8 Simple Rules

8 Simple Rules
8 Simple Rules.jpg
Also known as 8 Simple Rules for Dating My Teenage Daughter (S01E01-S02E05 title)
Format Sitcom
Created by Tracy Gamble
Starring Katey Sagal
Kaley Cuoco
Amy Davidson
Martin Spanjers
John Ritter (season 1-season 2, episode 3)
James Garner (seasons 2-3)
David Spade (seasons 2-3)
Theme music composer Dan Foliart
Country of origin United States
Language(s) English
No. of seasons 3
No. of episodes 76 (List of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Tom Shadyac
Michael Bostick (entire run)
Tracy Gamble (seasons 1-2)
Flody Suarez (seasons 1-2)
James Widdoes (seasons 2-3)
Judd Pillot
John Peaslee (season 3)
Location(s) Detroit, Michigan (setting)
Walt Disney Studios, Burbank, California (filming location)
Camera setup Film; Multi-camera
Running time 22 minutes
Production company(s) Shady Acres Entertainment (entire run)
FlodyCo (seasons 1-2)
Tracy Gamble Productions (season 2)
Broadcast
Original channel ABC
Picture format 480i (SDTV)
720p (HDTV)
Original run September 17, 2002 (2002-09-17) – April 15, 2005 (2005-04-15)
Status Cancelled/ended

8 Simple Rules (originally known as 8 Simple Rules for Dating My Teenage Daughter) is an American television sitcom that originally aired on ABC from September 17, 2002 to April 15, 2005. It was loosely based on humor columnist W. Bruce Cameron's book of the same name.

The show starred John Ritter until his death on September 11, 2003. Katey Sagal took over the show's starring position for the rest of the series' run.

Contents

Premise

8 Simple Rules is about a married couple with three children and is set in a suburb of Detroit, Michigan. The father, Paul Hennessy (John Ritter), is a sportswriter who is prompted by his wife Cate's (Katey Sagal) return to nursing to take a more active role in raising their two teenage daughters, Bridget (Kaley Cuoco), and Kerry (Amy Davidson), and their son Rory (Martin Spanjers). He is soon overwhelmed by the responsibility of being the father of teenage daughters and misses being a sports writer. Paul begins writing a column from home about his struggles with his children and offers advice to people who are in his same position.

His teenage daughters are dating, which sparks the use of the "8 simple rules for dating my teenage daughter". The show, created by veteran comedy writer Tracy Gamble, derives its name and some of its elements from W. Bruce Cameron's book 8 Simple Rules for Dating My Teenage Daughter.

The rules are:

  1. Use your hands on my daughter and you'll lose them after.
  2. You make her cry, I make you cry.
  3. Safe sex is a myth. Anything you try will be hazardous to your health.
  4. Bring her home late, there's no next date.
  5. If you pull into my driveway and honk, you better be dropping off a package because you're sure not picking anything up.
  6. No complaining while you're waiting for her. If you're bored, change my oil.
  7. If your pants hang off your hips, I'll gladly secure them with my staple gun.
  8. Dates must be in crowded public places. You want romance? Read a book.

The third season took a creative turn, revolving more around cousin C.J. and Jim, the grandfather, than the immediate Hennessy family, more specifically not revolving around the raising of the Hennessy girls. After the novelty of newly added ensemble characters wore off, the show shortly returned to its roots.

Come And Knock on Our Door connections

The episode "Come and Knock on Our Door" features a dream sequence in which Paul is on the set of Three's Company, the sitcom from which John Ritter gained fame. Also, Paul's wit and deadpan expression are similar to Stanley Roper's. His co-star on Three's Company, Don Knotts, appeared in a cameo at the end of the episode. Knotts would be the last Three's Company co-star to work with Ritter before his death.

Old Flame

In the episode Old Flame (S03E15), Cate sneaks away from the house for an evening with her ex-boyfriend, Matt (Ed O'Neill). O'Neill and Sagal played Al and Peg Bundy in 'Married With Children'. Producers felt that one of their most successful episodes to date was "Come and Knock on Our Door" because it clearly linked to a well known show that the main actor (Ritter) had starred in. It was believed that a similar episode for Sagal would boost ratings and re-create the previous success. However, the episode did not affect the ratings in any notable way.

