tv 2020 ABC April 7, 2018 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT
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road departure mitigation system is really impressive. a small camera sees road markers, then alerts you when you're about to leave the road so you can take action. i'm always on the lookout for new restaurants to try, and my friends keep talking about this place -- monsieur benjamin in hayes valley. so, i'm about to get a taste of what all the buzz is about. ♪ i'm in the kitchen of monsieur benjamin. did i say that right? >> perfect. >> i did?! >> yes. >> okay. >> i've never heard it said better. >> really? you're lying to me, aren't you? french is not my forte. so, what are you working on right now? what are we gonna whip up? >> we're gonna make a chicken and vegetable soup today. >> okay. >> it doesn't sound very exciting, but hopefully, once you see this process and taste the end result, you're gonna make this every year or even more frequently. >> this is something that even i could whip up or just the everyday, average chef can do, as well? >> absolutely. >> okay, why don't you go into
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the ingredients now, of making this soup. >> sure, so, we're gonna start with chicken stock and we're gonna add more to it. we have some traditional vegetables here. so, we've got onion, fennel. we're gonna put a head of garlic in there. this is all very, very rustic, so large pieces... >> oh, so, you're just -- oh, wow. >> everything goes in. >> that's my kind of chopping. >> yeah, yeah. well, we're gonna see you chop in a second here. >> oh, dear. [ laughs ] >> grab this head of cabbage here and cut that into about four pieces. >> four pieces? >> that'll go right in the pot. >> okay, just... >> there you go. >> oh! >> all right, while you're at it, why don't you do the carrot because you did so well with the cabbage. >> i'm professional now! >> let's cut that into four or five pieces. >> four or five pieces? >> yeah. >> i should -- maybe i can get a job here, chef. >> so, here we have our vegetables in the pot. now, these chicken legs, we have roasted in our charcoal oven. so, you probably don't have a charcoal oven at home. >> i don't. >> you may have a charcoal grill. >> but you can just roast these in the oven. so, what we want to do is we want to take this chicken meat that's been roasted, and then we're gonna flavor the stock with this roasted chicken. so, again, we're doubling the flavor here. so, these are just gonna go right in the pot. and now we're adding chicken stock. and at home, you can buy chicken
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stock... >> right. >> ...because we're adding more flavors to it. okay. >> wow. >> now this goes onto the stove. that will cook for 90 minutes... >> okay. >> ...at a slow simmer -- just gentle bubbles. after 90 minutes, we'll strain it through a fine mesh sieve or cheesecloth and we'll save that liquid for our soup later, and then we're gonna reserve the chicken meat also for the soup. >> so, what's this next step? >> well, this is a fun, little trick for people at home. we do this in the restaurant also, where, instead of having to hand-chop all these vegetables -- which would take quite a while if you want to make a large pot of soup, you're feeding a group -- you can utilize a cuisinart at home to chop them for you. and it's kind of nice, too, because one, it's quick, but two, it chops them into small pieces, so it really, you know, gives the soup a lot of texture and nice body. so, we'll just add this to cuisinart here. and you want to do this in small batches. it'll just help process more evenly that way. so, we'll just fill it up only about a quarter of the way, and then put the top on... why don't you push the green button. >> green button. >> and then we'll stop it.
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>> ah. >> that's perfect, right there. >> that smells so good, too. all those veggies. oh! i know you have a son, right? >> that's right. >> so, this is a great way to get, you know, the kids to eat all their veggies, too. >> in disguise. >> in disguise! i like that. okay. >> yeah. >> what happens now? >> the next step is now we start cooking the vegetables. >> okay. >> so, we have a pot on the stove. and you could use butter or olive oil, if you like. we actually just cook this in a little bit of water, so there's no added fat to the soup. it leaves a really clean, delicate broth. you see we've got the vegetables starting to soften here a little bit. smelling great. we're gonna add in our bouquet garni. now, this is just a bundle of herbs. so, we've taken a smaller pot with just one portion... >> okay. >> ...for us to taste today. you can add whatever you like to this. what we do in the restaurant here is, we add a mixture of grains. these are sprouted grains. great texture. good flavors. we have our reserved chicken meat that we use. >> so, that's where the chicken went. >> that's where the chicken went and you just pick it down into small pieces. >> okay, okay. >> why don't you dump those grains in -- just half that amount. >> half that amount? do you want me to use my hands? >> yes. >> okay. there we go.
