'IMPROVING' ON "HOME IMPROVEMENT"
A Sneak Peek At The Second Season
How do you improve on a comedy series that finishes as the #1 newcomer of the
'91-'92 season (#5 rated prime time series overall), is selected as The
People's Choice for Favorite New Comedy, and grabs an Emmy nomination for Best
Comedy along the way, all in its first year?
"Home Improvement" Executive Producers Matt Williams, David McFadzean and
Carmen Finestra are working on it, and here's what they have in store for a
"new, improved 'Home Improvement'" when the show debuts Wednesday,
September 16, 9:00 PM (ET/PT) on ABC:
- Look for Jill Taylor to finally get out of the house and get a job: she
may start part-time, but by mid-season, she'll be a full-time research
assistant at a fictional monthly magazine loosely based on "Detroit Monthly."
Still a devoted and savvy Mom, much of her work will de done at home and some
will involve her dragging along a reluctant Tim to various Detroit restaurants
and other points-of-interest for her job.
- Tim Taylor may wish he was out of a job when he has to confront Old
Man Binford's daughter -- as his new boss! Yep, John Binford, founder of
Binford Tools and long-time producer of Tim's 'Tool Time' show, will turn over
the reins to his daughter Maureen. It's bad enough that Tim has to have a boss
at all ... but a woman?!
- Jill gets a Mom this year, too. Probably around Halloween. Look for a
typical mother/daughter relationship in which they heartily disagree over how
to get things done the most efficiently.
- As for the kids, Randy (Jonathan Taylor Thomas) gets to fly -- sort of --
as Peter Pan in a school play that Tim nearly destroys. And, Brad (Zachery Ty
Bryan) turns 12, bumping smack into the teen years and all the little
rebellions which that entails. Not an easy year for Mom.
- Location, location, location ... "Home Improvement" goes all the way to the
back lot at the Disney Studios in Burbank, where the once and former "Down and
Out in Beverly Hills" house will become a 'project' house for Tim Taylor and
his indomitable sidekick, Al Borland (Richard Karn).
- And yes, Tim's hot rod will be back in the garage for multiple episodes in
which we'll see it progress from last season's rather primitive beginnings into
a nearly-finished "thing of beauty." (Tim's words, not ours!)
With "Home Improvement" airing on a new day and time this season, Executive
Producer Carmen Finestra points out, "We're re-doubling our efforts to make the
show even better this year; we'll have new people watching and we want to make
sure we're doing the same show, only 'improved!'"
He adds, "Now that the audience knows our characters, we're free to explore
their makeup a little more deeply; we don't have to worry that the audience
doesn't know why they act the way they do, so we'll have the chance to do
stories that we couldn't do last year."
Written and executive-produced by Matt Williams (creator of "Roseanne" and
Carol & Company"), David McFadzean ("Roseanne," Carol & Company"), and Carmen
Finestra ("The Cosby Show"), "Home Improvement" is an irreverent and
free-wheeling look at the things that bug men and women: Why didn't you
know what I meant?!"; How was I supposed to know you wanted to leave?!";
and the classic "You weren't listening, were you?!!"
"Home Improvement" is produced by Wind Dancer Productions, Inc. in association
with Touchstone Television.
Touchstone is part of Walt Disney Pictures and Television.
This page is part of the Home Improvement Archive
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Date last modified: 16:27:28 Sunday 9 October 2005