Other significant episodes

In the episode "The Doyle's Wedding" (s01e26), former Cheers stars (John Ratzenberger & Shelley Long) appear as the Doyle family at their daughter's wedding. Ratzenberger guest-starred in three episodes, again playing Fred Doyle, the Hennessys' pesky and annoying neighbor. For the "Doyle Wedding", ex-Cheers co-star Shelley Long played Fred's wife Mary Ellen. For his other two appearances, Laverne and Shirley's Cindy Williams played Mary Ellen. Ratzenberger's last appearance on 8 Simple Rules was on the first segment of the "Goodbye" episode following John Ritter's death from an aortic dissection in 2003.

The first season finale and second season premiere featured Cybil Shepherd as Cate's sister Maggie. Throughout the first series, it is suggested that Cate and Maggie has a similar sibling bond to that of Bridget and Kerry, with Cate being like Kerry. In the two episodes in which Maggie appears, the pair play out an adult version of the Hennessey daughters. First of all, Cate would represent Bridget and Maggie would represent Kerry. But in the second episode, they switched roles. From Maggie's first appearance, Cate and Jim frequently talk about the sibling relationship as if Cate was the Bridget type.

Production

Death of John Ritter

On September 11, 2003, following an interview on the set with the Museum of Television & Radio, John Ritter suffered an aortic dissection. After he experienced discomfort during a rehearsal that afternoon, crew members took Ritter to a nearby hospital, where he died that night. Following Ritter's death, ABC announced that the show would continue after a hiatus, and would incorporate the death of Ritter's character. The three new episodes that Ritter completed were aired with Katey Sagal introducing them.

The show returned on November 4, 2003 with a one hour episode, "Goodbye," dedicated to Ritter's death. Subsequent episodes dealt with the family's reaction to his death and their moving on. The first four post-Ritter episodes were shot without a live audience. Suzanne Pleshette and James Garner guest-starred as Cate's parents. David Spade later guest-starred as Cate's wayward nephew, C.J. Both Garner and Spade eventually received starring roles following Ritter's death.

Season 3 and subsequent cancellation

Shortly after the third season finale, rumors began circulating that 8 Simple Rules was facing cancellation. In its first season, the show ranked 42nd in the Nielsen ratings. By the end of the second season, the show slipped to 50th. After ABC moved the show to Friday nights at 8:00 p.m., it plunged to 94th in the Nielsen standings.

It is one of the few instances in U.S. television history that a series continued nearly two full seasons beyond the death of the show's star. But the Friday night death slot ratings took their toll on the show. The third season finale (in which Katey Sagal's character tells her family that she has been dating the school principal played by Adam Arkin) was not aired for May sweeps. The finale received a 3.9/8 rating share which gave ABC a third place finish behind NBC's Dateline (5.8/11) and CBS' Joan of Arcadia (4.9/10), which starred Ritter's son Jason. On May 17, 2005, ABC officially cancelled 8 Simple Rules.

"Jump the Shark" founder Jon Hein[1] believed that the idea of 8 Simple Rules bringing in David Spade was like bringing in Scott Baio to play Chachi on Happy Days. Hein added that while he thought Spade was funny, the show should have ended immediately after John Ritter's death.[2]

Characters

Main characters

Other characters

Episodes

American ratings

Season Episodes Premiere Season finale U.S. ratings
1 2002–2003 28 September 17, 2002 May 20, 2003 10.85 million (43rd place)[3]
2 2003–2004 24 September 23, 2003 May 18, 2004 9.98 million (50th place)[4]
3 2004–2005 24 September 24, 2004 April 15, 2005 6.8 million (90th place)[5]

Syndication

While 8 Simple Rules ratings were well above those of the surrounding TGIF shows during its third season, ABC canceled it due to the inability to sell it to syndication. Due to John Ritter's death, 8 Simple Rules could not air two daily cycles (with episodes from varying seasons), as some think doing so would confuse and/or upset viewers. However, Danish channel TV3 and the Canadian channel YTV does air episodes featuring Ritter.

On July 11, 2005 (less than two months after ABC officially canceled it), the WB television network announced it would air back-to-back repeats of all 76 episodes of 8 Simple Rules from 4–5 p.m. weekdays from January 2, 2006 to September 15, 2006 when it was replaced by Reba on The CW Daytime.[6]

On Tuesday, June 12, 2007, the show joined the ABC Family line-up, airing weekdays from 6:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. Then in September 2008, the show started airing from 3:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m., until October 10, 2008. On October 3, 2009, 8 Simple Rules returned to ABC Family, having been absent for a year, airing on Saturdays from 10:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m., and Sundays at 11:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.[7] Airings have mostly been sporadic due to the channel's unpredictable movie schedule and holiday programming block. On February 8, 2010, the series was added back to ABC Family's weekday lineup, airing from 6-7PM/ET, replacing The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. After a few months of being absent on the channel, 8 Simple Rules resumed airings on ABC Family at 7/6 c on select weekend mornings, beginning July 18, 2010. The latest the series aired was on Saturday, August 7, 2010.

