the Home Shopping Network. Peggy is a red-head with the beehive hairdo and usually wears 1960s-inspired fashion with tight pants and stiletto heels, which makes her walk in a unique way. Nevertheless, Peg is an attractive woman and despite her impolite behavior, she generally appeals to men, including Al when she does work. Like Al, she would never cheat on her partner. But unlike Al, she loves to have sex with her spouse. She enjoys going to women's strip joints and watching male dancers, causing some of them to establish the "Bundy rule" where women can no longer go into the back rooms to meet the dancers personally. Her maiden name is Wanker, and her family is from the fictitious rural Wanker County, Wisconsin, "where everyone is relative."

[edit] Kelly Bundy

Kelly (Christina Applegate) is the oldest child in the Bundy family. "Pumpkin", as Al often calls her, is a promiscuous bimbo and stereotypical "dumb blonde."

A flashback to her childhood reveals that she was once a prodigious reader and bookworm, until she banged her head during a road trip, instantly changing her personality to prefer focusing on her "shiny, shiny shoes". The show hints that she has an amazing intrinsic intellectual ability, which only exhibits itself on the rare occasions when she is not preoccupied with her social standing or the opposite sex. An amazing example of this phenomenon is her unique ability to predict the next number to be called on a roulette wheel, but only if she first lets her mind go blank. When properly motivated, she is able to solve complex math equations, such as when she calculates an exact trajectory to shoot garbage bags into the Darcys' yard from a self-built catapult. Once was proven that she can absorb information very well, but only a limited amount. When that amount is met and she learns something new, she will forget something she learned in the past. She is also known to occasionally display excellent hand-eye coordination when playing pool or doing archery.

Kelly's comedic contribution to the show is often in her blatant displays of naïvete and ignorance, and the typical response by the rest of the Bundy family of willfully allowing her to remain ignorant. Bud, in particular, goes so far as to implant further misconceptions and fallacies in her mind. For example, she asked her brother to help her with her book report on Robinson Crusoe and ended up reviewing Gilligan's Island instead (while yelling at her brother for tricking her, she says "I had a meeting with the principal. A three hour meeting. A three hour meeting!"). Due to Kelly's stupidity, it was a shock to her entire family when she earned her high school diploma in 1990; when she received her diploma through the mail after completing summer school, she had to ask Peg to read it to her. She then worked as a model and as a waitress. She became a bottle-blonde at an early age, after a boy at school liked a natural blonde more than he did Kelly, and mom Peggy promptly came to the rescue with a bottle of peroxide. (Years later, neither can remember their own natural hair-color.) She is in love with boys, hair bleach, and the telephone. Kelly wasn't allowed to have sleepovers or birthday parties from age eight to age sixteen, since after the one she had at eight, "the judge wanted to try you as an adult!"

Though she often pokes fun at her younger brother Bud for being an underdeveloped, pubescent horndog, she usually seems to be proud of him whenever he manages to get an attractive date. On at least one occasion, she has also avenged Bud by humiliating a girl that humilitated him. For a short time, Bud is her official agent, entitled to 80% of her earnings. Kelly is very fond of her pets, even when she can't take care of them well enough. Buck, the family dog, was generally considered to be hers and she was the most devastated when he passed away. However, when Buck was to be neutered, Al (not wanting to have Buck fixed) says "Buck is Bud's dog and we have to get Bud's permission." But Peg asks Bud if it is ok to neuter "his" dog, Bud doesn't even seem to care and and simply says "sure."

Her favorite comic strip is Garfield. Her less than stellar reading skills led to many comedic situations in which she would read the Garfield comic aloud, mispronouncing lasagna as "luh-SAG-nee." She also watches cartoons such as Looney Tunes under the impression that they are real animals in a nature show.