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>> also, the chicken. about half the chicken. >> about half the chicken. >> okay, and now we'll return this back to the stove to heat through. >> oh, okay. ♪ >> okay, so, we're gonna finish our soup with fresh herbs here. >> oh, good. what do we have here? >> this is a combination of about six different herbs. it smells great, doesn't it? >> it smells phenomenal! i got to give it a try. >> yes. >> i've got to give it a test. okay, now, this is really hot, too. >> it is very hot. >> okay. so, i'm gonna let it cool down a little bit. is there a proper slurping technique when you're drinking hot soup, chef? >> just carefully. >> [ laughs ] [ whispering ] oh, my gosh! oh, my goodness! mmm! that is so good! chef, thank you so much! >> you're very welcome. it's a pleasure cooking with you today. thank you. >> cooking? i'm all about the eating.
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this is so -- oh, i got some chicken now. this is awesome. mmm! mm! high-five! thanks so much for joining us. we'll be back with more stories to share. in the meantime, we want to hear from you. so send us your favorite stories, videos, pictures, and places in the bay area. visit us online, join us on facebook, and follow us on twitter. all this fun driven by your northern california honda dealers. for more information on the vehicle featured in this episode, visit norcalhondadealers.com. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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>> what about me? >> no. >> it was the absolute first thing i had ever done. it was a life-changer. >> when i met the entire cast, i think we went to a howard johnson to have our first table read, and seeing the family trickle in was just so exciting. >> she started it. >> okay, we know who started it. >> it was the first time i got this feeling, even though i was young, i just felt like, oh, we have something big here. >> they certainly did have something big here. a cast member who would later go on to become academy award-winner george clooney. >> we used to play basketball together. you know, he's that cute and charming and someone you want to pal around with in real life. >> george clooney was, you know, just the manager at a factory on a show and was a small character, and we all felt like he was magical and he was a great guy. >> all right, listen up, everybody. i got an important announcement to make.
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>> you're a woman trapped in a man's body? >> on-set, the cast finds chemistry and comedy, but behind the scenes, there is drama, lots of it. the show that will soon return for its tenth season was once in real danger of never making it through the first. >> they knew they had something really special here, but they also had somebody who wasn't used to the rules of television and who was not going to be easy to work with. >> my feet hurt and i got periodic bouts of depression, but other than that, i'm fine. >> i don't know if she told you this, but we were editing the pilot and roseanne called me up and i was just checking with her and i was saying how great the show was. and she said, i'm not sure i want to do anymore episodes. and i said -- what? >> big trouble. the network wants to pull the plug, roseanne hates the script, the writer hates roseanne, it's a mess. >> and that will begin a high stakes battle between two very powerful people on this show.