International

Country Channel First airdate Last airdate Notes
 United Kingdom Disney Channel 2003 2006
 United Kingdom ABC1 2005 September 26, 2007 Channel closed September 26, 2007
 United Kingdom Five 2007
 United Kingdom Fiver 2008 Currently showing All three seasons
 Uruguay Warner Channel 2005 2007 All three seasons
 Turkey TNT
atv
2006 Second Season
 Australia FOX8 April 15, 2005 Every Weekday at 1pm
 Austria ORF 1 All Seasons everyday at 3:50pm
 New Zealand TV2 2003 2005 Occasionally Rerun
Bulgaria Bulgaria Kanal 1
Fox Life (repeats)
Nova Television (repeats)
2006
2007
April 5, 2008
2006 All seasons on every channel
 Serbia Foxlife and RTS 2007 2008
 Canada Family 2008 Recently Cancelled.
 Canada Vrak TV 2004 2009 All three seasons
 Canada YTV 2009 currently showing All 3 seasons aired, reruns
 Canada CMT September 2010 at TBA This Fall All 3 seasons will be aired, reruns
 Russia STS October 19, 2004
 France M6 Renamed as Touche pas à mes filles (Don't mess with my daughters or Don't touch my daughters)
 Belgium VT4
 Ireland RTÉ Two Airing cancelled
 Ireland TG4 Airing Weekdays at 5:35pm
 Spain SET en VEO
 Netherlands Comedy Central 2007 Currently showing Daily 23:05
 Poland Comedy Central 2010
 Norway TV3 2007 All three seasons. Every weekday at 5 pm.
 Sweden TV3
 Sweden TV6
 Sweden Comedy Central Currently Showing Weekdays at 1:45 AM
 Japan NHK Educational TV 2003 2005 Renamed "Papa niwa Himitsu(パパにはヒ・ミ・ツ)" (Keep It Secret From Dad). First and Second Seasons. All the episodes were aired in rerun spending 9 days in 2007.
 Estonia TV3 Renamed "8 Lihtsat Reeglit minu Tütre kohtamiseks"
 Germany ProSieben
February 21, 2004
January 2, 2005
April 1, 2006

Dec. 19, 2004
July 24, 2005
Sep. 9, 2006
Renamed "Meine wilden Töchter" (My Wild Daughters)
First Season. Saturday at 4 pm (until May 29) / Sunday at 11.30 am (starting September 5).
Second Season. Sunday at 10.30 am.
Third Season. Saturday at 2.25 pm.
 Germany Comedy Central
August 10, 2009
Currently showing Renamed "Meine wilden Töchter" (My Wild Daughters)
Monday – Thursday at 9.40 pm. (until October 1) / Monday – Thursday at 8.15 pm (starting October 5) / Currently Monday – Thursday at 1.25 am
 Saudi Arabia MBC4 2007 2008 All three seasons
 United Arab Emirates Dubai One 2006 2007 All three seasons
 Israel yes 2007
 Slovenia Kanal A 2007 All three seasons
 India Star World
 Pakistan Star World 2005 2008 All three seasons
 Turkey TNT Turkey atv Turkey March 3, 2008
 Finland TV Viisi, Nelonen currently showing

(Tv viisi)

Renamed as Teinitytön kasvatusopas (How to raise a teenage girl)

On weekdays 7.30pm

 Ukraine 1+1 2008 Third season only.
 Slovakia TV Markiza July 15, 2008 All three seasons
 Denmark TV3 Renamed as Fingrene væk fra min teenage datter (Get your hands off my teenage daughter)
 Brazil Sony Entertainment Television All three seasons
 Hungary Viasat 3 March 2, 2009 Renamed as Pimaszok (Cheekies)

DVD releases

On August 7, 2007, Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment released Season 1 of 8 Simple Rules on DVD in Region 1. Season 1 was released in the UK on the 1st of September 2008. [1]

In August 2008, Lionsgate Home Entertainment announced that they had acquired the rights to the series from ABC Studios. They subsequently released Season 2 on DVD in Region 1 on May 19, 2009. [2]

DVD Name Ep # Region 1 Region 2 Region 4
The Complete First Season 28 August 7, 2007 September 1, 2008 November 12, 2008[8]
The Complete Second Season 24 May 19, 2009 TBA TBA
The Complete Third Season 24 TBA TBA TBA

References in popular culture

References

External links