[edit] Bud Bundy

Budrick Franklin "Bud" Bundy (David Faustino) is the second child of the family. He was named after Al's favourite beer, Budweiser. The first word Bud spoke was "hooters". He believes himself to be attractive, sexy, and smooth, but often proves not to be as he is typically caught in sexually humiliating scenarios. He doesn't appear to know how to impress women upon meeting them and is often rejected. It is unclear when he lost his virginity, as the audience is led to believe that he may have bedded women as far back as age 14, but as late as the fourth season mentions of his virginity were still commonplace between characters. Later on, he often manages to have one-night-stands, including one with his cousin's fiancee, played by Joey Lauren Adams. He tries to get girls with the help of his various alter-egos, including Grandmaster B - a rapper who is perpetually ridiculed by the rest of the family, e.g. Bed-wetter B, Cross-Dresser B, Grandma B, Grand Bastard B More Examples. (David Faustino has actually been featured in a few rap albums, and he manages a night club.) Another alter-ego is 'Cool Bud', Bud's sexual, suave side that Bud eventually 'merges' with, prompting him to become more 'cool'. Bud generally fails in his attempts to get with women, and unfortunately for him the only people who develop attractions to him are usually people Bud himself has no interest in (fat hotel guests, dowdy college librarians, and male hotel workers). Bud also takes an interest in Mrs Rhoades, especially after Steve leaves her, he actively persues her. After playing a trick on Kelly proving how dumb she is, Kelly proves she isn't so stupid by making Bud and Mrs. Rhoades believe they spent the night together, which they didn't. Bud asks Mrs Rhoades "You are on the pill right?" Mrs. Rhoades looks nervous.

Out of the Bundys, Bud seems to be the most ashamed of the family as he often pretends to never have met Al or claims to have a different last name. He ridicules Kelly as a promiscuous dimwit, and although he quite frequently uses her ignorance to his benefit, he occasionally feels obliged to defend her when others mock or take advantage of her lack of intelligence. He can be shown as lecherous and scheming, even against his own family. Despite his dysfunctional family background, Bud is the best-educated Bundy. He makes honor roll throughout high school, and manages to get himself through college (even earning scholarship money which his family spent without his consent). During his college years, Bud is portrayed as the leader in his circle of friends (most of which are stereotypical "losers"), as he appears to be the only one with the least bit of self-confidence. He is also Kelly's agent, receiving 80% of everything she makes.

[edit] Buck

Buck (voiceover by writer Kevin Curran; on special episodes Buck is voiced by Cheech Marin) is the family dog. He is often "heard" by the audience through voice-overs that tell what is going through his mind at the moment. He is just as disgusted with the family as the rest of them are. He died at one point in the series to allow the ten-year-old Briard that portrayed him to retire, although he was immediately reincarnated as Lucky.

[edit] Lucky

The spaniel that the family gets after Buck dies. He is the reincarnation of Buck, but no one in the family ever finds this out. Lucky's voiceovers were performed by writer Kevin Curran.

[edit] Seven

Seven-year-old Seven (Shane Sweet) is adopted by the Bundy family after being abandoned by his own parents, cousins of Peggy from Wanker County (Linda Blair, Bob Goldthwait). True to the Bundy name, he quickly proves himself to be manipulative, conniving, and good in a fist fight. Although the character was introduced to generate fresh storylines for the series, the writers ultimately found it difficult to work the boy into the show’s adult-themed scripts. He was abruptly dropped from the series, to the delight of the viewers (a poll showed that more than 80% of the viewers didn't like that character)Template:Cn. Never to be mentioned again, except on two occasions in season 8 episodes. The first in which his face appears on the side of a milk carton over the words, “Have you seen me?” The second in which he appears in episode 0823 ("Kelly knows Something"), when Al is teaching sports trivia to Kelly we see numerous (many essential) facts leaving her brain as she is learning. A picture of Seven flows out of her brain, indicating that she will no longer remember him. See also: Jumping the Shark.

[edit] Peggy's Mother

Heard only in frightening voiceovers by Kathleen Freeman and ground-shaking gags, she comes to live with the Bundys in later seasons. There are vague and comical references to her gigantic weight. This woman is mostly the victim of Al's abrasive, behind the back, and hatred-filled insults. Set to be played by Divine, but he had died before production.

[edit] Peggy's Father

Efrem Wanker, Peggy's father, was played by Tim Conway, appearing occasionally in the last three seasons. It is implied that he was drunk and held a shotgun to Al's head at the altar of Al's and Peggy's wedding. He calls Peggy "Margaret".

[edit] The Neighbors

[edit] Marcy Rhoades-D'Arcy

Marcy (Amanda Bearse) is Peggy's best friend, Al's nemesis, and the family's next-door neighbor. Though she considers herself to be above the ways of the Bundy family, she often sinks to their level. Marcy originally worked as a loan officer at the city bank (with a higher job title than her husband, Steve), and then as the manager of the Kyoto National Bank from the second season on. However, for a short time, she was demoted to drive-up window teller as punishment for approving a loan Al was not in a position to pay back. She got her old job back after frugging on her boss's desk for 20 minutes, clad only in her slip, while the other drive-up window tellers tossed quarters at her.