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roseanne barr, its star, matt williams, its creator and executive producer, that will never be resolved. >> we had big fights. >> oh, yeah, we all were aware of that, yeah. i mean, we were right there. >> roseanne wanted him out. roseanne wanted control of the ship creatively. the tension was, you know, unbelievable. >> i remember he threw over a table and chairs and said, i'm not a scribe! >> she was promised a show to voice her point of view. and what was on the page at that point was really not that. >> the show premieres in october of 1988. as the cast watches the pilot, roseanne notices something is missing. >> because that is the first time that roseanne barr sees the credit, "created by matt williams." she believes that she is the creator of "roseanne." >> ahh! >> roseanne had it tougher because, as a woman, coming into it, especially in those days, she really had to fight for the
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power. >> you were in the first year of "roseanne." it was a big hit. you played what, her boss? >> yes. the first season, she wanted it to be a specific way. matt williams did not. and there was a big fight and she eventually asked matt to leave. now, matt's a nice guy, and very talented. roseanne was right. >> and so, that is the question. is the show actually going to proceed without roseanne? >> people told me that he was keeping a list of all the offensive things i did, so that they could replace me, and it included belching and things like that. >> in the end, williams decides to leave the show over creative differences. >> matt williams goes on to create "home improvement," with tim allen, which is hugely successful. >> i knew i would have the last word and i always did. >> well, she's around and matt's not. there you have it. when we come back --
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>> what? >> you're fired. >> from hot button topics on-set -- >> school's having a food drive for poor people. >> well, tell them to drive some of that food over here. >> to getting really steamed off-set. >> i made the sign that i put on my door, these are the people that will be fired when the show goes to number one. one year later, they were all gone. ♪ tired of constantly battling lingering smells in your home, like pet, shoe, and body odors? for long-lasting, continuous freshness, try febreze plug. febreze plug provides 45 days of freshness, with a unique dual chamber design that alternates between harmonized scents for a continuous renewal of fragrance. plus, febreze plug is formulated with odorclear technology, which cleans away odors instead of just masking them. for freshness you'll notice week after week, try febreze plug. [sfx: mouse click]
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it's the number one show in the country, reaching a staggering 30 million viewers. and roseanne has creative control. >> when the show hits number one, the head of abc entertainment, he sends a chocolate cake to the show. >> they gave me a chocolate number one. >> well, roseanne has heard that when guys have number one shows, they don't get cakes. they get, like, maseratis. they get, like, ferraris. >> and they gave me a [ bleep ] chocolate number one. excuse me. >> she feels it's disparagement. >> but once bob eiger got on abc, boy, they started upping the gifts. i tell you. >> you read my diary. >> i got to go to work. >> the question about roseanne was, always, was she representing a new kind of person? was she this newly empowered woman who was taking on the old guard? or was she just like a tyrant, like anybody else was, firing men and women? >> i made the sign that i put on
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my door, these are the people that will be fired when the show goes to number one. and one year later, they were all gone. >> when i took the job, my agent and my lawyer said, she will fire you. she fires everyone after a year. and i said -- okay. they said, it's going to be a hell of a year. she fired me. >> if you're working for roseanne, she's not going to settle for much at all. and rightly so. her name's on it, and it's her story. it's her real life. >> being "roseanne," it was not the calmest of places. so, you had to kind of be ready, on your feet. we were often changing stories last minute. >> sometimes it was, hey, i met -- >> joan collins. >> i met -- yeah, met joan collins at a party and i want joan collins to play my cousin, so, write her into the episode this week. >> that's a nice outfit. >> thank you. that's a nice -- place. >> it was a little crazy. >> oh, hi, arnie. >> hey, rosie. where's the man of the house? >> tom arnold is put in the writer's room.
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and tom arnold is there to make sure that roseanne's wishes are followed. >> tom arnold will enjoy many titles on the sitcom. actor, writer, producer and perhaps most importantly, roseanne's real life husband. it makes things tricky on the set. >> roseanne taking up with tom arnold was a huge story. and all this is turning up in "people" magazine and all that stuff. it's all a big topic of conversation. >> you are such a leech. there was always some drama going on, every week that i was there. >> wow! >> hi, roseanne! >> "roseanne" really did change things in tv. >> oh, no, not june cleaver. >> she wasn't your typical housewife. >> oh, let me do it, it's easier. >> she wasn't your typical actress, with this voice that could be very piercing and grating. >> d.j.! becky! dan, come here!
