Английская Википедия:Brother's Keeper (1998 TV series)
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Brother's Keeper is an American television sitcom that ran for one season on ABC from September 25, 1998, to May 14, 1999. Created by Donald Todd, the series chronicles the rocky coexistence of Porter Waide (William Ragsdale) and his irresponsible pro-football player brother Bobby Waide (Sean O'Bryan), who is contractually forced to move into his brother's house, where Bobby's lifestyle often clashes with that of Porter's, and becomes an unwitting second parent to Porter's son Oscar (Justin Cooper).
Premise
The series centers around Porter Waide (Ragsdale), a milquetoast college history professor and widowed single father, raising his son, Oscar (Cooper), by himself until his brother, Bobby (O'Bryan), a football placekicker who had just been signed to play with the San Francisco 49ers and has a reputation for being a bad boy, moves in with his brother and nephew, as part of a stipulation in his new multimillion-dollar contract in which Bobby has to live with someone who is more responsible than him, in order to change his troublemaking ways.
This situation proves incredibly challenging as Bobby continues to exhibit childish behavior in his adult years, which often aggravates Porter, as well as Bobby's smart, sarcastic and harried sports agent Dena Draeger (Bess Meyer), who has the unenviable task of "babysitting" Bobby to ensure he stays out of trouble and keep him from violating the terms of his new NFL contract. Although Porter is reluctant to let Bobby stay with him and his son, he realizes that Oscar is thrilled with the fact that he now gets to spend time with his famous uncle, with Bobby becoming an unlikely second parent to his nephew and making attempts to try to get his brother to have fun and loosen up, while Porter tries teaching Bobby how to be a responsible person.
Toward the end of the series, Porter wrestles with his burgeoning romantic feelings for Dena. Although it's implied that Dena partially reciprocates Porter's affection, the series is canceled before their relationship can advance.
Cast
Main
- William Ragsdale – Porter Waide
- Sean O'Bryan – Bobby Waide
- Justin Cooper – Oscar Arthur Waide
- Bess Meyer – Dena Draeger
Recurring
- Natasha Slayton – Rose
- Kate Hodge – Marilyn
Special guests
- Elizabeth Berkley (as Amy; episode: "You Are Me")
- Dan Dierdorf (as himself; episode: "Kick Ball, Get Check")
- Illeana Douglas (as Ginny; episode: "Dating the Teacher")
- Boomer Esiason (as himself; episode: "Kick Ball, Get Check")
- John Michael Higgins (as Mark; episodes: "Trick or Treat?", "The Note", "Politically Impolite")
- Henry Kissinger (as himself; episode: "Politically Impolite")
- Jack Klugman (as Jack; episode: "An Odd Couple of Days")
- Piper Laurie (as Jane Waide; episode: "Everybody Says I Love You")
- Bill Maher (as himself; episode: "Politically Impolite")
- Karl Malone (as himself; episode: "You're in Trouble")
- Al Michaels (as himself; episode: "Kick Ball, Get Check")
- Heather Nauert (as herself; episode: "Politically Impolite")
- Tony Randall (as Tony; episode: "An Odd Couple of Days")
- Bobby Slayton (as himself; episode: "Politically Impolite")
Episodes
Production
Brother's Keeper was produced by Axelrod-Widdoes Entertainment and Donald Todd Productions in association with Studios USA Television. Show creator Donald Todd served as the executive producer and showrunner of the series, alongside non-writing executive producers Jonathan Axelrod and James Widdoes (the latter of whom had also directed fifteen of the series' 23 episodes, including the pilot episode and the final episode of the first season, that effectively became the show's series finale, "The Duel").
Broadcast
The series aired as part of ABC's TGIF comedy lineup on Friday evenings; despite this, some of the show's episodes featured decidedly more adult humor than the rest of the TGIF lineup, which otherwise targeted pre-teens and teenagers (though like most family sitcoms aired on TGIF, Brother's Keeper incorporated humor that would appeal to both adult viewers as well as to the lineup's target audience); as such, the series was aired at 9:30 p.m. ET on Friday evenings and was one of two freshman series added to the block that season, along with the Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen starring vehicle Two of a Kind (both series were joined by veteran TGIF shows Boy Meets World and Sabrina, the Teenage Witch).
Reception
Ratings
Despite respectable ratings, often winning the 9:30 p.m. timeslot in most demographics[1] and averaging 10.7 million total viewers during its run (finishing the 1998–99 season #62 out of 155 primetime shows, tied with the CBS newsmagazine 48 Hours, according to Nielsen Media Research), the series was cancelled by ABC in May 1999.
Awards
Year | Award | Category | Recipient | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1999 | Young Artist Award | Best Performance in a TV Comedy Series – Supporting Young Actor | Justin Cooper | Шаблон:Nominated |
Trevor Einhorn | Шаблон:Nominated | |||
Best Performance in a TV Comedy Series – Supporting Young Actress | Natasha Slayton | Шаблон:Nominated |
References
External links
- Английская Википедия
- 1998 American television series debuts
- 1999 American television series endings
- 1990s American multi-camera sitcoms
- American English-language television shows
- Television series by Universal Television
- Television shows set in San Francisco
- TGIF (TV programming block)
- American Broadcasting Company sitcoms
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