Married... with Children

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Married… with Children was a long-running American sitcom about a dysfunctional family living in Chicago. It was the first ever primetime television series to air on the FOX Network, debuting on April 5 1987 and concluding June 9 1997. The series was created by Michael G. Moye and Ron Leavitt. Its eleven season run and 259 episode total make it the second longest lasting sitcom on the FOX network (second only to The Simpsons) and the network's longest live-action sitcom.

Married... with Children
File:MWC 1.JPG
Screenshot from the first season of Married... with Children
Created byMichael G. Moye and Ron Leavitt
StarringEd O'Neill
Katey Sagal
Christina Applegate
David Faustino
David Garrison
Amanda Bearse
Ted McGinley
Country of originUSA
No. of episodes259
Production
Running timeapprox. 22 minutes
Original release
NetworkFOX
ReleaseApril 5 1987 –
June 9 1997

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 hairdo, tacky 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 (Steve later runs out on Marcy, and she marries boy-toy Jefferson D'Arcy (who was in the CIA) after getting drunk one night. Most storylines involve the ever-scheming Al being foiled by his cartoonish dim wit and bad luck.

Characters

The Bundy family

Al Bundy

The father of the Bundy Family, Al (Ed O'Neill) is practically cursed to fail in everything he does. Once a promising fullback for fictional Polk High School (his proudest moment in life was scoring 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. 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." 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 prefers the escapism of television over his dysfunctional family and life of drudgery, and is often seen in his trademark couch-potato pose—seated on the sofa with one hand stuck under the waistband of his pants.

Peggy Bundy

Peggy Bundy (Katey Sagal) is Al's very lazy wife. She refuses to cook for the family or to clean the house. She also prefers shopping for new clothes to 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 (without getting fat, though). Her favourite TV show is Oprah and Phil, but she also likes the Home Shopping Network. Peggy usually wears white trash fashion with tight pants and stilettos, which makes her walk in a unique way. Unlike Al, she loves to have sex with her spouse. She is also attracted by handsome young men, but just like Al she would never cheat on her partner. Her maiden name is Wanker, and her family is from the fictious rural Wanker County, Wisconsin, "where everyone is relative."

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 prodigous bookworm, until she banged her head during a road trip, instantly changing her personality 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 Darcy's yard from a self-built catapult.

Kelly's comedic contribution to the show is often in her blatant displays of naivete and ignorance, and the typical response by the rest of the Bundy family of willfully allowing her to remain ignorant. Budrick, 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. 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!" She often pokes fun at her younger brother, Bud, for being an underdeveloped, pubescent horndog, and her friends sometimes join in. Kelly is very fond of her pets, even when she can't take care of them well enough. She considers Buck to be her dog. She is known to occasionally display excellent hand-eye coordination when playing pool or doing archery.

Budrick "Bud" Bundy

Bud (David Faustino) is the second child of the family. The first word he spoke was "hooters". He believes himself to be attractive and sexy, but often proves not to be. He is often rejected by women. 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'. He often ridicules Kelly as a promiscuous dimwit, though he is often lecherous and scheming, often with the result of sexual humiliation. Despite his dysfunctional family background, Bud is the best-educated Bundy. He makes honor roll throughout high school, and manages to get himself into college. He is also Kelly's agent, receiving 80% of everything she makes.

Buck

Buck (voiced by Cheech Marin and later writer Kevin Curran) 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.

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 Mind is still voiced by writer Kevin Curran.

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). Never to be mentioned again, except in a season 8 episode in which his face appears on the side of a milk carton over the words, “Have you seen me?”

See also: Jumping the Shark; Chuck Cunningham syndrome.

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 hilarious references to her gigantic weight. Set to be played by Divine, but he had died before production.

The neighbors

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. 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, and often argues with him. 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, who is a lesbian in real life) is a lesbian. 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.

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.

Jefferson D'Arcy

Jefferson 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 and often angers Marcy in his bonding with Al. 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. Perhaps the most conclusive evidence comes in Episode 820 ("The D'Arcy Files"), when the new part-owner of the Chicago Cubs is a former target is named "Walter Traugott" who is out to get revenge. Jefferson is forced to reveal 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 despots, 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 this is the reason Jefferson cannot normally go out and get a job as Marcy wants him to; he is apparently in hiding because Castro put a price on his head. He was 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. 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.

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. neighbourhood 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.

