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IMDbPro

The Jeff Foxworthy Show

  • Série télévisée
  • 1995–1997
  • TV-PG
  • 30min
NOTE IMDb
5,7/10
808
MA NOTE
The Jeff Foxworthy Show (1995)
sitcomComédieFamille

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAir conditioning repair man Jeff finds himself a fish out of water living in Indiana with his Southern ways and humor. Eventually he takes his family back to Georgia and reconnects with his ... Tout lireAir conditioning repair man Jeff finds himself a fish out of water living in Indiana with his Southern ways and humor. Eventually he takes his family back to Georgia and reconnects with his eccentric relations.Air conditioning repair man Jeff finds himself a fish out of water living in Indiana with his Southern ways and humor. Eventually he takes his family back to Georgia and reconnects with his eccentric relations.

  • Création
    • Tom Anderson
  • Casting principal
    • Jeff Foxworthy
    • Haley Joel Osment
    • Ann Cusack
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,7/10
    808
    MA NOTE
    • Création
      • Tom Anderson
    • Casting principal
      • Jeff Foxworthy
      • Haley Joel Osment
      • Ann Cusack
    • 12avis d'utilisateurs
    • 2avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 2 nominations au total

    Épisodes41

    Parcourir les épisodes
    HautLes mieux notés

    Photos2

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux99+

    Modifier
    Jeff Foxworthy
    Jeff Foxworthy
    • Jeff Foxworthy
    • 1995–1997
    Haley Joel Osment
    Haley Joel Osment
    • Matt Foxworthy
    • 1995–1997
    Ann Cusack
    Ann Cusack
    • Karen Foxworthy
    • 1996–1997
    G.W. Bailey
    G.W. Bailey
    • Big Jim Foxworthy
    • 1996–1997
    Jonathan Lipnicki
    Jonathan Lipnicki
    • Justin Foxworthy
    • 1996–1997
    Bill Engvall
    Bill Engvall
    • Bill Pelton
    • 1996–1997
    Neil Giuntoli
    Neil Giuntoli
    • Florus Workman
    • 1996–1997
    Anita Barone
    Anita Barone
    • Karen Foxworthy
    • 1995–1996
    Matt Clark
    Matt Clark
    • Walt Bacon
    • 1995–1996
    Matt Borlenghi
    Matt Borlenghi
    • Russ Francis
    • 1995–1996
    Dakin Matthews
    Dakin Matthews
    • Elliot
    • 1995–1996
    Debra Jo Rupp
    Debra Jo Rupp
    • Gayle
    • 1995–1996
    Jay Mohr
    Jay Mohr
    • Wayne Foxworthy
    • 1996
    Bibi Besch
    Bibi Besch
    • Lois
    • 1995–1996
    Kathryn Zaremba
    • Nettie
    • 1996–1997
    Darryl Theirse
    Darryl Theirse
    • Andre
    • 1997
    Michelle Clunie
    Michelle Clunie
    • DeeDee Landrow
    • 1996
    Jeanine Jackson
    Jeanine Jackson
    • Livie Ann…
    • 1996
    • Création
      • Tom Anderson
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs12

    5,7808
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    Avis à la une

    413Funbags

    Loved the first season.....

    I never even knew this show existed until last week. I tried one episode and loved it so I immediately watched the whole first season. Jay Mohr and Debra Jo Rupp were both hilarious. Then came the second season. Those two were replaced by the comedic genius of Bill Engvall, ugh. That man has never said a funny thing in his life. Anyway, they don't even explain what happened to Jeff's brother, their business or his wife's sister. For the entire first season Jeff's wife was pregnant and many times they said it was a girl. Turns out it was a 4 year old boy. Seven stars if there hadn't been a second season.
    6signlady

    Great for its time

    Really latetotheshow - but I have both seasons on DVDs & recently rediscovered them & rewatched.

    Very funny & great stories (for that era) I'm surprised there are only 10 written reviews here (11 with mine now) & 735 just rated with stars only, and the series garnered a 5.7. I'm sure it would've been at least 6.5, possibly 7 if more people had seen it.

    One little thing kept 'taking me out of it' - the brother-character Wayne. He should'a had a mullet haircut.

    He was funny, but he would've been ten times funnier with a mullet.

    I also really missed Walt & Russ after they summarily & needlessly got wrote off the show . . .

    I like the actress who played Karen's sister, but something about her just didn't fit the show. And the writing for her just wasn't always good.

    My take is, they made too many drastic changes with characters in season one, so people probably quit watching - They should've kept Russ & Walt & brought in Wayne & let Wayne & Russ buddy together to drive everyone crazy.

    The obnoxious boojie neighbor disappeared too, and everyone liked the contrast between him & Jeff.
    6jabo1971

    Another Victim of Network Suit Madness

    I guess when they started filming the first season, the network executives at ABC didn't know that Jeff Foxworthy had already sold more comedy albums than Carlin, Cosby, or Pryor. Instead of going with Foxworthy's proved style of comedy, they decided to juxtapose a Southern, rural, redneck Jeff against his Midwestern-intellectual-snobbish in-laws, his neighbor Craig, and his wife Karen. Perhaps the suits thought the in-laws and others would act a foil against which Jeff's Southern persona could be displayed. It never really worked. Jeff's existing fan base, myself included, did not recognize Jeff Foxworthy in his own show; "Who's this guy?" - it was nothing like his comedy - totally alien. In an interview years later Foxworthy explained that for the first six months of filming he wasn't even allowed in the writer's room.