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>> and just that really blue collar, working class person. >> us regular people, we're paying more taxes than the rich people because they got all the lawyers to figure out the loopholes. i want to find loopholes. >> to represent working class as the noble class in this country, that just hasn't been the point of view. >> roseanne was the first woman i saw on television that was rejecting the social construct of what femininity was supposed to be. >> well, i always wanted to do a show that was complimentary to the viewers, who i felt were, you know, me when i was a little girl watching tv. give me this damn thing. make it about something that i can identify with, and she certainly did that. >> in my culture, it was always a strong mother-based home with a loving husband and some problems and loudmouth kids, so, i wanted that. >> come on, mom. >> and of course they faced money issues. >> our school's having a food drive for poor people. >> well, tell them to drive some of that food over here. >> it was a show where you could
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see people paying bills, or the lights being turned out, because we weren't able to pay all our bills. or the games roseanne would play, how to shuffle around the bills. >> first, we send in the phone bill and we forget to sign the check. >> there you go. >> then we send the water bill to the electric company and electric bill to the water company. >> now you're cooking. >> and you know that charge card bill, it never even showed up. >> that's what roseanne did over and over again. she just constantly reinforced this idea that there were struggles to be had. >> what? >> you're fired. >> you don't have to have sex just to have a boyfriend. >> i know. >> look what i found in david's room when i was cleaning today. >> oh, man, that looks like pot. it's set up as a comedy. everybody's loving it, you know, first season and everybody's relating to it. and now she starts introducing issues. >> dad, i'm real sorry you died before i got to tell you some stuff.
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>> the birth control stuff. it's time for me to -- um -- get some birth control. >> uh-huh. >> i think the episode where d.j. doesn't want to kiss the girl in the play is kind of pivotal american television. i just don't want to kiss her. >> hey. black people are just like us. they're every bit as good as us and any people who don't think so is just a bunch of ban banjo-picking, cousin-dating ba, barefoot embarrassments to respectable white trash like us. >> we dealt with domestic abuse with jackie's character and her boyfriend. >> darlene says your back's all bruised up. >> no. it's nothing. >> let me see. >> no, don't. don't. >> everyone was terrified of tackling that subject. was it going to be too dark? was it going to turn people off, to watch that when they're tuning into a sitcom? >> that son oaf a bitch. >> you don't understand. >> he beat the crap out of you. >> no, he didn't. it's no big deal.
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>> i came back to her and i said, "powers that be are very concerned about this. don't want to do it." she said, "we're doing it." i said, "okay, great." >> roseanne was one of the first people in that arena that said no, you know, this is it. it has to be this good all the time or i'm not going to do it. >> don't say anymore. >> she was always willing to sacrifice some of the laughs in a sitcom for the depth, and i think people loved her for that reason. i did. >> they were in the comedy business. but it did give you an ongoing sense that this show was tapping into something that other shows weren't. and that's what made it special. next -- ♪ o say can you see >> she's singing, she's kissing. and we're dishing on the mystery of the two beckys. >> where the hell have you been? >> i was surprised that they recast me.
