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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lapetitevie2_0.jpg]]
2 [[caption-width-right:350:The Paré Family [[note]]Clockwise from Bottom Left: Jacqueline "Moman", Rodrigue "Rod", Rénald "Pinson", Lison "Creton", Caroline "Caro", Réjean, Thérèse, Aimé "Ti-Mé / Popa" [[/note]]]]
3''La Petite Vie'' (lit. ''The Small Life'') was a French-language Canadian SitCom airing during the late 90s. First born as a comedy routine the two main actors used to perform on tour, the routine was later expanded into a TV show.
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5The show centers on the eccentric and dysfunctional Paré family, with the elderly Paré parents as the main characters. Jacqueline[[note]]Played by the same ''male'' actor who played her on the comedy tour[[/note]] and Aimé "Ti-Mé" Paré (respectively nickamed Môman and Pôpa, French versions of "Mom" and "Pops") form the two halves of a retired couple whose marriage has long since lost its passion. Both have developed their own strange routines to give meaning to their otherwise now boring lives: Mom fusses over the increasingly massive turkeys she cooks, treating them like children (and arguably as replacement for her actual children, who are all adults now), while Popa obsesses over the state of his garbage bags and of his workshop in the basement - despite it never having come into use. The couple interact with their four children, who are just as messed up as they are: Mom must ceaselessly comfort Thérèse, her nervous wreck of a daughter; Caroline seeks new corporations and governments to rebel against; Rodrigue refuses to mentally grow out of his teenage-hood; and Rénald, TheUnFavourite, desperate for his parents approval, who insists he isn't a penny pincher despite being a high-strung bank manager.
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7The show ran from 1993 to 1999. During its peak, ''La Petite Vie'' used to be the most watched TV show in Quebec, at one point one out of five Quebecers was watching the show's episodes on their first run. One of the episodes holds the record for the highest market share ever achieved by a television program. An oft remembered prop of the show is the parents' bed, which was laid vertically against a wall. While this was originally used during the stage show so the audience could see the actors, the bed kept this characteristic into the TV show, and was revealed to be a particular eccentricity of the elderly Paré.
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9In 2015, the show had a SpinOff, ''Le Ti-Mé Show'', a VarietyShow / TalkShow where Popa receives real life personalities and interviews them with characters from the show (most often Pogo).
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11In 2023, ''La Petite Vie'' was {{reviv|al}}ed for one more season of six episodes [[MilestoneCelebration to celebrate its 30th anniversary]].
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13!!'''La Petite Vie''' contains examples of the following:
14* TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture: The entirety of Season 5. The Paré children have all visibly aged by a couple decades, with Rénald notably mentioning that he is recently retired. Inexplicably, Pops remains looking exactly the same as before.
15* AllJustADream: Occurs at the end of [[spoiler: Season 5, in which it is revealed that Pop dozed off while Mom was out to buy groceries, leading him to dream up the entire 30-years-later adventure.]]
16* AllMenArePerverts: Réjean barely conceals the fact that he sleeps around on the regular, and he gets away with it only due to his wife's profound innocence.
17* AsHimself: Several celebrities appeared as themselves over the course of the series, including Music/CelineDion in the first Christmas special.
18* CampGay: Jean-Lou, who seems to get more effeminate with every appearance.
19* CloudCuckooLander: Thérèse shows time and again that she cannot ever think straight due to her nervous disposition, leading her to screw up the most basic of life skills.
20* ChristmasSpecial: Two of them were made years after the series ended. The first one, from 2002, focused on Mom getting tired of seeing the family bickering every Christmas and preferring to spend Christmas without them. The second, from 2009, was about the family participating in a Christmas-themed reality show.
21* DotingParent: Mom for Rod, to the point where despite being in his 40s, Rod still depends on her to do his laundry and cook him meals for the week.
22* DrillSergeantNasty
23** Popa's way of teaching his wife to drive is to put her through a simulation of what amounts to nothing less than a weather apocalypse, using waterguns, confetti, and cardboard to take her through a storm, blizzard, and nighttime in quick succession.
24** Popa insists on taking a controlled approach to teaching home improvement, to the point where he will disallow his pupil from using anything but a hammer and the same five nails.
25* HandsOffParenting: Implied to be Pop's preferred method for raising his kids. Applies to Mom, too, except for her first born, Rod.
26* HilariouslyAbusiveChildhood: Rénald is shown in flashbacks to have been denied even the most basic of attentions, which makes it a sheer miracle that he survived to this day. Played for laughs in that he's completely oblivious to it.
27* JerkAss: Réjean and Popa.
28* NoodleIncident: Popa's best friend Pogo constantly begins counting the tale of a tragic event that happened to him at a Montreal Canadians hockey game in 1972, only to be interrupted every time, and never getting to finish his story.
29* ParentalNeglect: Rénald's conception was accidental. Mom and Popa both freely admit they did as little as they could to raise him. They have only one photo of him as a kid — and it's Rénald hiding behind a tree (even there, they just wanted a picture of the tree). Even now the parents are not shy about showing their dislike of him, to the point where Mom will purposely cook foul meals to discourage him from coming over for lunch. This doesn't work as expected: Rénald is more than happy to bite into a sandwich full of nothing but tomato caps.
30* RevisedEnding: The first Christmas special has an ending where Céline Dion shows up. But there is an alternate ending only in audience where [[spoiler: Ding et Dong]] show up instead.
31* RunningGag:
32** Thérèse keeps trying to recreate her mom's shepherd's pie recipe, which is about as simple as cooking can possibly get: she even spends an entire episode reciting the mantra "Meat, corn, potatoes!" Every single one of her attempts is an unmitigated failure.
33** She repeats the feat with date squares, with her first attempt defying all reasonable logic: she ends up with date triangles, date circles, date parallelograms... but no date squares.
34** Pogo frequently mentions the NoodleIncident about what happened to him during a Montreal Canadians hockey game with his ex Shirley, which is always accompanied with dramatic music.
35* ScatterbrainedSenior: Pogo gets a ''hard'' case of this in Season 5, leading him to forget crucial elements of the situation at hand, and ask inappropriate questions.
36* StraightGay: Mr. Bricole
37* StrawFeminist: Caro.
38* SelfDeprecation: In one episode, the family watched a comedy routine by ''Ding et Dong'', calling them "Those two weirdos", with Popa remarking that the one with glasses was way too annoying. [[note]]For those unaware, ''La Petite Vie'' has started as a comedy routine in Ding et Dong, with Claude Meunier (Popa's actor) as the one with glasses.[[/note]]
39** Also qualifies as a CelebrityParadox moment.
40* SmartBall: Gets passed around in rapid-fire fashion, especially when one character egregiously exposes themselves to a witty retort. Thérèse is especially adept at catching the ball when comes time to sass Lison. She even sometimes temporarily wises up to Rénald's constant romantic escapades for the sake of delivering a particularly vicious one-liner in his direction.
41* UnseenCharacter: Le beau Marco (Handsome Marco), constantly referred to but never seen until the end of the second season. Turns out, beauty is in the eye of the beholder (and every character needs some urgent laser-eye surgery).
42* UnsympatheticComedyProtagonist: Popa.

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