Elyse Is Pregnant Again Family Ties

Television receiver series

Family Ties
Family Ties title.svg
Genre Sitcom
Created by Gary David Goldberg
Starring
  • Meredith Baxter
  • Michael Gross
  • Michael J. Fox
  • Justine Bateman
  • Tina Yothers
  • Brian Bonsall
Theme music composer
  • Jeff Barry
  • Tom Scott
Opening theme "Without U.s." performed by Dennis Tufano and Mindy Sterling (season 1 episodes 1–10); Johnny Mathis and Deniece Williams (remainder of series run)
Country of origin United States
Original language English
No. of seasons 7
No. of episodes 176 + i moving-picture show (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
  • Gary David Goldberg
  • Lloyd Garver
Producers
  • Susan Borowitz
  • Ruth Bennett
Photographic camera setup Multi-camera
Running time 24 minutes
Production companies
  • Ubu Productions
  • Paramount Television
Distributor Paramount Domestic Television
Release
Original network NBC[1]
Picture format four:3
Sound format Stereo
Original release September 22, 1982 (1982-09-22) –
May 14, 1989 (1989-05-xiv)
Chronology
Related shows The Fine art of Being Nick (TV pilot)
Day by Day

Family Ties is an American sitcom television set series that aired on NBC for 7 seasons, premiering on September 22, 1982, and concluding on May 14, 1989. The series, created past Gary David Goldberg, reflected the motility in the United States from the cultural liberalism of the 1960s and 1970s to the conservatism of the 1980s.[2] This culture was peculiarly expressed through the relationship between young Republican Alex P. Keaton (portrayed by Michael J. Pull a fast one on) and his ex-hippie parents, Steven and Elyse Keaton (portrayed past Michael Gross and Meredith Baxter).

The show won multiple awards, including three consecutive Emmy Awards for Michael J. Pull a fast one on as Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series.

Plot [edit]

Fix in suburban Columbus, Ohio, during the Reagan administration, Steven and Elyse Keaton (Michael Gross and Meredith Baxter) are baby boomers,[3] liberals and former hippies,[2] raising their three children: ambitious, would-be millionaire entrepreneur Alex (Michael J. Fox); fashion-witting, gossipy Mallory (Justine Bateman); and tomboy Jennifer (Tina Yothers). Married in 1964, Elyse is an independent architect and Steven, a native of Buffalo, New York, is the station managing director of WKS, a local public television station.

Much of the humor of the series focuses on the cultural divide during the 1980s when younger generations rejected the counterculture of the 1960s and embraced the materialism and conservative politics which came to define the 1980s.[iv] Alex, the oldest, is a "Young Republican" who embraces Reaganomics and exhibits bourgeois attitudes. Mallory is apolitical and a materialistic young woman in contrast to her feminist female parent.[ii] Mallory is besides presented every bit a vacuous airhead, who is fodder for jokes and teasing from her brother. Jennifer, an able-bodied tomboy and the second youngest child, shares more of the values of her parents and just wants to be a normal kid. Steven and Elyse have a 4th child, Andrew (or "Andy", for short), who is born in early on 1985. Alex dotes on his immature brother and molds Andy in his bourgeois image.

Regarding the concept, show creator Goldberg observed, "It actually was simply an observation of what was going on in my ain life with my own friends. We were these one-time kind of radical people and of a sudden you're in the mainstream...just now yous've got these kids and y'all've empowered them, and they're super intelligent, and they're definitely to the correct of where you are. They don't empathize what'south wrong with having coin and moving forward."[5] A recurring theme involved Alex hatching a scheme involving some amount of greedy money-making, which led to a humorous misadventure and concluded with Alex being forced to apologize for his choices. According to Goldberg, "We really had this construction that nosotros'd inherited from Jim Brooks and Allan [Burns], which was six scenes and a tag...And so the last scene became Alex apologizes, in every show, we merely left it upwards. Alex apologizes. Some version of it."[6] Nevertheless, Trick'southward portrayal of a likeable Alex proved to exist an important part of the show's success. Goldberg once more stated, "With Alex, I did not remember I was creating a sympathetic grapheme. Those were not traits that I aspired to and didn't want my kids to aspire to, really...Just at the end of Family Ties, when we went off the air, then The New York Times had done a piece and they said, 'Greed with the face of an angel.' And I think that's true...[Michael J. Fox] would make things piece of work, and the audience would simply not admission the darker side of what he's really saying."[five]

Cast [edit]

Main cast [edit]