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on the show, roseanne conner is struggling to make ends meet. >> that negative attitude of yours is going to get you nowhere. >> this is nowhere. >> but in real life, roseanne barr is on top of world. >> the domestic goddess became a hollywood diva. the embodiment of white trash with money. >> peek inside her home and you'll find a softer side of roseanne, as she showed my friend barbara walters. >> her kitchen is bathed in the yellow hue of monet's house in france. you're acting as if you are the woman who understands all the women, while you live in a gorgeous house -- >> no. i'm the woman who has been screwed every single way a woman can be screwed and have lived through it. and survived it and pulled through and triumphed. >> triumphed, she says. >> all the power jobs are taken. margaret's running england, ben is turning the letters over. >> because while she's the star of a sitcom, her personal life with then-husband tom arnold is a soap opera. >> her life outside of the show, it did spiral and spiral. >> yet they would never expect
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the fallout from roseanne singing the national anthem at a baseball game. >> i was the general partner of the san diego padres at the time. and we were doing a night, actually, celebrating working women. and the best thing i can say is, i thought it was a good idea at the time. i hope you don't show that clip. ♪ o say can you see ♪ by the dawn's early light >> roseanne gets out there to sing the national anthem, and she does not do what we would call a mellifluous version. ♪ and the rocket's red glare ♪ the bombs bursting in air >> and she spits and she grabs her crotch, like a player would, like adjusting their jock strap, and spitting. and that's kind of her whole gag
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after it. and people are aghast. >> by the time she walked out of that stadium, she was lucky, as someone said, to be alive. people hated her. the president of the united states criticized her. >> president bush today called the comedian roseanne barr's performance on wednesday night disgraceful. >> that's the why i feel about it. and i think a lot of the san diego fans said the same thing. >> i got out there and i sang about four notes and then i thought it was okay in the beginning and then everybody started booing me and i really went into this panic thing, and, you know, i sang "the star spangled banner" as best i could under the circumstances. >> my whole life was lived out with the tabloids. everything that's ever occurred, you get the phone call. she's always told everybody to be brave, and she really embodies it. >> it's a pitfall of being, you know, celebrated and then, them wanting to tear you down in the same moment. she was an easy target, you know? because she's so outspoken.
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>> it's just a beautiful morning today, it just makes me want to sing. >> ultimately, roseanne did what she does best. turn strife into satire. >> that woman is on the cover of every one of these papers. >> check it out. she put a voodoo curse on her ex-husband. >> she's a damn good singer, though. >> the series was so huge that roseanne broke many of the sitcom rules, like having multiple people play the same character. >> quiet, you. becky! >> i'm lecy goranson, and i play becky on "roseanne." >> well, you look incredible. >> really? >> yes. get in the kitchen. >> the becky. not the one and only, but kind of. >> did i hear right, we're going on vacation?
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>> ladies and gentlemen, the role of becky originally play e by lecy goranson and later played by sarah chalke, then lecy goranson will be played tonight by sarah chalke. >> i'm sarah chalke, and i was becky 2/4. >> we had lecy goranson playing becky and then when she left for school, sarah chalke played becky. >> and then i came in for a couple of years, and then she came back, and then i came back. >> where in the hell have you been? >> where the hell have you been? >> why does everyone keep saying that to me? >> seems like you've been gone for three years. >> it was the kind of thing you would see in a high school play. you know, where you triple cast the lead in "once upon a mattress" so everybody gets a chance. >> disney world? i've always wanted to go there. >> aren't you glad that you're here this week? >> they had us all watching an episode of "bewitched" at the end.
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and roseanne says -- >> i cannot believe that they replaced that darren. >> and laurie says -- >> it was a hit show, they knew they could get away with anything. >> and then i say -- well, i like the second darren much better. so, they always found ways to, you know, wink at the audience and not shy away from the fact of what we were doing. >> come here, i got it. where are you? come here. >> that's a staple of the show. sillry -- silly inside jokes. but what alluded roseanne for so long was acceptance by her peers in hollywood. >> he got an emmy nomination. >> that moment finally came when she and co-stars john goodman and lawrie metcalf are all nominated for emmys. >> the emmy goes to -- laurie metcalf! >> i had received an emmy. she presented it. and i really quickly in my mind,
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i thought, is my name really on that card or did she just say it? because i wouldn't have put it past her. i had to make sure it really said it. >> metcalf wins, but the others don't, and soon, art imitates life on the set of "roseanne." >> i was sitting there polishing my emmy, you know, in the living room on the set. and she and john were trying to steal it away from me. >> give me that. >> no. >> come on, i want it. >> no. >> give me it. >> no. >> come on, give it -- give it! give it, come on! >> what's going on? oh! >> roseanne would finally get her statue the following year. next, as the parade of famous faces marches on through -- >> i'm the only one here and the sign says dr. whitman, so, that's me. >> the cast comes to face the
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end. >> this has been a d.j. conner film. the show ended and i was devastated. >> when roseanne returns, literally. no matter how much you clean, does your house still smell stuffy? that's because your home is filled with soft surfaces that trap odors and release them back into the room. so, try febreze fabric refresher. febreze finds odors trapped in fabrics and cleans them away as it dries. use febreze every time you tidy up to keep your whole house smelling fresh air clean.