At first, Marcy was a sweet, wholesome newlywed, but years of living next to the Bundys apparently warped her into a character almost as outrageous as the Bundys themselves. She dislikes Al, often argues with him and thoroughly enjoys laughing at his misery. Marcy enjoys sharing her past memories of her life with Peg, but often tends to get lost in them. At various points in the series she is identified as Republican, who looks down on the lower class Bundy clan, but at other times she's portrayed as a feminist and environmentalist. Al's most frequent targets are Marcy's tiny chest and her chicken-like stance when she is annoyed.

One of the running gags in the series has Marcy often mistaken for a young boy; when she reminisces about her first training bra, Al asks "How old were you then - twenty-five?!". Her cousin Mandy (also played by Bearse) is a lesbian (Bearse is a lesbian in real life). Despite wanting to appear prudish, Marcy is shown to be a very sexual person, and it is revealed throughout the show that she has a sordid sexual history.

Although Marcy and Al are usually adversaries, they often unite in a common causes after Steve loses his job and later when Jefferson comes into the series. This is due to both Marcy and Al being the breadwinners, it gives them a common cause and a level of understanding between them that doesn't last, but keeps appearing from time to time

[edit] Steve Rhoades

Steve Rhoades (David Garrison) is Marcy's first husband. He is a banker who was actually at a lower position than Marcy at the city bank but was not fazed by it. When Marcy moved up to a high position at another bank, he received her job. Steve sees himself as a better person than the Bundy family but over time becomes more like them, and indeed it is generally Al to whom Steve turns when in need of male bonding. Steve was written out of the show in the middle of the fourth season; Garrison had decided he no longer wanted to be tied down to a weekly television series, preferring to avoid being typecast into one role, and to be able to devote more time to his first love: stage acting. He reached an agreement with Fox to buy out the remainder of his contract. In preparation for his departure, in the final episode shot (though confusingly, not the final episode aired) in which he was a regular, we see Steve becoming disenchanted with his and Marcy's yuppie lifestyle and taking an increasing interest in nature and in becoming an outdoorsman (a real-life interest of Garrison's). He then disappears, with it being explained that he has left Marcy to become a forest ranger at Yosemite National Park. During later seasons, Garrison would reprise the Steve Rhoades character on four occasions, returning to guest star in individual episodes (Steve having pursued whole other careers in the meantime), as he eventually returns to professional life to become the Dean of the college Bud is attending. This episode was to be the pilot of a spin-off series that never happened.

[edit] Jefferson D'Arcy (pronounced "Darcy")

Jefferson Milhouse D'Arcy (Ted McGinley) is Marcy's second husband, a prettyboy who marries her for money. Self-centered and lazy, he is a male equivalent of Peggy. Marcy met Jefferson (originally a bartender) at his bar after a bankers' convention, where she got drunk and found herself married to him the next morning; she was horrified to find out that her name was now Marcy D'Arcy. He is a close friend of Al's and often angers Marcy in his bonding with him. Marcy constantly bosses Jefferson around and keeps him in check. However, behind her back, Jefferson commonly insults Marcy and ignores her orders. When Marcy's favorite squirrel Zippy dies, Jefferson tells her that they'll give it a proper burial, only to punt it out of his sight when Marcy turns around.

He claims that he was a CIA agent in the past (code-named Bullwinkle), and it is later revealed that he has a commission as a 1st Lieutenant in the National Guard. His ties to the CIA are never conclusively proven, although it is strongly hinted they are real; it is proven he has some powerful friends in Washington when he is able to get an audience with Congress on short notice, and members of the United States Secret Service recognize him as an old colleague and speak to him in code. But perhaps the most conclusive evidence comes in Episode 0820 ("The D'Arcy Files"), when the new part-owner of the Chicago Cubs is a former CIA target named "Walter Traugott" who is out to get revenge on his erstwhile captors. Jefferson privately reveals his history to Marcy and never retracts it; moreover, Traugott comes into the shoe store and presents Al a number of pictures of Jefferson with Castro, Arafat and other world leaders, saying Jefferson is a villain and offering a reward for turning him in. Al waffles, but the point becomes moot when Jefferson is in the room, watching the Cubs game, and the stadium announcer says that "El Bundy" is paging Walter Traugott. Jefferson pretends that he is going to have to kill Al for selling him out, but then laughs and dismisses the whole thing as an "April Fool's" prank on Al, asking, "If I was really a spy, couldn't I have just made a call and had Walter killed?" Laughing himself now, Al leaves for a party, but as Jefferson turns to watch the TV, the announcer incredulously notes that Traugott has just fallen out of the luxury box to his doom. Jefferson just smiles and blows quietly into a kazoo, a shot which became his trademark in the opening credits of later seasons. Jefferson claims that his last mission for the CIA was a failed attempt to assassinate Fidel Castro. It is hinted that the reason he cannot get a job is because he is in hiding since Castro has put a price on his head; although at one point they met face to face later in the show.

