The Good Life | |
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Also known as | The Bowmans |
Genre | Sitcom |
Created by | |
Written by |
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Directed by | Gerry Cohen |
Starring |
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Composer | Jonathan Wolff |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 13 |
Production | |
Producers |
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Running time | 30 minutes |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network | NBC |
Release | January 3 – April 12, 1994 |
The Good Life is an American sitcom television series created by Jeff Martin, Kevin Curran and Suzanne Martin, which aired on NBC from January 3 to April 12, 1994. It starred John Caponera and Drew Carey. [1] Other members of the cast included Eve Gordon, Jake Patellis, Shay Astar, Justin Berfield and Monty Hoffman. It focuses on the personal and working life of John Bowman (Caponera) and his family.
The show revolved around John Bowman, and featured both his home life and the lock distribution warehouse where he serves as a middle manager. It was set in Chicago. [2]
Caponera originally created the character of John Bowman for his stand-up routine. He based John on the man he would have become if he had "married young and never finished college." [3] When executives from Disney saw Caponera perform the character during one of his shows, they offered him the chance to star in his own sitcom. [3] The Good Life was created by Jeff Martin, Kevin Curran and Suzanne Martin. [4]
The show premiered on January 3, before moving to its regular Tuesday timeslot the following day. [5] The fifth episode, broadcast on January 30, 1994, aired following NBC's coverage of Super Bowl XXVIII. [6]
Thirteen episodes were produced and aired, before the sitcom was cancelled on May 13, 1994. [3] Caponera heard about the cancellation from the press and was unhappy with NBC for dropping the show, stating "People seemed to love it, but the powers that be didn't care because the ratings weren't high enough." [3] He felt that NBC did not do enough to help get the show started when it debuted in January, suggesting that a comedy lead in and not putting them up against Full House on ABC would have helped growth. He also pointed out that The Good Life was taken off air for coverage of the Olympics and then placed in a different timeslot, which impacted the show's ratings. [3] Caponera told Bunnie Nichols of the News-Press that the show's producer Disney Studios was shopping the sitcom around and that Fox were interested. [3]
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Viewers (millions) | Rating/rank (households) |
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1 | "Paul Dates a Buddhist" | Gerry Cohen | Warren Bell | January 3, 1994 | 20.0 [8] | 12.4 / #38 [9] |
2 | "Maureen's Play" | Gerry Cohen | Mark Driscoll | January 4, 1994 | 12.0 [8] | 8.3 / #73 [9] |
3 | "Pilot" | John Rich | Jeff Martin, Kevin Curran, Suzanne Martin | January 11, 1994 | 9.9 [10] | 6.9 / #84 [11] |
4 | "John Hurts His Leg or Tales from the Crip" | Gerry Cohen | David Silverman and Stephen Sustarsic | January 18, 1994 | 10.2 [12] | 6.8 / #84 [13] |
5 | "The Statue" | Gerry Cohen | Frank Lombardi and Dana Reston | January 30, 1994 | 22.8 [14] | 14.2 / #21 [15] |
6 | "Calendar Girl" | Gerry Cohen | Mark Driscoll | February 1, 1994 | 10.3 [16] | 7.5 / #83 [17] |
7 | "She Shoots, She Scores" | Gerry Cohen | Kevin Curran | February 1, 1994 | 10.2 [16] | 7.1 / #84 [17] |
8 | "John Takes Out Melissa" | Gerry Cohen | Leslie Rieder | March 15, 1994 | 8.3 [18] | 7.0 / #78 [19] |
9 | "John Fights the System" | Gerry Cohen | David Silverman and Stephen Sustarsic | March 15, 1994 | 9.9 [18] | 5.9 / #86 [19] |
10 | "Bob's Field Trip" | Gerry Cohen | Wendy Braff | March 22, 1994 | 8.2 [20] | 6.0 / #78 [21] |
11 | "Melissa the Thief" | Gerry Cohen | Suzanne Martin | March 29, 1994 | 8.4 [22] | 6.2 / #81 [23] |
12 | "The Mother-in-Law" | Gerry Cohen | Holly Hester | April 5, 1994 | 7.1 [24] | 5.4 / #88 [25] |
13 | "John's New Assistant" | Gerry Cohen | Suzanne Martin | April 12, 1994 | 7.8 [26] | 5.9 / #85 [27] |
John J. O'Connor of The New York Times gave the show a positive review, writing "Another sitcom. Another show with a goofy dad, a wry mom and three troublesome but wonderful kids. Television marches on. Groan. But then, against all odds, the tired formula works." [4] He thought John's co-workers were "brought to a wonderful level of lunacy by Drew Carey and Monty Hoffman" and he praised the younger actors, calling their characters "appealing." [4] He believed that the cast were "having a genuinely good time" and that came across in their performances, adding "that's a good sign. Mr. Caponera is onto something." [4]
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