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we continue now with more of "roseanne: the return." >> through nine seasons of award-winning television, "the roseanne show" welcomed so many guest stars and future stars along the way. >> i'm the only one here and the sign says dr. whitman, so, that's me. >> george clooney. >> oh, my gosh, i remember george clooney came on early in his career. >> i haven't played in a long time. but i used to be a high scorer. >> we're talking about bowling, booker. >> that, too. >> who wouldn't like to kiss
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johnny galecki? johnny and i have such a special connection. and when we get to work together, it's just an added bonus. >> i'm sorry, am i being too loud? >> no, you're being perfect and you know it. >> johnny galecki, my god. he's got so much money. i can't believe -- i'm angry for his success. no, i'm very happy for him, he's great. >> i tried an accent once and it didn't work for me. people kept asking if i was wearing a retainer. >> sandra bernhard, who is so funny. >> i specifically told arnie to be here at 9:30. all these years later, people will comment on, you know, what i was wearing and loved the outfits and just nancy's outrageousness. it is really a big part of the lexicon of my career. >> james pickens, he's unbelievably talented. but we knew that, you know, decades ago. >> even before i got the "grey's anatomy" gig.
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i would get folks going, i remember you from "roseanne." you were chuck. you're a wild man, marvin. they even brought on bob hope one time for a came owe. the audience just went up. >> we get so used to seeing great people, that it just becomes an every day thing. sometimes you have to step back from it for awhile, look around and go, wow, i got to work with some of the best who had ever done it. >> and martin mull, fred willard, who are just incredible together. and sharon stone. >> my friend tobey maguire was on the show. leo dicaprio. >> leonardo dicaprio was darlene's friend. he was a doll. he was real sweet. joseph gordon-levitt. >> don't forget to come to my party on friday. >> another one of those really talented people who goes to "third rock from the sun" and obviously his career has really blossomed. >> but the legacy of the show wasn't just in front of the camera. there was sitcom magic behind the scenes. >> we were writers on "roseanne", and we're the
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creators of "the middle." >> are you over 50? >> ugh, yes. >> do you feel overwhelmed with clutter? >> we loved the writing of "roseanne" so much. and we said, if we could bring that kind of authenticity, dealing with having that heart you know and yet having the comedy, all those are things that we brought from "roseanne" into "the middle." >> yeah, and not being afraid to write some serious situations with characters who don't have a choice always to quit their job. or, you know, if their credit card bill comes, it actually is a real problem for them. >> "the middle" is definitely rooted in "roseanne." >> "the roseanne show" became the roots of a comedy writing family tree. >> we had so many big writers that have created incredible shows. amy sherman-palladino. >> who obviously went on to create "gilmore girls." >> danny jacobson. >> bruce helford. >> who went on to create many, many things. >> yeah, drew carey and multiple things. >> chuck lorre. >> there was a lot of them. >> it was a great training ground. and everybody knew, if you
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survive "roads -- roseanne," you must be pretty good. >> we owe a debt to our time at "roseanne." >> and we have an afghan on the couch. >> it's a little nod. it means home to us. >> i think that what frankie and roseanne have in common is, they're not like june cleaver, as far as their families go. they're not wearing pearls and a dress with an apron. they don't necessarily always have a kind word, or an encouraging word for their kids. and not that they're mean, it's just sort of a realism with your kids that i think a lot of parents relate to. okay. here's your hat. backpack. lunch. i think what comes through in both shows is the heart and the love. ♪
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>> just as it opened, so many seasons around the kitchen table, "roseanne's" last episode in 1997 included a final gathering of the extended conner family. >> the dining table is sort of like the hallmark of where everybody gathers for all important events, and i think she used the kitchen and the table as the linchpin of all those stories. so, it made sense that you would resolve it all at the table. >> the final episode shocked the viewers with revealing dan's character was actually dead and the entire last season, you know, where they were rich and won the lottery -- >> we won the lottery! >> was all just a story roseanne made up. none of it happened. >> my writing is really what got me through the last year after dan died. i think i'll be a lot better now that this book is done. >> the sad ending hit hard for fans and for the cast. >> the show ended and i was devastated. maybe one of the hardest moments of my entire life. if you can picture everybody you know that you literally have
