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1[[quoteright:315:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/family_ties_cast_photo.jpeg]]
2
3->''"What would we do baby, without us?''
4->''Sha-la-la-la."''
5-->-- last lines of "Without Us", the show's ThematicThemeTune.
6
7''Family Ties'' is a rather straightforward DomCom that was created and executive produced by Gary David Goldberg for his company, Ubu Productions, and Creator/{{Paramount}}, and aired for seven seasons (1982–89) on Creator/{{NBC}}.
8
9Former [[TheSixties '60s]] flower children Steven (Creator/MichaelGross) and Elyse (Creator/MeredithBaxter Birney) Keaton are now {{happily married}} adults living the {{bourgeois bohemian}} life in Columbus, UsefulNotes/{{Ohio}} and raising three kids of their own: hyper-conservative Alex (Creator/MichaelJFox, in the role that made him a star), [[TheDitz ditzy]] Mallory (Creator/JustineBateman), and precocious Jennifer (Creator/TinaYothers). A fourth Keaton child, Andrew, was born in the show's third season and played by Creator/BrianBonsall starting in season 5.
10
11Much of the show's humor comes from the conflict between the [[TheGenerationGap staunchly conservative, Republican Alex and his liberal Democratic parents]]. In a rare example, however, there are no [[StrawCharacter Strawman Political]] dynamics to be found here: both ideologies are given equal time in the spotlight, and there aren't any StrawmanBall episodes either.[[note]] Alex was originally designed as a [[StrawCharacter Straw Conservative]], but this was changed when he became the show's most popular character. [[/note]]
12
13Unlike many {{Dom Com}}s (and most of the ones made since [[TheSeventies the '70s]]), ''Family Ties'' is notable in that it features a completely standard, intact {{nuclear family}}. The fact that the show had no adopted children, stray cousins, stepkids from previous marriages, older kids living away from home, or single parents (in contrast with ''Series/MyThreeSons'', ''Series/FamilyAffair'', ''Series/TheBradyBunch'', ''Series/DiffrentStrokes'', ''Series/FullHouse'', etc.) made it something of a rarity, even for [[TheEighties the '80s]]. It also notably lacked the notorious backstage turmoil many other '80s shows are known to have had.
14
15----
16!!This show provides examples of:
17
18* TheEighties: The show ran from 1982 until 1989 and was drenched in the fashion and look of upper middle class 1980s Reagan America.
19* EightiesHair:
20** Jennifer's hair in later seasons was a fairly extreme case.
21** Alex had a bit of a mullet around season 6, too.
22* AbhorrentAdmirer: Skippy to Mallory, though he gets a girlfriend in the later seasons.
23* AbortedArc: The episode "Working At It" introduced two new characters that were clearly meant to be recurring characters, Elyse's new co-workers Bill and Karen, much like Steven's co-workers at the TV station were. However, Meredith Baxter's pregnancy derailed Elyse's intended storylines thanks to her being absent for most of the season.
24* AcademicAthlete: Jennifer, the sporty tomboy, gets good grades and is stated to be just as much as a TeenGenius as Alex. The "athlete" part is removed in later seasons, though.
25* ActorAllusion: The episode where Jennifer forms a GirlGroup and Alex decides to manage them. Their song: "[[MisterSandmanSequence Mr. Sandman]]," which featured prominently in a key scene in ''Film/BackToTheFuture1''.
26* AlwaysSecondBest: The show followed ''The Cosby Show'' during a majority of its run. ''The Cosby Show'' would go on to become a massive success and one of the most watched TV shows in history. ''Family Ties'', while getting very solid ratings, was a distant second. Cosby's success resulted in him requesting his own creation, ''A Different World'', to follow ''The Cosby Show'' on NBC's Thursday night lineup. ''Family Ties'' was moved to Saturdays, where the ratings plummeted.
27* AntiAlcoholAesop: In the episode "Say Uncle", Creator/TomHanks guest stars as the Keaton family's Uncle Ned, who turns out to have developed an extreme alcohol problem. In just his first night at their house, Ned drinks all the beer in the fridge and a pint of liquor, and then he raids the kitchen pantry for anything that might contain any alcohol, including a bottle of vanilla extract and a jar of maraschino cherries. He later shows up drunk to a job interview, and Elyse, Steven, and Alex stage an intervention to try and convince him of his addiction before it's too late.