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.
  • 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").
  • Ike (Tom McCleister) – Another friend of Al and member of NO MA'AM.
  • 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.
  • Miranda Veracruz de la Joya Cardenal (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.
  • 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.
  • Gary (Janet Carroll) – The female owner of Gary's Shoes and employer of Al. Gary's first appearance in the series came after Al turned her women's shoe store into a men's, assuming Gary was male and therefore wouldn't mind. Gary 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.
  • 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, achieveing 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).

Bundy icons

  • NO MA'AM – An acronym for the National Organization of Men Against Amazonian Masterhood. This is the middle aged men's club that meets in Al's garage to discuss matters of serious importance to men such as beer and girls. In 1995, "Reverend Al", the guys turn it into a church so they won't have to pay beer taxes.
  • Polk High – The high school that Al Bundy went to where (as he always loved to rejoice about) he scored 4 touchdowns in one football game. Kelly and Bud also attended Polk High. In 1995 the football field was named "Al Bundy Field" in his honor, although the scoreboard comemmorating this was immediately destroyed.
  • Jiggly Room/Nudie Bar – This is a strip club run by Iqbal, where members of NO MA'AM go to unwind and spend any money that their wives have not already spent.
  • Big Uns – This is a girlie magazine that Al and his friends read. Also used before having sex with the wives. Al to Jefferson: "Take two of these and call me in the morning," looks at Marcy and adds, "better make that four."
  • Girlie Girl Beer – Official beer of NO MA'AM. After the beer's normal mascot has been replaced with Yoko Ono, NO MA'AM declares it no longer their official beer. However, they then spend all night getting drunk testing out alternate beers. Thus, come morning, they forget they hated the beer, and declare it their official beer once again.
  • Psycho Dad – Al's favorite TV show until Marcy's women's group got it cancelled. It was a Western about a psychotic cowboy who had similar values to Al and his NO MA'AM friends. As depicted in the show's opening lyrics, Psycho Dad "is quick with a gun, loves his son, and killed his wife because she weighed a ton."
  • Peas In A Pod – Another TV show Al enjoyed. This one was only featured in one episode, and was removed from the air after the network received a complaint from "a Michigan housewife." The show was actually an exact parody of the family, due to Kelly telling the producers all about her life. The show depicts 'Hal' often muttering "My life sucks", and his daughter bringing home a Marine, a sailor, a soldier and an airman.
  • Weenie Tots – Al's favorite fast-dissolving miniature corndog-like snack, with many disclaimers on the package including "This Is Not a Food" and "No Nutritional Value".
  • The Mighty Dodge – The Bundy family car, a 1972 Dodge Dart, which dates back to Al's high school days and has logged over a million miles of travel. Its old, brown, rustic colour makes it instantly recognizable as the Bundys' car, though after a car wash in episode 917, it turns out that under all that dirt, it was really red. Despite its poor condition (ex. constant engine troubles), Al has been shown to be very reluctant to part with it.
  • Gary's Shoes and Accessories For Today's Woman – The shoe store where Al has been working since high school. He was planning on working there only for a brief summer period during high school until Peg's pregnancy with Kelly changed all that. Al is often shown being rude to customers in the store, and placing his head in his hands all day long if there are no customers, reflecting on his miserable life. When he finds it too humiliating to sell women's shoes, he starts to only order men's, thinking Gary wouldn't mind. He gets into a lot of trouble as it turns out Gary is really a woman.
  • The toilet flush – One of Al's favourite activities is to sit in the bathroom for a long time. Whenever there is a sound of the toilet flushing in the Bundy house, viewers know that Al is coming out of the bathroom with a newspaper under his arm. He loves the toilet so much that one day he buys his very own Ferguson toilet, just like the one his father had. After having built his own restroom and garage apartment, he has to tear it down again after the pregnant women take it over.
  • Isis – Bud's blow-up doll and the object of several jokes.
  • Bundy Motto/Credo– Essentially, an ever-changing slogan that tries to describe Al's philosophy on certain subjects or situations. "We ain't got it." Also, as Al told to Bud: "Lie when your wife is waking. Lie when your belly's aching. Lie when you know she's faking. Lie, sell shoes, and lie." Alternative version: "Hooters, hooters, yum, yum, yum. Hooters, hooters, on a girl that's dumb".
  • Whoa Bundy! – family cheer, used whenever the Bundy family was about to embark on a venture together, often a scheme against the D'Arcys or other groups. Led by Al, "Can I get a Whoa Bundy?," it involves all of the Bundys placing their hands on top of one another in a circle and raising them into the air, yelling "Whooooa Bundy!"
  • Thank Your Father, Kids –Sarcastic line said by Peggy to her children after Al royally screws something up. Interestingly, it was used previously (and sincerely) by Beverly D'Angelo's "Ellen Griswold" character in National Lampoon's European Vacation.
  • The Bundy Curse – Actually there are two curses. The most mentioned curse is the one that every male Bundy is cursed to eventually fail. There also is a curse we see the actual beginning of where a Bundy forefather (played by Ed O'Neil) is a blacksmith (selling mainly horse shoes) in Lower Uncton in England who insults a witch and then she curses him with eternal darkness upon the Lower Uncton until the last male Bundy dies and that each Bundy will have smelly feet. The Bundy family has eventually left the Lower Uncton and left behind its darkness but their feet of course remained smelly. The townspeople searched for male Bundys for centuries and killed them to destroy the curse, until they encountered Al's family. The other curse is that whenever a Bundy receives good luck, he builds up an equal amount of bad luck. Once the Bundy admits having good luck, the bad luck starts; example: Al Bundy was having good luck in an episode, Bud was moving to a fraternity house in college, Kelly was going to move out soon, Al hit every green light, all the songs in the oldies station were his all-time favorites, and only attractive women came to the shoe store came. Then, Jefferson took advantage by getting Al to win a big poker game; the stakes, all of Al's winnings from previous poker games, and all of the players' cars. Al wins, and he admits he has good luck. Al gets arrested because the cars he won were all stolen.

