“Full House” stars tell series creator they feel 'a little bad' for being 'critical of the show': 'You know, it was a sitcom in the '90s!'

"Full House" stars tell series creator they feel 'a little bad' for being 'critical of the show': 'You know, it was a sitcom in the '90s!'

Michael Tullberg/Getty; John Wolfsohn/Getty; Leon Bennett/WireImage Everyone's favorite "rewatch podcasters"Jodie SweetinandAndrea Barbergot a visit from their old boss,Full Housecreator (and one-time owner of10050 Cielo Drive) Jeff Franklin. It was a special season 3 wrap-up episode of the podcast, in which there was some thoughtful ranking and summarization of the shows that aired from 1989 to 1990. As you may already know, Sweetin and Barber's delightful program is calledHow Rude, Tanneritos!, and this was a time in which the gals felt the need to fess up to some potential rudeness of their own. "We finally get to have Jeff in here for one of our recap episodes," Sweetin said as introduction, after which Barber chimed in, saying, "Well, we felt a little bad at how we've been a little critical of the show. Well, critical with love." Craig Sjodin/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty If Franklin was upset, he didn't show it, saying, "I get it, you know, and all of the vicious criticism is well deserved." Sweetin wanted to clarify, though, adding, "I'd like to think it's not vicious, but hilarious criticism. Hilarious criticism." Barber agreed, saying, "You know, it was a sitcom in the '90s! We're gonna poke fun at it, with love." With the sagacity that likely comes from decades of regular, Everest-sized royalty checks, Franklin responded, "You know, some of it has weathered the years better than others." After all this yukkin' around, Franklin did offer his opinion on why the series was such a success — enough to inspire the five seasons of a Netflix sequel,Fuller House, 21 years after the original went off the air. ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty "The happy accident of this show was how amazingly perfect those actors were for the parts that I wrote," he shared. "[It] was very bizarre. I mean, it was just perfect casting. And by accident. But amazing. So that was a big part of what made the show work." Barber pushed back, saying that it couldn't have all been by accident, and that Franklin used his special set of producer skills to get the remarkable cast that includedJohn Stamos,Bob Saget,Dave Coulier, and all the others together. "But I didn't write for actors," he explained. "I just made up stuff. These people appeared that were so right for those characters." Emily Assiran/Getty He continued, "It's just very rare. And then for everyone in this little fake family to turn into a real family, just icing on the cake, was amazing." Sign up forEntertainment Weekly's free daily newsletterto get breaking TV news, exclusive first looks, recaps, reviews, interviews with your favorite stars, and more. To listen to the full Jeff Franklin visit with theHow Rude, Tanneritos!gals, all you need to do is click the link below. Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

 

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