Dads | |
---|---|
Genre | Sitcom |
Created by | Alec Sulkin Wellesley Wild |
Starring | Seth Green Giovanni Ribisi Brenda Song Vanessa Lachey Tonita Castro Peter Riegert Martin Mull |
Theme music composer | The Bogmen |
Composers | Bill Ryan Brendan Ryan |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 19 |
Production | |
Executive producers | Seth MacFarlane Alec Sulkin Wellesley Wild Mike Scully |
Camera setup | Multi-camera |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Production companies | Fuzzy Door Productions 20th Century Fox Television |
Original release | |
Network | Fox |
Release | September 17, 2013 July 16, 2014 | –
Dads (stylized in all lowercase) is an American television sitcom created by Wellesley Wild and Alec Sulkin for Fox.[1] The series follows Warner and Eli, two successful video game developers whose lives are unexpectedly changed when their respective fathers move in with them. Sulkin and Wild are also executive producers. The show was recorded in front of a live studio audience. Dads was a joint production by Fuzzy Door Productions and 20th Century Fox Television and was syndicated by 20th Television. The series ran from September 17, 2013 to July 16, 2014.
The series first appeared as part of Fox development slate in September 2012.[2] In January 2013, Fox bypassed the pilot order and green-lit Dads with a six-episode, straight-to-series order.[3] The pilot was directed by Mark Cendrowski and written by Alec Sulkin and Wellesley Wild, who also serve as executive producers alongside Seth MacFarlane. In May 2013, Fox extended the episode order from six to thirteen episodes.[4] In October 2013, the network ordered six more scripts of the series.[5] Later that same month, Dads was picked up for a full season with nine episodes.[6] On December 6, 2013, Fox trimmed the series' first season from 22 to 19 episodes.[7]
Casting announcements began in January 2013, with Brenda Song first to be cast in the role of Veronica, Warner and Eli's odd assistant.[8] Tommy Dewey was the next actor cast in the series as Warner, Eli's work partner and married father of two, whose father Crawford moves in with him.[9] Peter Riegert was then added to the cast in the role of David, Eli's father, who abandoned Eli and his mother when he was five, and is now trying to rebuild their relationship.[10] In mid-March, Martin Mull joined the series as Crawford, Warner's father, a man who's always been the bane of Warner's existence.[11] Tonita Castro followed in the role of Edna, Eli's hard-drinking, outspoken maid.[12] Seth Green and Erin Pineda were the last actors cast in the series. Green signed on to play the remaining lead role of Eli, a man who hasn't grown up but who built a successful video game business with Warner.[13] Pineda joined the series as Camilla, Warner's wife with whom he has a four-year-old son and one-year-old daughter.[14] In late March, it was announced that Vanessa Lachey would replace Erin Pineda in the role of Warner's wife, Camilla.[15] In April, Giovanni Ribisi replaced Tommy Dewey as Warner after the taping of the pilot.[16]
On May 7, 2014, Fox canceled the series after one season before the final episode aired on July 16, 2014.[17][18]
Dads was universally panned by critics. It holds a score of 15 out of 100 on review aggregator Metacritic, based on 28 critics, indicating "overwhelming dislike".[19] It also holds a rare 0% rating on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, where the consensus reads, "A near-total disaster, Dads makes the fatal mistake of believing its racist gags can lend an edge to its aggressively predictable writing and unlikable characters."[20]
Dads premiered to a 2.2 rating in the key Adults 18-49 demographic.[21] In week two, it fell about 32% to a 1.5 rating.[22]
These results were viewed by experts as mediocre. At television ratings analysis website TV by the Numbers, Dads premiered at On the Bubble on the Bubble Watch[23] and had a de facto canceled status on the Renew/Cancel Index,[24] until it was cancelled on May 7, 2014.
On November 11, 2014, Olive Films released the entire series on DVD.[25]
The series premiered in Australia on Eleven on May 18, 2014.[26]
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | US viewers (millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Pilot" | Mark Cendrowski | Alec Sulkin & Wellesley Wild | September 17, 2013 | 1AWS79 | 5.76[21] |
Eli (Seth Green) and Warner (Giovanni Ribisi), two successful business partners, have their lives completely changed when their fathers, David (Peter Riegert) and Crawford (Martin Mull), respectively, move in with them. | ||||||
2 | "Heckuva Job, Brownie" | Ted Wass | Julius Sharpe | September 24, 2013 | 1AWS02 | 3.65[22] |
When Ghost Child Games needs a new idea for a video game, Warner and Veronica encourage Eli to get stoned on pot brownies. The guys end up using the treats to get along better with their dads. | ||||||
3 | "Clean on Me" | Ted Wass | Julie Thacker-Scully | October 1, 2013 | 1AWS01 | 3.40[27] |
Eli realizes he should treat Edna better when he lends her to Warner. In the meantime, Veronica hires Crawford as an intern at the office. | ||||||
4 | "Funny Girl" | Mark Cendrowski | John Viener | October 8, 2013 | 1AWS04 | 3.10[28] |
Eli dates Veronica's friend Anne (Allison Munn), an attractive but annoying comedian, with Eli having her move in to spite David. Meanwhile, a recording session for the company's new video game "Occue-Die Wall Street" gets out of hand when Crawford tries to help Warner with some "businessman" voice-over work. | ||||||