Controversy & missing episodes

One episode of Married... with Children was "lost" due to the efforts of a Michigan housewife, and another episode was edited because of the World Trade Center attacks.

The Rakolta Boycott

In 1989 Terry Rakolta, a homemaker from Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, led a massive boycott against Married... with Children after viewing the episode "Her Cups Runneth Over - 3x06"[1]. Offended by the images of an old man wearing a garter and stockings, a homosexual man and a woman who bared her breasts, Rakolta began a letter-writing campaign to advertisers demanding they boycott the show.

After advertisers began dropping their support for the show and while Rakolta made several appearances on television talk shows, Fox executives played it safe and refused to air the episode titled "I'll See You In Court - 3x08"[2]. That particular episode would become known as the "Lost Episode." "I'll See You In Court - 3x08" was finally aired on FX on June 18 2002. The episode was packaged with the rest of the third season in the January 2005 DVD release.

Ironically during the boycott, ratings for Married... with Children skyrocketed due to interest in the show caused by Rakolta's crusade to have the show canceled. The increased number of viewers kept Married... with Children on the air until 1997. According to sources on the set, the creators of the show, Ron Leavitt and Michael G. Moye, sent Rakolta a fruit basket every Christmas as a way of saying "thank you".

Rakolta herself has been referenced twice on the show. The first time in the episode titled "Rock and Roll Girl - 4x14"[3] when a newscaster mentioned the city Bloomfield Hills. The second time occurred in the episode titled "No Pot To Pease In - 9x09"[4] when a television show was made about the Bundy family. After the show was canceled, Marcy told the Bundys that "some woman in Michigan didn't like it".

Remakes

The American Warner Brothers comedy Unhappily Ever After (1995-1999) has a similar setting, and was also created by Ron Leavitt.

Married... with Children 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 Russ Abbott in the lead role, or perhaps because the original had already been shown, albeit in a late-evening slot. The German sitcom "Hilfe, meine Familie spinnt" ("Help, my family is crazy") showing the family Strunk [5] is a remake of 26 early episodes of "Married... with Children". The show first aired in 1992 and had twice as many viewers as the original show in Germany, but as the Bundys were aired in early evening and the Struncks in prime time, the remake didn't achieve the expected success.

In 2004, the Colombian TV network Caracol Televisión, with Columbia Pictures filial CPT Holdings, produced a 132-episode adaptation of Married... with Children, called Casados con hijos [6]. It features the Rochas (the Colombian version of the Bundys) living in Bogotá with their neighbours, the Pachóns (the D'Arcys), using copied sets and situations from the original series, but adapted to Colombian urban environment. Broadcast at a weekend primetime slot, it has received mixed response. In Latin America, Married... with Children is still viewed through syndication on cable network Sony Entertainment Television.