  • Meredith Baxter-Birney as Elyse Donnelly Keaton: Steven's wife and the mother of Alex, Mallory, Jennifer, and Andy. She is a successful architect and an ex-hippie liberal who lived in California in the 1960s. She is a patient, caring, and loving wife and female parent. She met Steven in college where they later married.
  • Michael Gross as Steven Keaton: Elyse's husband and father to Alex, Mallory, Jennifer, and Andy. He is a branch manager of the local PBS station, [the fictional] WKS, who is an ex-hippie liberal who lived in California in the 1960s. He can exist belligerent at times, but in the finish is a diligent and supportive male parent who cares about his family deeply. He met and married Elyse in college in Berkeley.
  • Michael J. Fox as Alex P. Keaton: the eldest child and elder son of Steven and Elyse, and brother to Mallory, Jennifer, and Andy. He is an intelligent and ambitious Young Republican with but two goals in life: to be successful and make coin. He afterward goes on to attend Leland University and has long-term relationships with two women: Ellen Reed and Lauren Miller. He frequently clashes with his parents about their liberal politics which conflict with his ain conservative views.
  • Justine Bateman as Mallory Keaton: the second-eldest kid and elder girl of Steven and Elyse, and sister to Alex, Jennifer, and Andy. She is an unscholarly material girl, simply kind-hearted and inoffensive whose only main interests are shopping and boys. She has a longtime human relationship with Nick Moore. In the episode "Designated Hitter", it is revealed that Mallory has a college I.Q. than scholastic overachiever Alex.
  • Tina Yothers equally Jennifer Keaton: the second-youngest kid and younger daughter of Elyse and Steven, and sister to Alex, Mallory, and Andy. She is a tomboy whose cares mostly include athletics. She shares her parents' liberal views, in contrast to her siblings' more than bourgeois views. She is shown to be aggressive, just sweetness. She is shown to exist jealous at outset of Andy, but later cares for him.
  • Brian Bonsall every bit Andrew "Andy" Keaton (seasons 5–7)
    • Garrett and Tyler Merriman as Babe Andrew "Andy" Keaton (flavour 4): the youngest child and younger son of Elyse and Steven, and brother to Alex, Mallory, and Jennifer. He is built-in during season 3 due to Meredith Baxter-Birney being pregnant in real life. After he is born, the whole family quickly shows affection and a loving attitude towards him, peculiarly Alex who attempts to mold him into a Republican just similar him. He quickly ages by near four years between seasons iv and 5.

Recurring cast [edit]

  • Marc Toll as Irwin "Skippy" Handelman
  • Scott Valentine as Nick Moore (seasons iv–7)
  • Tracy Pollan as Ellen Reed (flavor 4)
  • Courteney Cox as Lauren Miller (seasons 6–7)

Notable invitee stars [edit]

  • River Phoenix equally Eugene Forbes in the episode "My Tutor"
  • Jeff Cohen as Marv Jr./Dougie Barker in 2 episodes
  • Corey Feldman every bit Student Walter in the episode "The Disciple"
  • Tom Hanks as Ned Donnelly in 3 episodes
  • Martha Plimpton as Jessie Black in the episode "Yous've Got a Friend"
  • Wil Wheaton as Timothy Higgins in the episode "'D' Is for Engagement"
  • David Faustino every bit Keith Baily in the episode "To Snatch a Keith"
  • Geena Davis as Karen Nicholson in 2 episodes
  • Maura Tierney as Darlene in the episode "My All-time Friend'south Daughter"
  • Crispin Glover equally Doug in the episode "The Birthday Boy"
  • Christina Applegate equally Kitten in the episode "Band on the Run"
  • Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Susan in the episode "Diary of a Young Girl"
  • Brownie McGhee equally Eddie Dupree in the episode "The Blues Blood brother"

The evidence had been sold to the network using the pitch "hip parents, square kids."[7] Originally, Elyse and Steven were intended to be the principal characters. However, the audition reacted then positively to Alex during the taping of the fourth episode that he became the focus on the show.[two] [7] Fox had received the role afterward Matthew Broderick turned it downwards.[8] Laura Dern was considered for the role of Mallory Keaton.[ix]

Supporting cast and characters includes neighbor Irwin "Skippy" Handelman (Marc Price), who has an eternal crush on Mallory; Nick Moore (Scott Valentine), Mallory's Sylvester Stallone-esque artist swain; Lauren Miller (Courteney Cox); and Alex'due south feminist, creative person girlfriend Ellen Reed (Tracy Pollan, whom Michael J. Flim-flam after married in 1988). In flavor 3, episode 17, Elyse gave nativity to her fourth child, Andrew (who was played by Brian Bonsall from season five onward). Twins Garrett and Tyler Merriman played baby Andrew.