He is wanted for running an investment scam wherein he sold useless plots of Lake Chicamicamico; the lake area was in fact a nuclear waste dump, and Al had actually bought shares for his retirement. Much like his felony would suggest, he is easily the most financially scheming character of the show; even more so than the Bundys. Oftentimes, when Al stumbles into a unique (whether negative or positive) scenario, Jefferson typically is the one to persuade Al to take advantage of the lucrative possibilities. When Al was robbed in his shoe store, Jefferson convinced him to sue the mall and pretend he was traumatized from the incident. When Al discovers hidden shoes that he stocked away in the 70's, Jefferson convinced Al to use the shoes as a new gimmick for the store and take advantage of the old trend's popularity. When discovering Al's boss Gary was using illegal sweatshops to manufacture the shoes, Jefferson assists Al in a search for incriminating evidence. When Bud was going out with Gary, Jefferson convinces Al to permit the relationship so Al can milk Gary out for her money through his son. When discovering that they were in possession of private pictures of Shannon Tweed in sexually provocative manners, Jefferson convinces Al to sell it to the media. Jefferson also convinced Al to go home to have sex with his wife so Al could win a radio contest cash prize.

Ted McGinley had appeared previously as Peggy's husband, Mr. Jablonski, in the second part of "It's a Bundyful Life", where Al's guardian angel (Sam Kinison) shows Al what his family would have become if he was never born. The episode lightly parodies Capra's It's A Wonderful Life.

[edit] Amber

Amber (Juliet Tablak) is Marcy's niece and delighted the male viewers in season nine (0904, 0908, 0915, 0923). Amber's mother sent her to Marcy to get her out of the bad L.A. neighborhood where she grew up. Bud keeps on trying to get her into his bed, but he only succeeds once (0904) — and that may have been a dream, as his fantasies about her became a central issue in the later episode 0923. After season nine, Amber disappears without an explanation. She is one of the few female characters in the sitcom to demonstrate an actual attraction to Bud (remarking to Kelly in private that she does think he's cute), and actually kisses him of her own free will as a way of saying goodbye.

[edit] Recurring characters

  • Griff (Harold Sylvester) – A friend of Al and co-worker at the shoe store. He is also a member of Al's NO MA'AM organization. A divorcee, he shares many of Al's characteristics as far as work ethic and views on women go. However, Griff isn't quite as callous; occasionally he feels uneasy when going along with one of Al or Jefferson's many schemes.
  • Bob Rooney (E.E. Bell) – One of Al's friends from the neighborhood and treasurer of NO MA'AM. He works as a butcher, has a wife named Louise who is a friend of Peggy, and played on the same football team as Al, at Polk High. He is always called by both first and last name, and it is even spelled as one word on his bowling shirt. Producer Tim Weiskopff had a theory that "in every neighborhood in the midwest of the U.S. there is one guy all the people in the neighborhood refer to with both his names" (e.g. "Charlie Brown"). E.E. Bell was the only member of the extended cast to spend a lot of time on the Usenet newsgroups fielding questions from viewers.
  • Officer Dan (Dan Tullis Jr.) – A friend of Al's who is in NO MA'AM. Surprisingly, though he is part of NO MA'AM, he often arrests them for their illegal antics.
  • Ike (Tom McCleister) – Another member of NO MA'AM. He is virtually the most forgotten character of the show.
  • Miranda Veracruz de la Jolla Cardinal (Teresa Parente) – Hispanic local news reporter typically assigned to cover the pathetic news stories in which the Bundys inevitably involve themselves. She often laments the sad state of her career on-air. In spite of the fact that she only appears in a handful of episodes throughout the series, Miranda is apparently quite popular among fans of the show.
  • The Wankers – The parents of Peggy, living in Wanker County ("The home of the gassy beaver"). They are more often mentioned than seen on camera. Peggy's mother is never shown (though she is heard in several episodes, voiced by Kathleen Freeman), but her father (Tim Conway) appears in a few episodes. Mrs. Wanker's unbelievable obesity is the subject of many jokes, including one in which Al goes blind after accidentally walking in on her bathing. Although not widely known in the US, in the UK the word 'wanker' is a slang insult meaning someone who masturbates. It is not known whether the producers knew this and included is as an injoke for the benefit of British audiences, or whether the name is just a coincidence.
  • Garry (Janet Carroll) – The female owner of Garry's Shoes and employer of Al. Garry's first appearance in the series came after Al turned her women's shoe store into a men's, assuming Garry was male and therefore wouldn't mind. Garry is fantastically rich (she would have been in the Forbes 400, but only reached #401 because of the shoe store--her only failing business venture). Over the course of the series she makes several more appearances, always to the chagrin of Al, and in one episode even becomes the Sugar Momma of Bud, much to the chagrin of those who still thought she was a man.
  • Luke Ventura (Ritch Shydner) – A co-worker at the shoe store early in the series. He was a sly womanizer who was always seducing beautiful women and stealing Al's sales. Peg hated him while Al tolerated him. He disappears from the show after the first season, but is mentioned again in the 9th season episode "Pump Fiction", when Al learns from the shoe industry publication "Shoe News" that Luke is being given an award. Though he was portrayed to be a friend of Al's in the beginning of the series, after his disappearance, he had been spoken of as if he had since become a rival to Al.
  • Aaron Mitchell (Hill Harper) – Another co-worker of Al's at the shoe store. A young football star at Polk High, he is on the verge of marrying a wonderful woman and going to college, achieving everything that Al ever wanted. Al chooses to live his life vicariously through Aaron, until his misguided attempts to help accidentally drive the boy to a shrewish woman named "Meg" (a young copy of Peg) and the same dismal fate which had befallen Al. Aaron appeared only in the 8th season (5 episodes).