28* ArtisticLicenseChess: the episode where Alex plays chess against a Russian is an interesting case. They actually got many of the details right, including the use of the chess clock. But the presence of live commentary in the same room was more than a little silly, Alex's whole moral dilemma for the episode is created by ignoring the sealed-move rule for adjournments, and of course, for some reason, the Russian who suddenly decides he wants to lose can't simply do so by resigning.
29* ArtisticTitle: Beginning in Season 2, the opening sequence begins with the first brush strokes of a family portrait of the Keatons. By the end of the sequence, the painting is finished.
30* BeautyBrainsAndBrawn: Popular DudeMagnet Mallory (Beauty), competitive overachiever Alex (Brains), and PassionateSportsGirl Jennifer (Brawn).
31* BelligerentSexualTension: Alex and Ellen. So much so that, years after she moved to Paris and they broke up, when Alex met Lauren he knew he liked her because "Nobody has irritated me this much, this fast, since I met Ellen." He gets along much better with Marty (a music student he becomes attracted to while tutoring her), but they too only admit their feelings and kiss after arguing about it.
32* BewareTheNiceOnes: Steven Keaton is generally a mellow, understanding person. But if you make him mad, you might as well be a [[{{Film/Tremors}} Graboid]].
33* BigBrotherWorship: Andrew, for Alex.
34* BigDamnMovie: ''Family Ties Vacation'', an action-adventure TV movie filmed on-location in England ([[NoExportForYou but ironically never shown there]]).
35* BigEgoHiddenDepths: Alex has, on many occasions, shown that beneath his arrogant, overachieving self lies a rather insecure and scared young man who fears failure and seriously needs a hug.
36* BittersweetEnding: To "They Can't Take That Away From Me." Alex ends things with both Lauren and Marty, realizing that neither is the girl for him, but manages to do so without either of them hating him and genuinely wishing him well.
37* BourgeoisBohemian: The central premise of the show is that the parents are former hippies who have settled down into a comfortable middle-class lifestyle and now suffer culture clash with their yuppie kids.
38* BrattyTeenageDaughter: Mallory, sometimes. Jennifer, when Andy came along and later when she was going through puberty.
39* BreakoutCharacter: Alex. Michael J. Fox even went from losing an Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor to winning three consecutive awards for Outstanding Lead Actor.
40* BumblingSidekick: Irwin "Skippy" Handelman, particularly to Alex.
41* BunnyEarsLawyer: In the episode "The Fugitive," Bert Carlyle, the FBI agent who comes to apprehend [[spoiler: Uncle Ned]], is this. He is so quirky, especially in his first and last appearances, that it makes you wonder how he even became an agent. However, he isn't as dumb as he seems, since he knows the Keatons are lying, he successfully follows Alex to the airport and, while he doesn't make an arrest, he prevents a "known criminal" from fleeing the state. He also knows the law very well. And while he kinda got lucky that the fugitive gave up running, he took the correct actions to get him, although he almost let him slip through his hands ''after'' catching him. He still qualifies. He even says, "I'm pretty good at this, aren't I?"
42* CallingMeALogarithm: In ''Family Ties Vacation'', William calls Mallory "a complete revelation to me." Mallory says, "Oh. Sorry, I don't mean to be."
43* CanonWelding: In the last episode of ''Series/SpinCity'' where Creator/MichaelJFox appears as a regular, it is suggested that the series takes place in the same universe as ''Family Ties''.
44* CantGetAwayWithNuthin: The children Alex, Mallory and Jennifer do all sorts of shenanigans when their parents are away and never get away with it.
45* CharacterizationMarchesOn: Early on, Steven Keaton was much more meek and wimpy. By the time Mallory's boyfriend Nick Moore was introduced, Keaton developed more personality and showed more depth and a range of emotions. Michael Gross, the actor that played Steven Keaton, said he was unhappy at how one dimensional his character became and considered leaving the show because of it, but stayed because the introduction of Nick to the series made his character much more interesting.
46* ChekhovsSkill: In the opening credits of Season 1, Elyse is seen playing the guitar to baby versions of Alex, Mallory and Jennifer. It wouldn't be until the Season 2 episode "Lady Sings the Blues" when it would become a plot point that she was once a talented folk singer, and in the Season 3 two-parter "Birth of a Keaton," she goes into labor with Andrew while performing for the WKS Pledge Week.