Product [edit]

Chief stars Meredith Baxter and Michael Gross are exactly the same age, sharing the aforementioned altogether on June 21, 1947. In the series, their characters were intended to be approximately five or six years older, given that their on-screen son, played by Michael J. Fox, was in fact only fourteen years younger than Baxter and Gross in real life.[x]

The show had several similarities or parallels to Baxter's prior serial, Family. In addition to similar names for both series, the shows both initially featured three children, the youngest a tomboy, and later added another kid to the cast. Baxter played the oldest child on the earlier show, and assumed the role of mother in Family Ties.

Theme song [edit]

The theme song, "Without Us" (credited in season ane equally "Us"), was composed by Jeff Barry and Tom Scott in 1982. During the first 10 episodes of the first flavor, it was originally performed by Dennis Tufano and Mindy Sterling.[xi] [12] From episode 11 and onwards, the song was performed by Johnny Mathis and Deniece Williams, as producers were displeased with Dennis and Mindy's cover. A full length version of "Without Us" is featured on Mathis and Williams' duet album "That's What Friends Are For", which was released by Columbia Records on the 2003 CD release of this album.

"At This Moment" [edit]

"At This Moment" was a 1981 single written by songwriter and recording artist Billy Vera and recorded live past Vera and his band, Billy Vera & The Beaters. Five years afterwards the original release of this song, a studio recording of "At This Moment" was featured at the offset of several episodes of the 4th and early fifth flavour as the love song associated with Alex P. Keaton (Michael J. Flim-flam) and his girlfriend Ellen Reed (Tracy Pollan). Its exposure on Family Ties renewed a huge interest in the vocal. People called and wrote NBC request for the proper name of the song and its singer. The melody and then began a revived chart run, eventually hitting #1 on both the Billboard Hot 100 and Adult Contemporary charts in January 1987. The song also hit the Billboard R&B Chart and the Billboard Hot Country Chart. "At This Moment" quickly sold over a million copies in the U.s., condign i of the last Gold-certified singles in the 45 RPM format. The song crossed over to the R&B and State formats, reaching #42 Country; every bit country was moving abroad from pop influence at the time, "At This Moment" would be the concluding song to appear on the country charts and reach number ane on the pop charts for 13 years.

The beginning Baton Vera & The Beaters album was recorded live, and then when "At This Moment" was used in Family Ties, only the live version existed. Vera afterward explained: "We re-recorded pieces of the vocal. In other words, they'd need 12 seconds here, or twenty seconds there in the show. And then we went in and recorded but those pieces in the studio without the audience, because the audience would have been abrasive, to the Idiot box viewer. The thing that made it piece of work amend the second time was that the story of the song, boy-loses-daughter, was the story of the episode, "Boy Loses Daughter." The starting time time they used the song, it was when he met the girl."

Family Ties writer Michael Weithorn would subsequently retrieve: "In 1985, I had written an episode of Family Ties to start the 4th flavour, and nosotros needed a sort of a sad romantic song. I only happened to go into a bar in Los Angeles and saw Baton and the Beaters. That was the perfect song, and the rest was history." In an interview, Vera talked near his coming together with Family unit Ties author Michael Weithorn: "Ane afternoon I got a call, and this guy said, 'Hey I produce a testify called Family unit Ties, and some of us were at your show the other night, and we heard you do this song that nosotros thought would be perfect for an episode that we take coming upwards. I got my publisher to make a deal for that with them and America responded like crazy". "NBC called us upwardly, they said, 'My God, we've never had any response like this in the history of the network for a song. The switchboards are lighting up, we're getting letters, telegrams, where can we find this song? People started calling radio stations, which never happens. I mean, it was a total organic hit."

On the DVD releases of both Family Ties' 4th and fifth seasons, "At This Moment" is even so included and heard in those episodes.

In an interview with Rachael Ray in 2007, Michael J. Fox good-naturedly said, "Tracy and I couldn't get on the dance flooring anywhere in the world for similar ten years without them playing 'What did you retrieve..."

At the 2011 Tv set Land Awards held in New York Metropolis, Baton Vera performed "At This Moment" with the primary Family Ties cast in attendance that also included Michael J. Fox and Tracy Pollan as the prove had been nominated for and won Outstanding Fan Favorite.

