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Unhappily Ever After: Difference between revisions

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* [[Buxom Is Better]]: Tiffany certainly plays this trope. Despite having an above-average intellect, Tiffany uses her sex appeal more than her brains. The fact that she plans to marry a rich, dying old man to get money shows clearly that she has no plans to use her intellect to get by.
* [[Chuck Cunningham Syndrome]]: In a canine version, the Malloy's have three dogs when the series starts. Their number soon dwindle...
* [[Crossover]]: As part of The WB's promotional night of inter-series character crossovers. Jackee Harry (then of [[Sister, Sister]]) popped in during a moment of [[Breaking the Fourth Wall|wall-smashing]].
* [[The Ditz]]: Ryan. His intellect seems to dimish [[Flanderization|more and more]] as the series progressed.
* [[Driving Test]]: One episode has Jack preparing his teenagers for this.
* [[Drop in-In Character]]: Early episodes feature Jennie's mother Maureen. While she actually lived in the house she fulfilled this function as she would usually come out of her room for one scene to insult Jack and then go back there.
* [[Early Installment Weirdness]]: Season one had the Malloys divorced, a theme song sung by Jack and Mr. Floppy about said divorce, and a good amount of focus upon Mr. Floppy/Jack. By season two the show picked up a regular theme song (which was attached to the reruns of season one) and Mr. Floppy was phased out to appearing usually once per episode to deliver a monologue.
* [[First Father Wins]]
* [[Hey, It's That Voice!]]: Bobcat Goldthwait as Mr. Floppy.
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