Another remake of the series appeared in Argentina, also named Casados con hijos, starring Guillermo Francella and Florencia Peña as Pepe and Moni Argento. Also featured are Luisana and Darío Lopilato in the roles of Paola and Coqui Argento, the teenage kids. The first episode was aired on March 2005. The show had a great success, and its rumored that in September 2006, the actors will return to make another season.

Since 2006, Russian channel TNT has been producing another version called Schastlivy Vmeste (Happy together) [7].

A remake named Casado con Hijos ¿quién dijo que era fácil? is on air in the Chilean TV Channel Megavision since April 2006, monday to friday 08:20 P.M. starring Fernando Larrain and Javiera Contador as Tito Larrain and Quena Gómez. Also featured are Dayana Amigo and Fernando Godoy in the roles of Titi and Nacho Larrain. Buck is replaced by a parrot.

In the years 1999-2005 Polish television Polsat aired sitcom Świat według Kiepskich (it stands for World according to Lousies, as the Married... was named Swiat wedlug Bundych in polish). It wasn't strictly remake but close related to polish reality sitcom. Everyone in the family is out of money, noone has job - only grandma gets some money as life annuity. They live in an old neglected tenement house, and have really strange adventures. The family and neighbours - even, that they usually argue - try and try to make some money, to buy as much of Mocny Full (Strong Beer - "noname" name of beer, that later really appeared in stores), as they only can.

DVD Releases

Season Releases

DVD Name Release Date Ep # Additional Information
The Complete First Season October 28 2003 13 Reunion special watched by a record 20 million viewers, Bonus trailers.
The Complete Second Season March 16 2004 22 20 Hidden Easter Eggs Featuring Interviews With the Cast.
The Complete Third Season January 25 2005 23 10 Hidden Easter Eggs Featuring Clips Of The Reunion Special,
Non-copyrighted theme replaces "Love and Marriage" during opening
sequences, and is used from this box set on.
The Complete Fourth Season August 30 2005 23 Eight episodes are US syndicated versions (i.e. about 40 seconds shorter
versions for US reruns on local stations) instead of original versions.
The Complete Fifth Season June 20 2006 25
The Complete Sixth Season TBA 26
The Complete Seventh Season TBA 26
The Complete Eighth Season TBA 26
The Complete Ninth Season TBA 26
The Complete Tenth Season TBA 26
The Complete Eleventh Season TBA 24

Trivia

  • The correct address of the Bundy Household: 9764 Jeopardy Lane, Chicago, Illinois.
  • Before the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, the syndicated version of the episode titled "Get Outta Dodge - 8x17"[8] featured a scene of two Arabs with a ticking bomb at the front door of Al Bundy's house offering to buy his Dodge for $40 and asking for directions to the Sears Tower. The scene was cut from syndicated re-airings of the episode immediately after the fact, but was reinstated after a few years.
  • Al's Dodge is the butt of frequent jokes. The car shown is actually a 1970 Plymouth Duster, which is the twin of the Dodge Demon. The Duster and Dart Sport/Demon are based on the Plymouth Valiant and are renowned for their reliability and durability. One episode centered around Dodge executives visiting to photograph his car's odometer as it rolled over a million miles.
  • The creators of the show named the "Bundy" family after their favorite wrestler King Kong Bundy, though some fans mistakenly believed that it was from serial killer Ted Bundy. King Kong Bundy once made an appearance on the show as Peg's hick inbred uncle Irwin. He also was on the show as his wrestling persona, since NO MA'AM were big fans of King Kong Bundy. The Rhoades were named after Dusty Rhodes.
  • The producers originally wanted to cast comedian Sam Kinison as Al Bundy. However, they ultimately chose not to, due to the profane nature of Kinison's comedy routines. Kinison would later play Al's guardian angel in the memorable episode "It's A Bundyful Life," spoofing Frank Capra's It's a Wonderful Life.
  • The producers also originally wanted in 1986 to cast Michael Richards, who played Cosmo Kramer on Seinfeld, as Al Bundy.
  • The producers originally wanted Roseanne Barr for the part of Peggy Bundy, but she declined and the producers cast on Katey Sagal. She went on to star in her own successful show, Roseanne, about a crass, lower-middle-class family the next year.
  • The episodes "Top of the Heap," "Radio Free Trumaine," and "Enemies" were meant to be spin-offs.
    • "Top of the Heap" was the only episode of the three to get its own show. It was notable as an early sitcom starring Matt LeBlanc, later of Friends fame. The show was about an ex-boyfriend of Kelly Bundy (played by LeBlanc) and his father, an old friend of Al Bundy, always trying get rich quick schemes.
    • "Radio Free Trumaine" was to be about Bud Bundy's time in College with the campus radio station, with Steve Rhoades as the antagonistic Dean.
    • "Enemies" was a Friends clone, featuring Alan Thicke, based around Kelly Bundy's social circle.
  • In addition to those three spin-offs, a Frasier-type spin-off (i.e., picking up from where the show it spun-off from left off) about Kelly Bundy was planned but never made for two reasons: Christina Applegate turned it down, and Fox's contract stated that the two Bundy children couldn't get spin-offs.
  • In the Futurama episode "A Bicyclops Built for Two," Katey Sagal briefly revived her "Peg Bundy voice" when her character, Turanga Leela, became romantically involved with an alien known as Alkazar who, after presenting a cultured demeanor when they first met, soon revealed a side to himself that was distinctly Al Bundy-esque. At one point, Leela's hairstyle and outfit are definite spoofs of Peg, and she proceeds to refer to Alkazar as "Al" and swap insults with him in true Bundy fashion, and in the nasal vocal pitch that Sagal affected when playing Peg.
  • In the episode "Kelly Does Not Live Here Anymore," Jefferson mistakenly calls Al "Captain" (from the Love Boat) and "Fonzie" (from Happy Days) referring to shows that Ted McGinley had played characters on.
  • The house shown in the intro to the show is a real house on Castlewood Lane in Deerfield, Illinois.
  • In season five, Al and Jefferson argue over who was in the first Lite Beer commercial. Al claims it was Bubba Smith, and Jefferson claims it was Billy Martin. Neither were right. The first lite beer commercial was New York Jets player Matt Snell in 1973.[9]

