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39 Years Ago Today: FOX Launched “Married… with Children”, FOX’s First Primetime TV Series

Today marks the 39th anniversary of a landmark moment in television history: the debut of Married… with Children on April 5, 1987. The groundbreaking sitcom introduced audiences to the hilariously dysfunctional Bundy family and became the first primetime series to air on the then-fledgling Fox Broadcasting Company, establishing the network as a daring, irreverent alternative to the traditional Big Three (ABC, CBS, and NBC). Nearly four decades later, the show’s bold, boundary-pushing humor continues to endure as a cultural touchstone that redefined sitcom conventions and helped propel Fox’s rise to prominence.

You can find Married… With Children on Amazon HERE.

Married… with Children premiered at 8 p.m. ET on that Sunday night in 1987, offering viewers a stark contrast to the wholesome family comedies dominating the airwaves. Created by Michael G. Moye and Ron Leavitt, the series followed Al Bundy (Ed O’Neill), a downtrodden shoe salesman, his sharp-tongued wife Peggy (Katey Sagal), and their bickering kids Kelly (Christina Applegate) and Bud (David Faustino). Set in a fictional Chicago suburb, the show leaned into crude humor, biting sarcasm, and a gleeful rejection of the idealized suburban life portrayed in shows like The Cosby Show. Its tagline—“The less you know, the better”—set the tone for a series that reveled in its unapologetic edge.

The launch was a gamble for FOX, which had only begun broadcasting as a network six months earlier, on October 9, 1986, with The Late Show Starring Joan Rivers. With Married… with Children, FOX aimed to carve out a niche by targeting younger audiences and embracing content too risqué for traditional networks. The risk paid off: the show’s debut drew modest but promising ratings, and its cult following grew steadily. By its second season, it was a bona fide hit, running for 11 seasons and 259 episodes until its finale on June 9, 1997—making it one of the longest-running live-action sitcoms in U.S. history at the time.

The show’s impact went beyond its longevity. Married… with Children shattered sitcom conventions, introducing a family that was proudly dysfunctional and unpolished. Al’s rants about his miserable job and Peggy’s refusal to cook or clean were a far cry from the domestic bliss of earlier TV clans. The series also faced controversy—most notably a 1989 boycott led by Michigan housewife Terry Rakolta over its raunchy content—but the backlash only fueled its notoriety, boosting viewership and cementing its rebel status.

Thirty-eight years later, Married… with Children remains a milestone for FOX, which leveraged the show’s success to launch other edgy hits like The Simpsons and In Living Color. Its influence echoes in modern comedies that embrace antiheroes and dark humor, from It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia to Family Guy. Available on streaming platforms like Hulu, the series still draws fans old and new, with Ed O’Neill’s deadpan delivery and Katey Sagal’s fiery Peggy as timeless as ever.

There was once an attempt at an animated reboot of the show. Announced in 2022, the reboot would have reunited the original cast—Ed O’Neill as Al, Katey Sagal as Peggy, Christina Applegate as Kelly, and David Faustino as Bud—voicing their beloved Bundy family characters in a new story that relocated the dysfunctional clan from Chicago to a Florida town called Dumpwater. Despite the cast recording at least a pilot and the involvement of Family Guy executive producer Alex Carter as showrunner, the high costs of animation and lack of a network or streamer pickup ultimately doomed the effort after more than three years in limbo.

On this anniversary, Married… with Children stands as a testament to FOX’s early daring and a reminder of a time when a shoe salesman and his chaotic clan could change TV forever. Thirty-eight years ago today, the Bundys arrived—and television was never quite the same.

You can find Married… With Children on Amazon HERE.

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