Connectedness to Day by Day [edit]

During its final ii seasons, Family Ties was scheduled on Sunday nights often followed past Day by Mean solar day, another series from Ubu Productions. Michael Gross and Brian Bonsall brought their respective roles of Steven and Andy Keaton to the Mean solar day by Day episode "Trading Places", which reveals that Steven went to higher with Brian Harper (Doug Sheehan), this episode is included on a bonus special features disc in the Family Ties: The Consummate Series Palatial Family Album Drove Edition Box Set DVD.

Other appearances [edit]

Some characters were featured on Mickey's 60th Birthday, broadcast on November thirteen, 1988, on NBC, and featured Justine Bateman, Tina Yothers and Brian Bonsall as their Family Ties characters, trying to aid Mickey Mouse when everybody fails to recognize him due to a spell. Michael J. Fox additionally had a cameo in a flashback using archive footage.

International broadcast [edit]

In the Philippines, the show aired on GMA Network and was simulcast on RPN-nine IBC-thirteen PTV-4 & ABS-CBN in 1983–1991. Information technology moved to ABC-five Pilipino and was dubbed in 1998–2000.[ citation needed ]

Episodes [edit]

Awards [edit]

Emmy Awards [edit]

  • 1986: Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series (Michael J. Fox)
  • 1987: Outstanding Pb Actor in a Comedy Serial (Michael J. Fox)
  • 1987: Outstanding Writing in a One-act Serial
  • 1987: Outstanding Technical Direction
  • 1988: Outstanding Pb Histrion in a One-act Serial (Michael J. Fox)

Gilt Globes [edit]

  • 1989: Best Performance by an Actor in a TV-Series (Michael J. Play a trick on)

TV Land Awards [edit]

  • 2008: Graphic symbol You'd Pay to Do Your Homework for You (Michael J. Fox)
  • 2011: Fan Favorite, Presented by Ben Stiller to the Family Ties cast

Young Artist Awards [edit]

  • 1985: Best Young Actress in a Tv Comedy Serial (Justine Bateman)
  • 1985: Best Young Supporting Extra in a Tv set One-act Series (Tina Yothers)
  • 1986: All-time Immature Actor Starring in a Television Series (Marc Price)
  • 1988: Best Young Actor Under Nine Years of Age (Brian Bonsall)
  • 1989: All-time Young Actor Under Ten Years of Historic period in Television set or Motion Pictures (Brian Bonsall)

Syndication [edit]

NBC aired reruns of Family unit Ties weekday mornings from December 1985 until January 1987 earlier it was replaced by the Beak Rafferty version of Blockbusters. In the fall of 1987, the series went into syndication in the United States. Currently, reruns air on Antenna TV, Rewind Tv and Pluto Goggle box. Reruns previously aired on FamilyNet, TBS, Nick at Nite, TV Land, Authentication Aqueduct, The Hub and Pop.

In Canada, reruns of Family unit Ties began airing on CTS, a Christian-based network, on September 6, 2010. On May fifteen, 2011, Netflix began to stream season 1–7 on its "spotter instantly" streaming service.[sixteen]

In Australia, Family unit Ties originally screened on the Seven Network from 1983 onwards. It became a perennial favourite repeated many times before being bought past the Nine Network which screened it up until 2008.[ citation needed ] It later on screened on pay TV network TV1 before airing on 10 Peach (then known every bit Eleven) in the afternoons and tardily night until June 2013. Equally of June 2020, two episodes are shown on Saturday afternoons between 1 PM and two PM.

In the Uk, Family Ties aired on Channel 4 from July 1985.

Dwelling house media [edit]

DVD [edit]

CBS DVD (distributed by Paramount) has released all vii seasons of Family unit Ties on DVD in Region 1, as of August xiii, 2013[update]. The second through fifth season releases incorporate special features, gag reels and episodic promos. The second season contains interviews with Michael Gross and Michael J. Play tricks along with other bandage members. The 4th season contains the made-for-Telly-movie, Family Ties Holiday. Paramount has also released the first three seasons on DVD in Region 4.

On November v, 2013, CBS Dwelling Entertainment released Family Ties - The Consummate Series on DVD in Region 1.

On November 11, 2014, CBS Domicile Entertainment re-released a repackaged version of the consummate series set, at a lower price, but did non include the bonus disc that was part of the original complete series set up.[17]

In Commonwealth of australia, Region 4, after the commencement 3 seasons were released, no further release came to low-cal. In 2016, Via Vision Entertainment obtained the rights to the series and re-released the first three seasons long with flavor 4 on July six, 2016. The remaining seasons were released each month subsequently including a Consummate Serial boxset.