5 | "Oldfinger" | Gerry Cohen | Tom Gammill & Max Pross | October 15, 2013 | 1AWS05 | 3.42[29] |
Concerned about their dads' health, Warner and Eli takes them to get physicals, but Warner begins to worry about his mortality when the doctor dies before giving him his test results. | ||||||
6 | "My Dad's Hotter Than Your Dad" | Bob Koherr | Tom Gammill & Max Pross | October 22, 2013 | 1AWS03 | 3.59[30] |
Since Eli has a history of being a Human Resources liability, Warner hires Janet (Lee Garlington), an older woman as a new assistant at the office, but the plan backfires when David and Crawford compete for her affections. | ||||||
7 | "Foul Play" | Mark Cendrowski | Julius Sharpe | November 5, 2013 | 1AWS06 | 3.65[31] |
When David inadvertently brings bedbugs into the house, he and Eli are forced to sleep at Ghost Child Games. In the meantime, Camilla is cast as the lead in a local play and receives unexpected help from Crawford. | ||||||
8 | "Doubles Trouble" | Gerry Cohen | John Viener | November 12, 2013 | 1AWS07 | 3.19[31] |
Eli begins to question his and Warner's friendship when Warner makes Camilla his partner in the annual Virtual Tennis Tournament, while Crawford and David attempt to prove they can make real friends. | ||||||
9 | "Comic Book Issues" | Scott Ellis | David A. Goodman | November 19, 2013 | 1AWS09 | 3.21[32] |
David's disrespect for Eli's comic book collection leads Eli to place them in a storage unit that gets broken into at the same time Crawford buys them as a gift for Warner. When everyone realizes the comic books belong to Eli, Warner refuses to give them back without a fight. | ||||||
10 | "Dad Abuse" | Mark Cendrowski | Julie Thacker-Scully | November 26, 2013 | 1AWS08 | 3.18[33] |
Eli and Warner mistakenly cause an investigation of elder abuse, leading to their dads being put in foster care. At first, they're happy about the situation, but their happiness turns to guilt as they make up a plan to rescue their fathers. In the meantime, Crawford's childish, sloppy habits get between Warner and Camilla. | ||||||
11 | "The Glitch That Stole Christmas" | David Trainer | Maggie Mull | December 3, 2013 | 1AWS10 | 3.35[34] |
Eli and Warner fire one of their employees before the holiday season, but the ex-game designer includes an offensive word in the guys' family-friendly Christmas game for revenge. Meanwhile, Edna talks David into getting a job as a mall Santa so he'll earn enough money to get Eli a present. | ||||||
12 | "Mister Edna" | Mark Cendrowski | Julius Sharpe | January 7, 2014 | 1AWS11 | 3.64[35] |
David exposes Edna as an illegal immigrant during an immigration-related bust of a sweat shop in the building. To save his maid from deportation, Eli forces his father to marry her and enlists Warner to help plan the wedding. It isn't long before Eli regrets his plan, as Warner goes way overboard on the wedding arrangements while Edna steps into the role of wife and mother. | ||||||
13 | "Eli Nightingale" | Kelly Cronin | John Viener | January 14, 2014 | 1AWS12 | 3.20[36] |
Warner tells Veronica to go home since she's sick and he's a germaphobe. Eli takes care of Veronica, hoping that his kindness will lead to them sleeping together. | ||||||
14 | "Bully Gene" | Gerry Cohen | Julius Sharpe | January 21, 2014 | 1AWS13 | 3.88[37] |
Eli dates Elsa (Jamie-Lynn Sigler), a single mother whose 12-year-old son, Gene, bullies Eli and causes trouble by stealing the prototype for the latest Ghost Child game. Meanwhile, Warner picks fake fights with Camilla in order to sleep on the couch, which he finds more comfortable than the bed. | ||||||
15 | "Baby Face" | Gerry Cohen | Julius Sharpe | January 28, 2014 | 1AWS14 | 3.96[38] |
Warner is left home alone with Crawford when Camilla goes out of town to visit her sister, so he sends him and David to a hotel where the two dads are mistaken for a gay couple on their honeymoon. Meanwhile, Eli gets Warner involved in facebook, which causes Maria (Maria Thayer), an old girlfriend of Warner's, to show up at the office with an unusual proposition. | ||||||
16 | "Warner's Got It Made" | Gerry Cohen | John Viener | February 4, 2014 | 1AWS15 | 3.73[39] |
Eli and Warner hire Johnny (Ray Abruzzo), a mob boss to consult on a new mafia game in development at Ghost Child Games. | ||||||
17 | "Enemies of Bill" | Mark Cendrowski | Julius Sharpe | February 11, 2014 | 1AWS16 | 2.70[40] |
Camilla insists that the Whittemores quit drinking after Crawford gets too drunk and accidentally ruins the couch. Suddenly bored, Crawford takes to writing songs and has Warner join him on guitar. Meanwhile, Edna lashes out at David for stealing change out of her jar, but she and Eli then find him using the change at a claw machine in an attempt to win back a special toy he threw out when Eli was a child. | ||||||
18 | "Have a Heart... Attack!" | Kelly Cronin | John Viener | February 11, 2014 | 1AWS17 | 2.49[40] |
Eli and Edna both ignore David's constant complaining, until he ends up in the hospital following a heart attack and Eli realizes how much he still loves the old man. Crawford has an ankle band removed and is legally allowed to leave the building. Warner and Camilla immediately find a retiree condo for him, but Warner soon realizes that he too misses his dad. Meanwhile, Veronica gets engaged to Colt (Ryan Sypek) which makes Eli regret never saying how he truly feels about her. | ||||||
19 | "Jerk in the Box" | David Trainer | Julius Sharpe | July 16, 2014 | 1AWS18 | 1.38 |
Eli is still dealing with jealousy over Veronica's engagement to Colt, while David plans his own funeral. |