47* ChristmasEpisode:
48** In "Christmas Story," the Keatons miss their Christmas ski trip because of a snowstorm. Instead, they spend Christmas Eve at home, looking at a photo album and opening early presents while Steven and Elyse reminisce about the circumstances of each child's birth.
49** "A Keaton Christmas Carol" is as the title suggests YetAnotherChristmasCarol in which Alex relearns the spirit of Christmas by seeing his past as a Christmas-loving child and his future as a rich miser who leaves his family in poverty. Upon waking he goes to buy presents at 7-Eleven.
50** In "Miracle in Columbus," Alex works as a MallSanta, tries to help a little girl whose father won't be home for Christmas, and meets the real SantaClaus. In a subplot, Steven and Elyse try to find a Christmas tree that isn't crappy.
51* ClipShow: Several. Two of them see the Keatons sharing stories with Alex's girlfriends Ellen and later Lauren; another has the family rehashing past incidents. This was even parodied on ''Series/SaturdayNightLive''.
52* ComicallyMissingThePoint: In "Remembrances of Things Past", Robbie tells Steven's family a funny story of how he got in trouble for refusing to write his name on his paper at school. Alex doesn't see any humor in this because...
53-->'''Alex:''' Papers ''needed'' to be graded. All those names have to be in the same place every time. That was deviant behavior, and I hope Grandpa Jake punished you appropriately.\
54'''Steven:''' [[SarcasmMode I was]] [[TarAndFeathers tarred and feathered.]]\
55'''Alex:''' [[{{Beat}} ...]]okay.
56* CoolUncle: Uncle Ned (played by Creator/TomHanks) is really cool, but has a drinking problem.
57* CoolKidAndLoserFriendship:
58** Elyse in high school was the cool girl with a loser friend named Roger, as seen in the school reunion episode.
59** Alex is not the stereotypical "cool guy" but he's much more successful and respected than his dorky best friend Skippy.
60* CordonBleughChef: In season one, Jennifer experiments with cooking by making breakfast. The specialty: scrambled eggs with chocolate chips in them.
61* {{Costumer}}: In the episode "Philadelphia Story," Alex has a dream where he must convince Thomas Jefferson to write the Declaration of Independence and the cast wears clothing from that time period.
62%%* TheCouch
63* CousinOliver: Andrew, the youngest Keaton child, who was born in season 3 (due to actress Meredith Baxter being pregnant in real life at the time).
64* CrisisMakesPerfect: In the Season 3 episode "Auntie Up," with Elyse out of town and Mallory grieving the death of her beloved great-aunt - his own Aunt Trudy - Steven says "funerals, first dates and plumbing" have always been Elyse's job, while he handles "colds and flus, open school nights, and office supplies." He also says, "I don't deal that well with death myself." Season 3 would end with the two-parter "Remembrances of Things Past," in which Steven travels to his own father's funeral, which he had known was imminent since the Season 1 episode "I Never Killed for My Father," and he must comfort his mother.
65* {{Crossover}}:
66** Oddly happened a decade after the show ended. Michael J. Fox went on to play the lead on ''Series/SpinCity'' (once syndicated by the first incarnation of Paramount's television division and now owned by the second) and his character on that show eventually had an off-screen [[ActorAllusion run-in with Alex]] -- who is revealed to have become the junior senator from Ohio.
67** There was also a crossover in the short-lived series ''Series/DayByDay'', which was co-created by ''Family Ties'' creator Gary David Goldberg.
68* DecadeThemedParty: In "I Know Jennifer's Boyfriend," Jennifer has a 1950s-themed birthday party, with posters of Creator/JamesDean and an authentic 1950s jukebox playing rock and roll.
69* DeadpanSnarker: '''''Everyone'''''.
70* TheDitz: Mallory, although she's not as bad as most examples.
71* DitzyGenius: Alex. He's a hyper-competitive straight A student and math genius who was doing his parents' taxes when he was five years old and advised his parents on mortgage rates when they bought their house. Yet in everyday activities he often proves completely incapable. His little sister frequently beats him in sports, and he fails at things like building kites, cooking, or fixing cars even with extensive directions.
72%%* DomCom
73%%* DropInCharacter
74* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: Even though Alex P. Keaton is a major focus in the pilot episode, the whole incident is shown from the POV of the parents, Steven and Elyse. We only get to see the controversial club when Alex is being picked up there by his parents. Also, in the very first episode where Skippy Handelman appears, Alex treats him with just as much contempt as Mallory does -- and it's only later established that they were friends from childhood.
