Drake & Josh is a hilarious TV show about two stepbrothers who must learn to live together and navigate the challenges of their blended family. With lots of laugh-out-loud moments and slapstick comedy, this sitcom will keep you entertained and laughing from start to finish.
Step by Step follows the lives of two single parents, Frank Lambert and Carol Foster, who spontaneously decide to marry after meeting on vacation. The show focuses on their struggles and triumphs as they merge their two families, each with three children. Together, they navigate the challenges of raising a blended family while dealing with typical teenage drama, sibling rivalries, and comedic misunderstandings. Set in the 1990s in a small town in Wisconsin, Step by Step provides a lighthearted and relatable depiction of the ups and downs of stepfamily life.
Sofia the First follows the story of a young girl who becomes a princess overnight and must learn to navigate the challenges of royal life with the help of her friends and family.
The Cleveland Show follows Cleveland Brown and his family as they navigate through various comedic situations in their hometown. With absurd humor and a satirical twist, the show explores themes of family, ethnicity, and everyday life.
The Brady Bunch follows the daily lives of a widowed architect with three sons, who marries a widow with three daughters, and their adventures as they navigate the challenges of blending their families together in the groovy fashion of the 1970s.
In Daddy's Home 2, stepfather Brad and biological father Dusty have put their differences aside and are co-parenting their two children. However, their peaceful holiday plans are disrupted when their own fathers come to visit, leading to a chaotic and hilarious Christmas.
The Critic follows the life of Jay Sherman, a film critic who finds himself navigating the ups and downs of the entertainment industry while trying to maintain relationships and make sense of the movies he reviews.
Follows Anzu Murata, who thirteen years after the home of the wealthy Mitarai family was burned in a fire, infiltrates the house of the Mitarais as a housekeeper in order to reclaim the house and family that was taken from her.
Other People's Children is a four-episode 2000 British television drama, adapted by Leigh Jackson from Joanna Trollope's 1998 novel of the same name. The series tells the story of how three women and two men deal with new marriages and the consequences of the new spouses or partners having to deal with their partner's children of different ages from previous marriages.
We Are Family follows the story of a newly blended family as they navigate through the challenges of combining households. From power outages to video calls, birthday celebrations to thunderstorms, this heartwarming film captures the hilarious and heartwarming moments that come with being part of a stepfamily. With plenty of singing, guitar playing, and laughter along the way, We Are Family is a funny and relatable movie that celebrates the joy and chaos of family life.
In 'Families', a broken family faces a crisis when they lose their family home and enter into a feud over a real estate deal. As they relive their past, they must confront their complicated relationships and confront their own demons. This heartwarming drama explores themes of loss, legacy, and the importance of family.
The Family Tree is an American 1983 television series. Its pilot episode was a made-for-television movie called The Six of Us, broadcast a year before.
I Married a Princess is a 2005 reality show on the Lifetime TV network that starred Catherine Oxenberg and her husband Casper Van Dien. The show's slogan is "under the tiara and behind the shades - a real life look at a fairy-tale family."
When a widower and a divorcée are tasked with planning their children's wedding, they find themselves growing closer and falling in love. As they navigate the challenges of blending their families and dealing with their unresolved pasts, they discover that love can come unexpectedly and restore hope for a happy future.
Who Are the DeBolts? And Where Did They Get Nineteen Kids? is a 1977 documentary film about Dorothy and Bob DeBolt, an American couple who adopted 14 children [12 at the start of filming], some of whom are severely disabled war orphans -- in addition to raising Dorothy's five biological children and Bob's biological daughter. The film won an Academy Award for Best Documentary in 1978. Preserved by the Academy Film Archive in 2007.
A man named Ambrose Wolfinger struggles to maintain a harmonious family life while dealing with comedic mishaps and getting entangled in a crime. He faces challenges such as an overbearing wife, a dysfunctional stepfamily, and false reports of his death. Throughout the movie, he navigates through situations involving wrestling matches, woolen mills, traffic tickets, and burglaries. Despite the chaos, Ambrose remains loyal to his family and finds ways to reconcile with his wife.
Rikutaro and Mariko are in the same grade at an elementary school. They become brother and sister after Rikutaro's mother and Mariko’s father marry. After their marriage, the children become upset because they are teased by their classmates, so they hatch a plan to make their parents divorce.
Kung Mahawi Man ang Ulap (1984) is a drama film centered around a young woman who becomes entangled in a complicated web of lies and false accusations. She faces challenges such as dealing with a social climber stepfather, a greedy stepfamily, and a temptation to seduce a wealthy man. As she fights for her innocence, she finds herself navigating the complexities of the court system and uncovering shocking truths.
Intimate documentary following the Ferdinand family as Rio's fiancée Kate Wright integrates into the family and becomes a step mum to Rio's three children, Lorenz, Tate and Tia.
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