DVD name No. of
episodes
Release dates
Region one Region 4
The Complete First Flavor 22 February 20, 2007 April 9, 2008

July 6, 2016 (Re-Release)[18]

The 2nd Season 22 Oct 9, 2007 September four, 2008

July vi, 2016 (Re-Release)[19]

The Tertiary Season 24 Feb 12, 2008 April 2, 2009

July 6, 2016 (Re-Release)[twenty]

The Fourth Season 24 August 5, 2008 July 6, 2016[21]
The Fifth Season 30 March x, 2009 August 3, 2016[22]
The Sixth Flavor 28 Apr nine, 2013 September 7, 2016[23]
The Seventh Season 26 August 13, 2013 October 5, 2016[24]
The Complete Series 176 Nov 5, 2013/Nov 11, 2014 November 2, 2016[25]

Streaming [edit]

As of February 2019, all seven seasons are available on Amazon Prime Video (included with Amazon Prime membership), and likewise available on Paramount+, but no longer available on Netflix or Hulu.[26] The first ten episodes of the series are also bachelor for free (with commercials) on the CBS website.[27] Episodes are also bachelor on Pluto Boob tube.[28]

References in other media [edit]

Over a decade later the terminate of Family Ties, Michael J. Fox's final episodes on Spin City featured numerous allusions to the testify. In these episodes, Michael Gross played a therapist for Fox's character Michael Patrick Flaherty[29] and the episode contained a reference to an off-screen character named "Mallory".[xxx] In the episode, after Flaherty becomes an ecology lobbyist in Washington D.C., he meets a "conservative inferior senator named Alex P. Keaton."[31] Meredith Baxter likewise portrayed Mike Flaherty's mother, Macy Flaherty, in the episodes "Family Affair" (Parts 1 and 2).

The main bandage of Family unit Ties (minus a few other recurring cast members) has reunited publicly on 3 occasions (along with series creator/producer Gary David Goldberg on two occasions). They first reunited on February 7, 2008 (minus Tracy Pollan, Scott Valentine, Marc Price, Brian Bonsall and Courteney Cox) for an interview on The Today Show to assist promote Goldberg'due south memoir Sit, Ubu, Sit.[32] The cast reunited over again (minus Valentine, Bonsall and Cox) for a 2nd time for the 2011 TV Land Awards in March of that yr, which included Pollan aslope her husband Play tricks. That awards prove would be the final advent of Goldberg with the entire group.[ citation needed ] In October 2015, the principal cast reunited for a 3rd time with a second advent (which included Pollan alongside Pull a fast one on, only minus Price, Valentine, Bonsall and Cox) on The Today Evidence, and the outset cast reunion since the 2013 death of Goldberg from cancer.[ citation needed ]

WandaVision [edit]

The 2021 Marvel Cinematic Universe series for the Disney+ video streaming service, references the series in the fifth episode, "On a Very Special Episode...," such as a stylized championship sequence partially parodying the Family Ties opening that depicted the family unit first every bit a penciled sketch before finishing as a painted portrait, along with an upbeat theme song praising the family'due south honey and closeness. In the episode, Wanda Maximoff and Vision are attempting to navigate raising their new children Tommy and Baton, both of whom are developing superhero abilities of their own.

References [edit]

  • Trick, Michael J. (2002). Lucky Homo: A Memoir . New York: Hyperion. ISBN978-0-7868-6764-6.
  • Goldberg, Gary David. "Comedy Stop: What Would Alex Keaton Practice?." The New York Times, March 3, 2008.
  • Haglund, David. "Reagan'due south Favorite Sitcom: How Family Ties spawned a bourgeois hero." Slate. March 2, 2007.
  • Hurst, Alex. "Remembering an icon from the 'Me-Decade'." The Daily Pennsylvanian, April 24, 2001.
  • Patterson, Thomas. "What would Alex P. Keaton practice?." CNN, November 1, 2006.
  • Saenz, Michael. "Family Ties". - Museum of Broadcast Communications
  • Stewart, Susan. "The Parents Ate Sprouts; the Child Stole the Bear witness." The New York Times, February 25, 2007.