75** The political themes were much more heavily emphasized and taken seriously in the early seasons. By the later seasons, they were mostly used as comedic fodder.
76** Steven Keaton's lack of facial hair in season 1 is a bit jarring compared to his look for the remaining seasons.
77** The season 1 opening credits is a montage of photos of Elyse and Steven Keaton as hippies, activists and members of the Peace Corps during the 60s. From season 2 onward, the credits would be some variation of family photographs with clips of episodes mixed in as well.
78%%* EvilMatriarch
79* ExecutiveMeddling: In-universe, when Alex becomes manager of Jennifer's rock band and makes them into a group more like the Andrews Sisters (Jennifer: "(One audience) thought we ''were'' the Andrews Sisters!"). In the end, they rebel and go back to what they used to be.
80* FallingInLoveMontage: Alex and... ''Marty'', a shy, awkward music student he's tutoring while Lauren is away.
81* FieldTripToThePast: In one episode, Alex P. Keaton falls asleep - and he witnesses the Declaration of Independence. As this episode occurred around the time that Michael J. Fox (Alex's actor) was also playing Marty [=McFly=] on ''Back to the Future'', this episode was possibly a nod to the then-upcoming film. In the film, Doc Brown types in the date of the Declaration of Independence when demonstrating to Marty how his time machine works.
82* FormulaBreakingEpisode:
83** ''Family Ties Vacation'', a two-hour [[TheMovie movie]] episode which was filmed on location in London.
84** "A, My Name is Alex", an hour-long character piece dissecting everything that made Alex who he was. Arguably Michael J. Fox's finest hour.
85* FourPhilosophyEnsemble: Steve (the Cynic), Skippy (the Optimist), Jennifer and Nick (the Apathetic), Alex (the Realist), Elyse (the Realist-Optimist), and Mallory (the Conflicted).
86* FourTemperamentEnsemble: Alex (choleric, a very gentle and affectionate choleric, but a choleric nonetheless), Steven (melancholic/phlegmatic), Nick (melancholic), Mallory (melancholic), Skippy and Andy (sanguine), Elyse (sanguine/choleric), and Jennifer (phlegmatic).
87* FunnyAnsweringMachine: In "Teacher's Pet," Alex records an answering machine message that plays a fanfare every time he says his own name. Later, Mallory and Jennifer record another message that says, "If you're calling for either one of us or our parents, please leave a message after the beep. If you're calling for Alex, he doesn't live here anymore, and we don't know where he lives."
88* FunWithAcronyms: In "Oops," Steven thinks Elyse gave money to the Mafia, but she explains that she actually donated to '''M'''others '''A'''gainst '''F'''luorocarbons '''I'''n the '''A'''tmosphere.
89-->'''Elyse''': Just to be safe, if a guy named Fast Eddie calls, hang up.
90* GenderSeparatedEnsembleEpisode: In one episode Elyse takes Mallory and Jennifer away to a cabin for a mother-daughter weekend. Steven stays home with Alex and Andy and attempts some male bonding. [[HilarityEnsues Neither weekend goes well.]]
91* TheGhost: Alex's crush and unsuccessful high school (and into freshman year at college) date Suzie Farkas.
92* GirlinessUpgrade: Over the years Jennifer went from a sport-loving tomboy to a music-loving GirlyGirl with massive EightiesHair.
93%%* GoodParents: Steven and Elyse
94* GrandparentFavoritism: Steven and his father Jake always had a difficult relationship, partly because of their political differences, but Jake gets along much better with Alex. In "I Never Killed for My Father," Jake and Alex go fishing, the kind of one-on-one bonding activity Jake never did with Steven.
95* GRatedDrug: One episode has Alex becoming dependent on "diet pills" (stated to be amphetamines in initial airing and on DVD/streaming release, with those lines cut from syndication) to stay up late studying.
96%%* HairTriggerTemper: Steven's father.
97%%* HappilyMarried: Steven and Elyse
98* HeelRealization:
99** Happens in about half the episodes, usually to [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold Alex]], though the other characters get their fair share as well.
100** The two-part episode "Remembrance of Things Past" begins with Steven convinced that he was the misunderstood, rebellious hero of his family with his father and brother were the uptight jerk-asses. However, through flashbacks and a TheReasonYouSuckSpeech from his brother, Steven realizes that he was a brat who thought he was always right without ever considering how his actions affected his family.