International

Married...with Children is also popular in other countries around the world.

Australia: The show runs frequently on a cable channel distributing 'classic' television, TV1.

Belgium: The show still periodically runs on the commercial network VT4.

Brazil: The show runs in recently established PlayTV, belonging to Rede Bandeirantes (where it originally ran in mid-to-late 90s). There, the show is entitled "Um amor de família" (a lovely family, in an ironic sense).

Bulgaria: The show still runs on the FOXlife and BTV.

Canada: The show is being run on the channel TVtropolis, and CMT Canada.

Croatia: The show runs on Croatian RTL as "Bračne vode", translated as 'Marriage waters'.

Denmark: the show is called "vore værste år" (our worst years) and it runs on TV3

Estonia: the show is called "Tuvikesed" ("lovebirds") and runs on Kanal 2

Finland: the show is called "Pulmuset" and runs on Channel Four (Nelonen).

France : The show runs on Métropole 6 as "Mariés, deux enfants" from 1989

Germany: Has been running since 1992 as "Eine schrecklich nette Familie" on RTL ("RTLplus" at that time) which roughly translates as 'an awfully nice family.' Currently airs on Kabel1.

Hungary: The show is entitled Egy rém rendes család (meaning circa "A gruesomely decent family") and has ventured from channel to channel over the years, from the later ceased TV3 through RTL Klub to Viasat 3, where it is occasionally repeated.

Norway: The show is called Bundy and is currently in re-runs after midnight every day except weekends on TV3.

Netherlands: The show periodically runs on RTL 7 and Veronica.

Poland: Show is entitled Świat według Bundych (World according to Bundys). It was aired many times on Polsat, last time in 2006 (and it's still on the air). It was dubbed aired with lektor. Show was so popular, Polsat made Polish sitcom - Świat według Kiepskich (World according to Kiepskis).

Romania: Runs periodically as Familia Bundy (The Bundy Familly) on a commercial network PROTV.

Sweden: The show is entitled Våra värsta år, translated to "Our worst years". Meant as a pun on the title for the long-running soap opera Days of Our Lives called Våra bästa år which is "Our best years". It has been shown repeatedly on the Kinnevik-owned channels TV3 and ZTV. After several years off the screen, it returned in 2006 as a part of TV6's launch schedule.

Turkey: The show still runs on the CNBC-E.

UK: The show can usually be seen on the British channel ITV2.

Israel:The show can usually be seen On channel 4 Bip.

See also