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ Clements, Erin (October 7, 2015). "Family Ties cast reflects on show 3 decades after: 'We all loved each other'". USA Today. Archived from the original on June 2, 2017. Retrieved June 20, 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d Saenz, Michael. "Encyclopedia of Television receiver: Family unit Ties". Museum of Broadcast Communications. Archived from the original on June half dozen, 2016. Retrieved January 9, 2018.
  3. ^ Patterson, Thom (November 1, 2006). "What would Alex P. Keaton exercise?". CNN . Retrieved September 26, 2021.
  4. ^ Kiehl, Stephen (June vii, 2004). "What he left behind: From Tom Clancy to Alex P. Keaton, Ronald Reagan's legacy extends beyond the political and into the cultural". The Baltimore Dominicus. Archived from the original on June 14, 2018. Retrieved January 9, 2018.
  5. ^ a b Primetime Propaganda: The True Hollywood Story of How The Left Took Over Your Boob tube" by Ben Shapiro, Broadside Books, 2001, p. 125
  6. ^ Primetime Propaganda: The True Hollywood Story of How The Left Took Over Your Television" by Ben Shapiro, Broadside Books, 2001, p. 127
  7. ^ a b Haglund, David (March ii, 2007). "Reagan's Favorite Sitcom: How Family Ties spawned a conservative hero". Slate. Archived from the original on May xvi, 2010. Retrieved August 3, 2008.
  8. ^ The Biography Aqueduct - Matthew Broderick Biography Archived Feb 20, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ "Almost a KeatonWhat if actress LAURA DERN".
  10. ^ Baxter, Meredith (2011). Untied: A Memoir of Family, Fame, and Floundering. Random Business firm LLC.
  11. ^ Amazon Video: Family unit Ties Archived October 8, 2020, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved February 18, 2013
  12. ^ Netflix: Family Ties Archived Feb 5, 2013, at the Wayback Automobile Retrieved Feb 18, 2013
  13. ^ "1982-83 Ratings History". Archived from the original on June xxx, 2018. Retrieved July 20, 2021.
  14. ^ "1983-84 Ratings History". Archived from the original on January xviii, 2018. Retrieved July 20, 2021.
  15. ^ "1988-89 Ratings History". Archived from the original on Jan eighteen, 2018. Retrieved July twenty, 2021.
  16. ^ Netflix: Family Ties (1982–1988) Seasons 1–7
  17. ^ Lambert, David (August 22, 2014). "Family Ties - 'The Complete Serial' Gets Re-Released in a New 'Unlimited' Box". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on August 26, 2014. Retrieved August 24, 2014.
  18. ^ "Family unit Ties - Season ane". Sanity . Retrieved December vi, 2020.
  19. ^ "Family Ties - Season 2". Sanity . Retrieved December vi, 2020.
  20. ^ "Family unit Ties - Season 3". Sanity . Retrieved Dec half dozen, 2020.
  21. ^ "Family unit Ties - Flavor four". Sanity . Retrieved December six, 2020.
  22. ^ "Family Ties - Season 5". Sanity . Retrieved December half-dozen, 2020.
  23. ^ "Family unit Ties - Season 6". Sanity . Retrieved December half dozen, 2020.
  24. ^ "Family Ties - Season 7". Sanity . Retrieved Dec 6, 2020.
  25. ^ "Family Ties - Season 1-vii | Collection". Sanity . Retrieved Dec 6, 2020.
  26. ^ "Family Ties - Sentry Episodes on Prime Video, CBS All Access, and Streaming Online | Reelgood". Reelgood. February 11, 2019. Archived from the original on October 8, 2020. Retrieved Feb xi, 2019.
  27. ^ "Family unit Ties - Scout Full Episodes - CBS.com". CBS. February 11, 2019. Archived from the original on Feb 12, 2019. Retrieved February 11, 2019.
  28. ^ "Pluto Idiot box (channel 504)". Retrieved May ten, 2021.
  29. ^ Wallace, Amy (March 20, 2000). "Putting His Own Spin on 'City'southward' season finale". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on August 5, 2012. Retrieved August 5, 2008.
  30. ^ Shales, Tom (May 24, 2000). "Michael J. Fox, Playing 'Spin Urban center' to a Fare-Thee-Well." The Washington Postal service. p. C1.
  31. ^ Michael J. Pull a fast one on Database Archived November 19, 2004, at the Wayback Machine
  32. ^ "Family Ties: Reunited After Almost xx Years!". TVSeriesFinale.com. Archived from the original on August 11, 2007. Retrieved February seven, 2008.

External links [edit]

  • Family unit Ties at IMDb

blaircals1981.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Family_Ties

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