[edit] Plot

The show follows the lives of Al Bundy, a formerly glorious high school football player turned hard-luck shoe salesman; his wife Peggy, a tartish, uneducated housewife known for her large red beehive hairdo, 1960s clothes and her funny walk due to her always wearing high heels; and their two children: Kelly, their very attractive, promiscuous, but dim-witted daughter, and Bud, their unpopular and girl-crazy but highly intelligent son (the only Bundy ever attending college). Their neighbors are the upwardly-mobile Steve and Marcy Rhoades (later with second husband Jefferson D'Arcy). Most storylines involve the ever-scheming Al being foiled by his cartoonish dim wit and bad luck.

[edit] Setting

[edit] Episode List

I'll See You in Court Poker Game Born to Walk Buck Saves the Day How Do You Spell Revenge? If I Were a Rich Man Razor's Edge What Goes Around Comes Around You Gotta Know When to Hold 'Em 16 Years and What Do You Get? Build a Better Mouse Trap Great Escape Just Married...With Children The Computer Show Bald and Beautiful Buck Can Do It Girls Just Wanna Have Fun I'm Goin' to Sweatland Dance Show Top of the Heap It's a Bundyful Life Route 666 You Better Shop Around The Gas Station Show I Who Have Nothing If Al Had a Hammer If I Could See Me Now Kelly Does Hollywood God's Shoes Dancing with Weezy Take My Wife, Please Proud to Be Your Bud Al on the Rocks Death of a Shoe Salesman T-R-A Something Something Spells Tramp Heels on Wheels The Old College Try You Can't Miss Wedding Repercussions My Favorite Married Hi IQ The Good-bye Girl Babe in Toyland Business Sucks Kelly's Gotta Habit The Naked and the Dead, but Mostly the Naked Ride Scare Have You Driven a Ford Lately Mr. Empty Pants Here's Lookin' at You, Kid The Hood, the Bud and the Kelly Hot off the Grill Enemies It's a Bundyful Life A Desperate Half Hour Chicago Shoe Exchange Breaking Up Is Easy to Do Birthday Boy Toy Breaking Up Is Easy to Do Children of the Corns Crimes Against Obesity Bud on the Side Turning Japanese Calendar Girl Bearly Men The Two That Got Away The Weaker Sex Requiem for a Dead Briard Dud Bowl II How Bleen Was My Kelly My Mom, the Mom Oh, What a Feeling Poke High Three Job, No Income Family Pilot Episode Taxing Problem Where's the Boss? Requiem for a Dead Barber Who'll Stop the Rain? Master the Possibilities At the Zoo Camping Show Pilot Episode It's a Bundyful Life Eatin' Out He Ain't Much, but He's Mine Married...With Queen But I Didn't Shoot the Deputy Desperately Seeking Miss October Johnny Be Gone Peggy Loves Al, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah Peggy Turns 300 Dead Men Don't Do Aerobics Peggy Sue Got Work Pilot Episode Can't Dance, Don't Ask Me The House That Peg Lost Life's a Beach Shoeless Al Pump Fiction The Undergraduate Radio Free Trumaine Something Larry This Way Comes Blonde and Blonder Shoe Room with a View Reverend Al Requiem for a Chevyweight Requiem for a Chevyweight Kiss of the Coffee Woman The Joke's on Al Torch Song Duet Bud Hits the Books The Agony and the Extra C The Proposition The Old Insurance Dodge Scared Single Banking on Marcy A Little off the Top Change for a Buck Valentine's Day Massacre Field of Screams Get