101* HiredForTheirLooks: Alex hired Karen as a housekeeper, despite her being a klutz and having no experience.
102* HollywoodBoardGames: InsufferableGenius Alex and his father Steven get extremely invested in their ''TabletopGame/{{Scrabble}}'' games, to the point of playing the game at night while everyone else is sleeping. They even gamble the house's deed. Both are sore losers, with Alex getting frustrated because he's smarter and Steven sometimes just doesn't know when to stop.
103* HugeGirlTinyGuy: Karen (played by Geena Davis) and Alex, especially in one episode where he hugs her and his feet dangle off the floor.
104* IAteWhat: Steven takes a bite of Jennifer's scrambled eggs, unaware at first that they have chocolate chips in them. Although grossed out, he says they aren't bad and that they need more chocolate chips.
105* InWithTheInCrowd: Alex and Mallory both try (and often fail) to get in with the popular kids.
106* InfantSiblingJealousy: Jennifer, having previously been the youngest, gets hit with this hard when baby Andrew comes home and turns the household on its ear. One episode has her freaking out at her parents because the baby has woken everyone up in the middle of the night, and she has an important test in the morning.
107* InsomniaEpisode: In one episode, Alex is unable to sleep, even when his family offers various ways that usually help them sleep.
108* InterClassRomance: Mallory and Nick.
109* InUniverseFactoidFailure: In "The Homecoming," Alex lectures Jennifer about how in all species, the most important trait of any female is the ability to attract a male. He compares female humans who labor over their appearances to female blue jays with decorative plumage. Jennifer says, "Alex, it is the male blue jay who has the pretty feathers!" Alex admits, "Occasionally you'll find a deviant jay or two."
110* {{Irony}}: Alex prepares to end things with Marty and Lauren, only to have each of them say to him almost verbatim what he was planning to say to him.
111* ItWillNeverCatchOn: In "Remembrance of Things Past," Steven has a flashback to his childhood in TheFifties, when his dad told him, "I don't see what the fuss is about television. Mark my words, in a year people won't remember what television is."
112%%* IvyLeagueForEveryone: Subverted.
113%%* IWantYouToMeetAnOldFriendOfMine
114%%* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Alex.
115* JustTheIntroductionToTheOpposites: The entire premise was an inversion of the "younger radical vs. older conservative" dynamic seen on ''Series/AllInTheFamily'' and in other works influenced by the '60s counterculture. Here, the parents Steven and Elyse were liberals who never fully let go of their [[FormerTeenRebel hippie values]], while their teenage son Alex was a Reagan-loving capitalist.
116* LamazeClass: Elyse and Steven attend this during Elyse's pregnancy with Andy. It's also the focus of the episode "Oh, Donna" in which Alex becomes obsessed with helping out an unmarried student in the class.
117%%* LockedInARoom
118* LongLostUncleAesop: Elyse's brother Ned (Creator/TomHanks), who is an alcoholic, and sister Michelle (although in an earlier episode Elyse argues with her mother and refers to herself as "your only daughter"). There's a VerySpecialEpisode featuring Mallory's favorite great-aunt, the never-before-seen Trudy, who dies of a heart attack (which of course is never again mentioned). Also, teen pregnancy was dealt with by bringing in a never-seen-before friend, and both Alex and Mallory mourn the deaths of friends whom we'd never seen alive and would never hear about later.
119** Ned was in a two-part episode the previous season fleeing the FBI for stealing money from his company.
120** There's also a one-off episode with Elyse's ''other'' sibling, Stephanie, who never gets mentioned in any other episode. Stephanie herself is a perfectly lovely person, but for some reason her husband and two children are self-centered boors who have the entire Keaton family literally counting the days until they leave. Steven eventually gets fed up and throws them out.
121* LoveTriangle: Between Alex, Lauren, and Marty (a music student for whom he develops feelings while tutoring her). Despite the deep feelings he has for both women, he realizes that neither of them is "The One" for him and ends it with both of them.
122* ManlyTears:
123** Alex in "A, My Name Is Alex." His best friend was just killed in a car crash. Alex was supposed to be with his friend but wasn't. Alex later admits that he wasn't with him out of his own selfishness. Alex begins sobbing uncontrollably and repeatedly yelling, "Why am I alive?!" It's one of the few moments in the series that we see Alex vulnerable and completely fall apart. He cries again in front of the therapist later in this episode.