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built your world around for nine years, suddenly, everybody has to leave. >> it was strange to be only, you know, 22 years old, start back at ground zero and have to build my life back up after having early success. >> the show ended, but life moved on. >> so, after the show, i did a bunch of other acting, "seinfeld." >> is there anybody else here but you? >> i'm alone. >> i did a few movies. and i really focused on family. and i met my wife and got married. i really wanted my kids to have some kind of normal life and i wanted to be heavily involved as a dad, and so, i went behind the scenes, i worked on the technical side of everything. and then i was a high school coach, mostly baseball and softball. i guess i look at it is, i got to chase my dream. and so, i kind of always loved to help other people chase theirs. >> i had been commuting from canada, so, i moved back there. did my general arts degree. then when i was 24, i was like, okay, i'm ready, i'll go back.
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and then got lucky and got "scrubs." next patient. and ended up staying. >> after the show was over, i did a few movies and i just started to work again and do different projects. >> lecy goranson finished college and continues to act in film and theater. >> you go to sleep. >> john goodman's career includes dozens of blockbusters and independent hits. and roseanne returned to standup, started a farm and even ran for president. and laurie metcalf -- >> maybe you'd learn to pull yourself up and not expect everybody to do everything -- ahh! >> well, she was nominated for an oscar for her performance in "ladybird" and is currently starring on broadway. get ready for the return of "roseanne." rare home video. their first day back in the old house.
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after 20 years -- >> are you ready? >> yeah, this is -- . >> i know. >> the cast of "roseanne" is back to work. this is the first time they see the recreated set. >> that first moment when we walked in together -- i don't know that you can totally explain it. do you remember -- >> this is so -- look at that. >> it was just like walking into your home, because it was so familiar. >> hi, everybody! >> oh, my god. oh, my -- >> it was so crazy to walk into the set for the first time. it feels like such a time warp. everybody remembers the couch! and the afghan. >> cans of spam, all the knickknacks and the pictures on
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the walls and everything. it was startling to walk onto that set again after 20 years. >> i don't have the words to describe how it was. it was strange, exhilarating, the wallpaper was reproduced from photographs. the hair was standing up on my arms. like being home again. >> so, we had to have our corn, and we had to find the pickled eggs. >> where are the pickled eggs? >> pickled eggs? >> we always had a big jar of pickled eggs in the pantry. and that we got on amazon. >> the first table read was surreal. >> oh, she's my tootsie -- >> there he is! >> just having everybody sit around the table like we used to and have sets behind us looking almost exactly the same. it was truly incredible. >> everyone was crying and laughing. and the network was excited, which never happens. >> kids laughing, roseanne curls up next to dan. >> hey, just because they're up
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doesn't mean we have to give up, you know, pleasuring me. >> i don't have the time for the full symphony of love. but we can do the greatest hits. >> it ended up being more of a magical, like, christmas morning. >> how did they all get here after 20 years? >> there's something i've been wanting to talk to you for awhile now. >> it began when john goodman appeared on sara gilbert's talk show. >> what's that, kiddo? >> gosh. i don't know how to say this. i'm a talk show host. >> it was just a fluke moment on sara's talk show. we did a sketch at the top of the show and that felt like gold. >> you know, for a minute there, i thought you were going to tell me you were gay. just like falling out of bed, it was so easy. >> let's save something for halftime. >> john, would you ever consider a reboot of "roseanne?" >> oh, hell yes. >> i just thought, oh, maybe the cast will do this. so, i reached out to roseanne and she thought about it a