Outta Dodge No Pot to Pease In Business Still Sucks Assault and Batteries Kelly Breaks Out Shoeway to Heaven Naughty but Niece Legend of Ironhead Haynes And Bingo Was Her Game-O Kelly Takes a Shot Ship Happens I Want My Psycho Dad Ship Happens Business Sucks I Want My Psycho Dad The Godfather Route 666 One Down, Two to Go Sue Casa, His Casa Yard Sale A Dump of My Own Married...With Who? Kelly Bounces Back Oldies but Young'uns Raingirl Weenie Tot Lovers and Other Strangers England Show So This Is How Sinatra Felt Just Shoe It My Dinner with Anthrax Al Bundy, Shoe Dick All Night Security Dude What I Did for Love She's Having My Baby Christmas The Chicago Wine Party Lookin' fer a Desk in All the Wrong Places The Movie Show Peggy and the Pirates Rites of Passage The Hood, the Bud and the Kelly How to Marry a Moron Sleepless in Chicago Whose Room Is It Anyway Teacher Pets For Whom the Bell Tolls Guess Who's Coming to Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner Driving Mr. Boondy Her Cups Runneth Over Honey, I Blew Up Myself Peggy Made a Little Lamb England Show Married with Aliens Married...With Queen Wedding Show Married...With Children Kelly Doesn't Live Here Anymore The Harder They Fall Dud Bowl Get the Dodge Out of Hell Al...With Kelly Poppy's by the Tree Married...Without Children You Better Watch Out Girls Just Wanna Have Fun Kelly Knows Something Nightmare on Al's Street Fair Exchange Guys and Dolls Flight of the Bumblebee Im-Po-Dent No Chicken, No Check Luck of the Bundys Nooner or Later The Gypsy Cried Hood 'n' the Boyz 25 Years and What Do You Get? Earth Angel Love Conquers Al And Baby Makes Money Father Lode She's Having My Baby Al Loses His Cherry Alley of the Dolls Poppy's by the Tree Thinergy Tooth or Consequences You Gotta Know When to Hold 'Em 976-SHOE Married...With Children Rock and Roll Girl The Dateless Amigo He Thought He Could Married...With Queen Girls Just Wanna Have Fun The Best of Bundy User Friendly Dial B for Virgin Al Goes Deep A Man for No Seasons The D'Arcy Files How Green Was My Apple Sofa, So Good The Worst Noel Go for the Old 'Tis Time to Smell the Roses A Tisket, a Tasket, Can Peggy Make a Basket? 'Til Death Do Us Part Unalful Entry It Doesn't Get Any Better than This Every Bundy Has a Birthday Rock of Ages Look Who's Barking A Man's Castle Wabbit Season Kids! Wadaya Gonna Do? Do Ya Think I'm Sexy Poppy's by the Tree You Better Shop Around We'll Follow the Sun England Show The Mystery of Skull Island Kelly Does Hollywood Psychic Avengers Frat Chance Cheese, Cues and Blood Buck the Stud Grime and Punishment The Unnatural Buck Has a Bellyache Magnificent Seven I Can't Believe It's Butter Al Bundy's Sports Spectacular The Best of Bundy and Get the Dodge Out of Hell All in the Family The Agony of DeFeet The Egg and I No Ma'am Twisted Lez Be Friends Damn Bundys Al Goes to the Dogs Spring Break Spring Break The Juggs Have Left the Building God Rest Ye Merry, Bundymen Trash Stepford Peg Live Nude Peg A Bundy Thanksgiving Breaking Up Is Easy to Do A Desperate Half Hour and How to Marry a Moron Breaking Up Is Easy to Do

[edit] Reviews

[edit] Notes

[edit] External Links


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