124** In "Heartstrings Part 2", we find out the happenings of the day Steven's father died. Steven and Alex are watching the World Series on TV when the phone rings. Steven goes to answer it and while he is in the other room on the phone, the game ends. Alex is excited for his father that the Detroit Tigers had just won. However, Steven somberly enters the room and explains that his his father (and Alex's grandfather), Jacob, had just died from heart failure. Alex pauses and then begins to talk about how well-off his grandmother will be because of his grandfather's earnings, and when Steven stops him, Alex tearfully admits it will be the only way to stop himself from crying. Steven, beginning to get emotional, tells Alex that it is okay to cry, and the two embrace, sobbing in each other's arms. The scene was critically praised as a very sweet, tender moment between father and son grieving the loss of a loved one.
125** Alex also starts to get choked up at the end of "They Can't Take That Away From Me", having realized that neither Lauren nor Marty is the girl for him and that he has to end it with both of them.
126* MeanCharacterNiceActor: Alex is selfish and materialistic, but series creator Gary David Goldberg noted that although Michael J. Fox quickly became the breakout star of the show, Fox himself never asked to have his billing changed (he was billed third in the credits), or missed any time because he was holding out for a bigger salary, or ever behaved remotely like a prima donna.
127* MysteriousMiddleInitial: Both actor Michael J. Fox and character Alex P. Keaton. It's been suggested that the P stood for [[EmbarrassingMiddleName Peace]]. Mallory at one point suggests, not necessarily jokingly, that it stands for Pompous.
128* NamedAfterSomebodyFamous: Michael J. Fox's real middle name is Andrew. (He uses a StageName for professional reasons.) Andy is a loving meta-MythologyGag.
129* NotEvenBotheringWithTheAccent: Michael J. Fox plays Alex (a teenager from Ohio) with his own native Canadian accent. Any time he says "tomorrow" or "sorry" is a dead giveaway.
130* OpeningCreditsCastParty: The shows credits open with the Keaton family looking at family photo albums at the couch and introduces the cast members in order.
131* OppositesAttract:
132** Reagan-loving conservative Alex and artsy feminist Ellen.
133** Alex and Lauren are ironically very similar personality-wise--driven, overachievers, but much like him and Ellen, have contrasting views on everything.
134** Alex and Marty. She's downright flaky at times, and at the very least, far more carefree than he is, as well as shy and awkward.
135** Alex and Skippy are [[HeterosexualLifePartners a platonic example]]. Alex is smart, successful, and confident, while Skippy is an unintelligent, clumsy nerd.
136* PapaWolf: Steven is a very nice guy who generally gets along with everyone but harm his children and he will get you. Even his brother-in-law (played by Creator/TomHanks) is not safe from his wrath.
137%%* ParentExMachina,
138* PlayingHouse: In "Be True to Your Preschool," Alex is dismayed to find Andy changing a doll's diapers while playing house. He has Jennifer play house with him, using a Ken doll as the breadwinning husband and a Barbie as the submissive housewife, in order to model conservative gender norms for Andy. Instead of following the script, Jennifer confesses to CheatingWithTheMilkman and demands a divorce.
139* PopularIsDumb:
140** BookDumb Mallory is apparently popular, especially with boys.
141** In one of the later episodes, Jennifer [[ObfuscatingStupidity dumbs herself down]] to date a popular guy.
142* PostRobberyTrauma: Elyse invests in a gun after a break-in.
143* RedundantRomanceAttempt: A guy gets ready for a date with Mallory by asking Alex for tips. Alex (who apparently is genuinely trying to help) proceeds to give a bunch of chauvinistic advice (starting with ordering for her and getting worse from there). Naturally, it doesn't end well. Alex's advice might have worked well for the kind of woman Alex would be interested in dating. For his sister, who is more or less the political ''opposite'' of the kind of woman he'd be interested in dating... not so much.
144* {{Retool}}: The show went from focusing on Steven and Elyse Keaton to Alex P. Keaton being the main focus.
145* SantasExistenceClause: "[[Recap/FamilyTiesS6E17MiracleInColumbus Miracle in Columbus]]" has a little girl called Michelle not believe in Santa Claus; but by the end of the episode, Santa's existence is confirmed.