    ABC tried to retool the show by dumping the characters Russ and Walt, who worked at Jeff's HVAC business and bringing in Jay Mohr as Jeff's wild brother, Wayne. Still didn't work. Eventually the ABC suits cancelled the show.

    But it was resurrected and retooled by NBC. Jeff's business tanks and he returns to his hometown, the fictional Briarton, Georgia, but his wife is played by a different actress, Ann Cusack. I don't know why Anita Barone left, maybe NBC thought she was too saucy to be believable as Jeff's wife, so they brought in whiney Cusack. They also have another son, Justin, played by Jonathon Lipnicki.

    The move to the South provided Jeff's character with a history from which Foxworthy's comedy could flow. The setting and characters allow more of the familiar Foxworthy comedy to come out – professional wrestling, big hair, trailer parks, mud boggin', cousins marrying and so forth. Jeff's high school best friend, Bill Pelton, played by real life friend and comedian Bill Engvall, Jeff's dad Big Jim Foxworthy played by G.W. Bailey are central characters that add so much more to the show than the ABC version's peripheral characters ever did.

    But even NBC couldn't leave the show alone. The biggest changes were at Jeff's place of employment, Pitt's Trucking. Bosses came and went, so did truck drivers and dock workers. The second season had strong episodes and weak ones, but overall was a vast improvement. Unfortunately the network suits didn't want to invest another season in hopes of improved rating, and the show was eventually cancelled, this time for good.
    balkaster

    Good intentions, but troubled execution

    If any comic in the last ten years stood out as the potential source of a possible hit sitcom -- like Bill Cosby, Roseanne, Andy Griffith, and others before him -- it would be Jeff Foxworthy. He's a likable presence and his humor appeals to a wide range of Americans. Yet instead of taking a cue from these past successes and building around him a world inspired by his humor, the producers instead transplanted him to suburban Illinois. It was a fish-out-of-water comedy set in a Northern college town (without actually embracing his distinctly rural Southern humor), and complicated his life with snobby, intellectual in-laws who always misjudged him. It was well done, for what it was, but it wasn't what his fans were expecting and it didn't stand out for the rest of the audience. It got lost, the ratings tanked, ABC cancelled it.

    But someone wisely saw Foxworthy's potential, and brought the production to NBC...with changes. New producers who were more in tune with Foxworthy's strengths built a new world for him. Gone were the snobby in-laws and curvy, sexy Anita Barone as his wife, Karen, to be replaced with willowy, neurotic Ann Cusack (younger sister to John and Joan). Foxworthy was uprooted from the North and planted back in the South, in his small fictitious Georgia hometown. No longer would the show be taped in a studio with a laugh track, it would be filmed before a live audience. And no longer was pre-"Sixth Sense" Haley Joel Osment an only child; he now had to contend with sibling rivalry from Jonathan Lipnicki, fresh off the set of "Jerry Maguire". Add the always fun G.W. Bailey as Foxworthy's womanizing get-rich-quick-scheming father and Bill Engvall as his best friend, and you've got the kind of riotous yet heartwarming comedy that harks back to "The Andy Griffith Show".

    Unfortunately, retooling any show to this extent seems to doom it. Cusack played off Foxworthy better (with Barone, he always seemed a little henpecked, although that was due to the writing, not the actress), but the addition of Lipnicki felt like stunt casting. The fictional Foxworthy's friends were essentially the same doomed losers as in the first version, but they fit better, had more heart and were a lot funnier. Viewers who had stuck with it on ABC felt lost -- even though the past "incarnation" of the show was referenced early on, there were too many structural changes in the Foxworthy family to accept a continuity between the two versions of the show. Foxworthy's stand-up fans had largely tuned out during the previous version and weren't likely to give it another chance.

    If the second version of the show had been the first, this show might still be on the air, and Foxworthy would be retiring it soon after ten successful years. Unfortunately, it wasn't.
    jwhouk

    Not bad, should have been given another chance

    The original series on ABC had some funny moments, but most of the scripts seemed forced. It's also generally never a good idea to have the female lead get pregnant one or two shows in to the series.

    The series on NBC was a good one, and should have gotten at least another year to build up an audience - which I think it would have. I didn't care for Cusack as the new Karen, but that version of the show was a lot more "Foxworthy" than the ABC version.

    Jay Mohr... was just awful. Bill Engvall was a better (and funnier) foil for Jeff. The addition of his character (and Michelle Clunie as Dee Dee Landreaux) was a vain attempt by ABC to boost up the ratings on the show.

    The only thing that could have saved the original ABC show was different writers - but by the time that happened, it was on a new network. NBC was just as forgiving as ABC was.

    This show doesn't taint Jeff's comedy at all, but I can only imagine that he didn't care much for the ABC storyline.

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    Famille

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Jeff Foxworthy and Haley Joel Osment were the only two cast members to be on the show from beginning to end, despite the show only lasted two seasons. In season two, when NBC took over the show, the cast and plot were completely re-done, and Foxworthy and Osment were meant to play different people from who they played the first season, only they had the same names.
    • Connexions
      Referenced in The Larry Sanders Show: Eight (1995)

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    FAQ18

    • How many seasons does The Jeff Foxworthy Show have?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 16 septembre 1995 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Somewhere in America
    • Sociétés de production
      • Brillstein-Grey Entertainment
      • Mr. Willoughby
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 30min
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Stereo
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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