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1-50 of 117
- Ross makes the kids work all night long.
- You can't put a price tag on friendship. Well, in fact, you can, as Christine sadly discovers when her mother's monthly friendship checks to the cast fail to arrive, leaving Christine friendless.
- As Alasdair's exploration of his family tree starts connecting with castmates, Ross fears the kids will start making fun of his age. So he conducts a preemptive strike.
- Christine starts her new favorite hobby by trading Ross' rare coin collection for an exercise bike and a set of free weights.
- Explores the paranormal, a poltergeist invades the studio (sending equipment and personnel flying), Lisa conducts séances, and a thankful genie freed from an electric lamp grants wishes.
- Parodies of Little Orphan Annie, and ads for kids in need of homes, are among a set of adoption-themed sketches. Doug and Vanessa wonder if they could be long-lost siblings.
- The kids look at how everyone gets blamed for everything even if it is not their fault.
- The show explores those things which enhance a person's physical appeal, such as makeup, deodorant, breath spray, beauty cream, perfumes and aftershave, and the like.
- Ross purchases a robot kid to replace the cast.
- The kids review and discuss learning.
- Ross revokes the privileges from the kids.
- The kids expose their dirty little secrets.
- Habitual bad manners (a.k.a. disgusting habits) get the focus as Christine consults the questionable Book of Etiquette compiled by the show's producers.
- The show targets television and newspaper medias, mainly for their deceptiveness in advertising. Living the example, the show calls itself "new and improved" but admits having little to show for it.
- The show's theme on pets prompts Lisa to aim an endless stream of derisive dog jokes at Christine, which puts Christine in mind for revenge.
- Lisa receives letters from an unknown secret admirer.
- 1979–2004TV-PG7.1 (35)TV EpisodeThe government, having discovered kids working for You Can't Do That On Television, impose new rules and regulations to protect them. First rule: since money corrupts, the kids can't be paid.
- The cast prides itself on avoiding the addictions of its parent generation but displays a variety of addictions all their own.
- For the show's theme on vacations, Christine decides to get away and lay out at the beach, but that doesn't stop Ross and others from finding her.
- The cast tries answering the question "Just who do you think you are?"
- Doug plans a trip to outer space.
- Alasdair, with himself as host, thinks this show on optimism and pessimism will be great, but Christine, having read the script, thinks otherwise.
- Alistair tries to set a world record for eating the most hard boiled eggs.
- The Local Schoolboard appoints Ross to educate the kids since they're not in school.
- Ross tries to clean up the show by making the kids wear sailor suits.
- The show is receiving threats of Soviet invasion.
- The kids discuss fairy tales and Alisdair tries to become a wizard.
- The Doug, Jody and Alisdair become sick when the green slime becomes contaminated.
- Alisdair starts saving to buy a car.
- Jill's little sister Amy joins the cast and makes it very embarrassing for Jill.
- The Kids try to convince Ross to throw a party.
- The cast deals with fears, phobias and a few hidden monsters.
- A big time Hollywood producer plans to make a major motion picture version of the show while the kids go through slime wrenching auditions just to get a part.
- Alisdare aspires to become a pop singer.
- The kids lose their jobs and they have to work for the producer's spoiled daughter.
- In a show centered around blood relations and ancestry, Barth leaves relatives in change while on vacation, and Ross charges the cast to research each of their family trees.