146* SawStarWarsTwentySevenTimes: In "Father, Can You Spare a Dime?" Mallory and Nick watch ''WesternAnimation/OneHundredAndOneDalmatians'' for the 101st time.
147* {{Scatting}}: Mallory unconsciously does a weird, Yiddish scat to the tune of "If I Were a Rich Man" while she and Alex are sitting at the kitchen table working. Alex starts dancing in place for a moment before he stops her.
148--> '''Alex:''' You were yiddle-diddle-ing.
149* ScrabbleBabble: In "My Mother, My Friend," Steven plays "zoquo," which he says is Greek for "water sports." Alex and Jennifer not only let him have it but also start using "zoquo" in sentences. Then Alex is accused of hoarding U's so nobody can use a Q. He puts down "ushnuu," which he says is Greek for "to towel off" and uses in the sentence "After I zoquo I like to ushnuu." In a later game, four-year-old Andy unintentionally uses the trope by lining up all his letters to spell "NXMUV." Then he runs away, despite Alex offering to let him have NXMUV and a hundred points.
150* ScreamingBirth: Elyse throughout the births of Alex, Mallory and Jennifer in flashbacks, and eventually Andrew in season 3.
151* SecondLove: Lauren for Alex after Ellen.
152* ShortTeensTallAdults: Alex being only 5'5", exactly a foot shorter than 6'5" Michael Gross. Interestingly, NBC Entertainment's then-president Brandon Tartikoff initially thought Creator/MichaelJFox was ''too'' short to be Michael Gross's son.
153* SmartPeoplePlayChess: Alex is so good at chess that he competes against a player from the Soviet Union.
154%%* SmugSnake: Mr. Tadesco, Alex's teacher in "The Harder They Fall".
155* SnowedIn: Season 1's ChristmasEpisode, "A Christmas Story", has the Keatons unable to go on a planned skiing trip due to a blizzard; with the family passing the time by telling stories on how each of the Keaton children were born.
156%%* SoapboxSadie: Jennifer in later years.
157* SoapOperaRapidAgingSyndrome: Andy went from an infant in season 4 to about four years old in season 5.
158* SoapWithinAShow: In "Quitting Time," Lauren temporarily drops her senior thesis and spends all her time watching TV, including ''Days of Our Children''.
159-->'''Lauren''': Zander was about to tell Reef that Brick and Cashmere were trying to frame Skyler for Nicole's murder!
160* SpiritualAntithesis: The show's setup, in which conservative Reagan-era teenagers butt heads with their liberal ex-hippie parents, was almost an inversion of that of ''Series/AllInTheFamily'', in which the conservative patriarch Archie Bunker frequently spars with his liberal activist son-in-law Mike.
161* SuddenlyAlwaysKnewThat: In the ''Family Ties Vacation'' TV movie, when the Keatons are in England, Steven and Elyse try unsuccessfully to drive British cars. The only person who can drive one? Mallory, about whom there is a RunningGag how she is an ''awful'' driver. Alex says, "Well, yeah, this is the side of the road you ''always'' drive on."
162* SurpriseCheckmate: In "French Lessons," Steven challenges Alex to a chess game even though Alex has won all of their 139 previous games, except the one that ended in a draw. Steven takes hours to make each move, and usually blunders when he does. By the end of the episode, the two have been playing all day, and Alex has captured most of Steven's pieces. Then Steven suddenly checkmates Alex. He's so thrilled to have finally won that he flips the board into the air.
163* TakeTheThirdOption: In one episode, Mallory is torn between boyfriend Nick and a handsome young teacher who writes sappy love letters. Alex hears one of the teacher's love letters and tells Mallory, "I think you should dump both of them and start over in the morning."
164** This ends up inadvertently {{Foreshadowing}} Alex being in a similar situation and doing exactly that; while he admits that both Lauren and Marty are wonderful girls and that he cares deeply for both of them, he also knows that neither of them is "the one" and that he needs to end it with both of them.
165%%* TalkAboutThatThing
166* ThanksgivingEpisode: In "No Nukes is Good Nukes," Steven and Elyse are arrested at an anti-nuke rally and spend Thanksgiving in jail.
167* ThematicThemeTune: "Without Us", sung by Music/JohnnyMathis and Deniece Williams.