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little bit and we started to talk about it and it just started to feel right. >> i got a call from sara gilbert saying, "what would you think about revisiting 'roseanne'?" and i said, "yes, yes, when? where do we show up? i'm in." >> i came with a list of things that i would have to have in order to do it. i have a lot of anxiety. i don't bear stress well at 65. i can't be at odds with anybody anymore. too old. and she said, i can do it. and i said, all right, well, then do it. and she did. three weeks later, we had a deal at abc. >> the conners joys and struggles are as relevant and as hilarious today as they were then. and there is no one better to comment on our modern america than roseanne. >> we're at a point in time in our country where people are divided. where there's a lot of frustration and there's a lot of angst. there's a lot of economic frustration. and i think the conners really signify that. >> our last elections, the jokes were just writing themselves. i will wake up with jokes in my head. dream jokes. we wanted to show an accurate
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depiction of america. >> and there are new faces in the conner family portrait. >> one of my favorite episodes was when d.j. wouldn't kiss the black girl in the school play. >> is it because she's black? >> well, you'll be mad if i say yes. >> no, we won't. >> yes, we will. >> we wanted to honor a lot of those really powerful story lines currently in this season, he married her and they have a child together who is on the show. >> they are unlike any other family on television. and, again, in this run, like the first run, do not shy away from any topic. i think it's exactly what's needed. and it's so damn funny. i think people need to laugh right now. >> you're not seeing double. both beckys are also back, on screen together for the first time. >> it was really fun. >> i play andrea on the show and i hire lecy to be my surrogate. >> a lot of our old friends are are back on-set, too, but what about everybody's favorite outfit? that chicken shirt. >> i don't know the chicken
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shirt's origin story, other than it's fabulous. >> the chicken shirt came about as a joke with wardrobe. they saw it initially and thought it was kind of ugly. next thing you know, it ends up on the show, and it kind of grew. >> roseanne was wearing it and laurie was wearing it. i think i wore it once. it just got around. >> we thought it was so hilarious that it started to become a game of who would wear the chicken shirt, and it rotated on different cast members. >> oh, the chicken shirt is definitely back. >> of course, the chicken shirt and the afghan, it wouldn't be "roseanne" without either of those. >> the end of the day, folks still like to be told great stories. and the conners, they told great stories. i think it may even be funnier now, just because of the times we live in. what's going on, both socially and culturally and politically. i think this is probably perfect timing to reboot "roseanne." >> there's a lot of surprises in for people. i think we answer all the questions people have asked me for 20 years. >> here's a test for you. what's the one thing everybody remembers from "roseanne?"
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you know you had one. but it wouldn't have been "roseanne" without it. >> dan won't get off the couch. >> honey, get off the couch. >> shh. >> i believe the afghan just showed up on the set. who knew that it would become iconic, you know? this is the show. this thing right here. >> what is it with you? all you do is just lay here on the couch staring at that stupid tv. we wanted an afghan like my grandmother used to make. come on, dan, we're missing a chance to give this family a dose of culture. she'd whip them up in about two hours. she was so good at it. everybody's house in the midwest had one of those, so, it was like, part of having some realism in the show. >> you look great, mom. >> well, thank you. >> we've all taken naps on that couch. people have used that afghan to sleep in while writers we. >> reporter: writing stuff. >> you don't even know what cop material is. >> somebody swiped it. they always give me that when i
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say, i'd like to have that afghan. oh, it's in the smithsonian. that's what they always tell me. >> we spent a lot of time playing with it and jumping over. and the set, really, for us, feels like home. >> roseanne, my dear, thanks for the memories. and we look forward to making new ones with you. you can catch the brand new series right here on abc. i'm joy behar. thanks for watching. good night. ed retired marine helping others killed in a plane crash tragedy.
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