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The serices centers on the recently widowed D.J. Tanner-Fuller, who is now a veterinarian and mother of three sons. Things become too much to handle, so she asks for help from her sister Stephanie and her best friend Kimmy.
It's not necessary to know every nuance of the original 1987-95 family sitcom to enjoy Fuller House... But longtime fans are certain to get more out of the show because they'll recognize every familiar face and get every inside joke.
They've successfully recaptured the terribleness of Full House, while updating it with new terribleness marketed at a self-aware, pseudo-ironic audience of millennials.
Fuller House scrambles the normal critical circuitry. It is bad, but in a manner so in keeping with the original that to harp on its badness feels like meanness, akin to insulting a three-legged dog for not having four.
By lazily throwing everything at the wall without a single element sticking, Fuller House stands as a threat to memories of an older generation and future memories of a younger one. How rude, indeed.
It's selling nostalgia hard, but nostalgia for what? Simply because something had popularity for a time does not guarantee it a place in the history books.