168* ThrowingTheFight: Alex is thrilled at the chance to play against a Soviet chess prodigy, until he learns that his rival plans to throw the game so he can be allowed to return to Russia and live a quiet life away from the glare of the spotlight. Not wanting to see his opponent disgrace himself, Alex ends up trying to play a worse game than his opponent. HilarityEnsues.
169-->'''Jennifer''': I never thought I'd say this at a chess match, Alex, but nice tackle.
170* TitleMontage: In the first season.
171* TomboyAndGirlyGirl: Jennifer (in early years) and Mallory.
172* TheTonsillitisEpisode: In "Diary of a Young Girl," Jennifer is afraid she won't survive getting her tonsils out. She has {{flashback}}s to times she was mean to each of her family members.
173* TranquilFury: ''Don't'' get Steven mad. The best example might be the chillingly matter-of-fact way he asks his longtime (now ex) friend who's been making passes at Mallory, "Can you think of one reason why I shouldn't kill you?"
174* UptightLovesWild: All of Alex's primary love interests--Ellen, Lauren, Marty--are very much unlike him.
175* VacationEpisode: Presented as a TV movie where the family goes to England.
176* ValleyGirl: In one episode, Jennifer falls in with a group of Valley Girls and starts imitating their behavior. She leaves a note to her parents peppered with "likes."
177* VerbalTic: Nick's "aeehh" anytime he's introduced or enters a room.
178* VerySpecialEpisode: A number of these including: Uncle Ned's alcoholism, a colleague of Steven's inappropriately touches Mallory, Alex gets hooked on stay-awake pills, a friend of Alex's is killed in a car crash, Alex suffers from insomnia, Steven has a heart attack, among others...
179* WhatHaveIDone: Uncle Ned (SpecialGuest Creator/TomHanks) in "Uncle Ned" (from Season 2), where he loses out on an opportunity to work at the TV station where Steven works (after he shows up to the job interview drunk), then comes home even more drunk... and then (fitting the trope) after getting into an argument with Alex, punches him in the head, sending him flying across the room. Only then is Ned shocked into realizing he has a serious problem.
180* WhereDidWeGoWrong:
181** The Keatons are at a loss as to how their kids ended up so differently from themselves, particularly Alex.
182** Also, with Mallory, when she begins dating Nick. They had envisioned Mal dating a nice guy, perhaps college-educated... not some motorcycle-riding Rambo-wannabe.
183* WhileYouWereInDiapers: In "Oh Brother," Steven and Rob are arguing about Rob's divorce. Rob says, "Don't talk to me about marriage, okay? I was married while you were collecting baseball cards."
184* WrittenInAbsence: Meredith Baxter Birney is completely or ''almost'' completely absent from almost all of the first 16 episodes of Season 3. Although it was really due to Baxter Birney's maternity leave for her real-life pregnancy, it is usually explained in-show as Elyse's being either bedridden or out of town visiting relatives for her in-show pregnancy to Andrew. However, in one or two cases, it is explained as her being out of town for her recently acquired job out of the home at an architectural firm, and in at least one episode ("Auntie Up"), why she is out of town is not explained other than to say she is.
185* YetAnotherChristmasCarol: Jennifer and Mallory take the form of the Ghosts of Christmas past and future (respectively) and Alex learns the true meaning of Christmas, and what his greed could lead to.
186* YouAreNotAlone:
187** A particularly stirring example is the episode "'A,' My Name is Alex,." After denying the death of a close friend, Alex begins to feel guilt for not going with his friend the night he died (his friend asked him to drive across town with him and was killed in a car crash). Feeling it is his fault, Alex begins sobbing uncontrollably and yelling "Why am I alive?!" His mother runs and hugs him while his father assures him they'll get help.
188** Alex returns the favor for his mother in "Heartstrings Part 2." After finding out Steven needs surgery, Elyse is going hysterical about how she doesn't know how she will get by without him. Alex calms his mother down and wipes her tears. He tells her that he has depended on her for all his life and that she can depend on him now. His exact words: "There's no way that I'm not going to be here for you and let you go through this alone."
189** Mallory also winds up doing this for the shattered mother of a friend who committed suicide.
190* YoungerThanTheyLook: In the last couple of seasons, Jennifer is 15 or 16 years old, but looks like she could be in her late teens or early twenties toward the end of the series. Also, Michael Gross (Steven) went grey early, his hair thinned a bit, and he was only about 42 by the time the show ended.
191----
192[[VanityPlate "Sit, Ubu, sit. Good dog."]]\
193

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