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The Gang

    General 
  • Jerkass: Everyone has moments of this, but Hyde and Laurie take it to an art form. (Hyde will also occasionally lampshade his jerkass nature.) Jackie is also a shameless bitch, though she stumbles somewhat pulling this off against Hyde.
  • Nice, Mean, and In-Between:
    • Nice: Nerdy Eric and Funny Foreigner Fez are nice, although only compared to the others. They have less jerkass moments.
    • Mean: Jackie and Hyde. The former is a rude Alpha Bitch who belittles other people, the latter is an antisocial and manipulative jerk.
    • In-Between: Kelso and Donna. Kelso is a goofy, immature, and shallow Brainless Beauty. Donna is the Girl Next Door who can be arrogant.
  • True Companions: Despite problems often prone to tear them apart (such as Eric and Donna breaking up, or Jackie and Hyde breaking up), Eric and his friends pretty much always stay together.
  • Vitriolic Best Buds:
    • Hyde has this sort of relationship with all his close friends, Kelso in particular. He has no problem insulting the others, but still sees them as friends.
    • Donna and Jackie. Donna is amazed and a little horrified when she realizes they've become friends, and Jackie never lets up making fun of Donna's shoe size or calling her a lumberjack.
  • World of Snark: It's hard to find characters who don't fit the pattern. Eric snarks. Donna snarks (especially at Jackie). Hyde does almost nothing but snark. Eventually Fez snarks a lot too. Laurie snarks. Red snarks. Kitty slips her snarks in almost under the radar. Jackie and Kelso, on the other hand, don't seem to grasp sarcasm.

    Eric Forman 

Eric Forman

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/That70sShow-Eric_7743.jpg
"God, I feel like I'm Luke Skywalker, ya know?"

Played By: Topher Grace

Appearances: That '70s Show | That '90s Show

The main protagonist of the first seven seasons. A high school boy living in Point Place, Wisconsin, and son of Red and Kitty Forman. Is a sci-fi geek but has a wild streak in him that emerges from time to time. Towards the end of the series, he moves to Africa for a year to teach in order to further his career.


  • All Men Are Perverts: Despite being the Nice Guy and, usually, the Only Sane Man of the group, he can be just as horny as Hyde and Kelso.
  • Amazon Chaser: When he and Donna first met as kids, he commented in an impressed, amazed tone on how strong she was.
  • Back for the Finale: After being Put on a Bus for Season 8.
  • Beware the Nice Ones: The Forman Rage is strong in this one, as Red proudly pointed out. Eric is a geeky and socially awkward klutz who can never really put up much of a fight... unless he's defending someone he cares about. Anytime his friends or family are being mistreated, he immediately shakes off his usual cowardice and leaps to their defense, whether it be from school bullies, random drunks, or his own dad. "The Keg," "Grandma's Dead," and "What is and What Should Never Be" are all episodes with shining examples of this.
  • Book Smart: Despite Red's insistance that "the only smart thing about you is your mouth," there are frequent indications that Eric does very well in school, at least when outside factors don't intefere. He is, however, naive about other matters, at least at the beginning of the series.
  • Borrowed Catch Phrase: In That '90s Show, he threatens to put his foot up Leia's ass. He immediately has a Can't Believe I Said That moment. Kitty and Donna are shocked, while Red has a So Proud of You reaction.
  • But I Would Really Enjoy It: He loves Donna, but both of them have doubts about consummating their relationship until mid-Season 2.
  • Butt-Monkey: Guess who's the butt of the jokes 80% of the time?
  • Calling Parents by Their Name: Behind Red's back, Eric often calls him by his name.
  • Characterization Marches On: Early on, Eric was far less of a Deadpan Snarker and more a put-upon everyman, This Loser Is You kinda guy. His fandom of Star Wars was also originally not limited to him, but extended to the rest of the male members of the gang as well. In addition, Eric becomes lazier to near childish levels in the later seasons.
  • Childhood Friend Romance: With Donna, as they befriended each other as children, dated as teens, and continue with a Will They or Won't They? to their adulthood.
  • Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass: As weak as he's often made out to be, he always displays "the Forman rage" whenever he's in a fight. He's also a deadly accurate shooter.
  • Deadpan Snarker: This quality is why Red calls him "Smartmouth", a trait Red says he gets from his mother.
  • Digging Yourself Deeper: He does this a lot. Hyde calls him "The Little Engine That Could of Screwing Yourself".
  • Ditzy Genius: He has moments of being rational, intelligent and is shown to have a good work ethic due to his geekiness but is just as goofy, impulsive, and immature as most of the group.
  • The Dog Bites Back: Eric, of all people, calls out on Red, of all people, who'd rather keep his Corvette and refuse to be there for Kitty when she's pregnant.
  • Dumbass Teenage Son: He's this in the eyes of his father Red, and while he's nowhere near as dumb as Kelso, neither is he a paragon of sensibility.
  • The Dutiful Son: He is this compared to his sister Laurie. After Red has a heart attack (which Laurie was partly responsible for causing), she ditches the family. Eric, meanwhile, puts off going to college to get a job as a waiter to help support the family. Red begins to acknowledge this more and more as the series goes on.
  • Extreme Doormat: In an alternate future where he never kissed Donna, he's no longer has the smart mouth that Red complains about, but he is also a complete pushover.
  • Foolish Sibling, Responsible Sibling:
    • The responsible to Laurie's foolish.
    • After Hyde moves in at the end of the first season, he can be seen as the foolish to Hyde's responsible.
  • Four-Temperament Ensemble: Phlegmatic.
  • Geek Physiques: He's often teased for his skinniness.
  • Geeky Analogy: Keeps comparing himself to Luke Skywalker, or sometimes Spider-Man. The latter becomes funnier since his actor would eventually play Venom.
  • The Hero: Main protagonist of the show.
  • Heterosexual Life-Partners: With Hyde. They both were able to say "Indy 500" simultaneously when having to come up with a lie about what they were talking about when Kelso showed up.
  • Honor Before Reason: After Casey broke up with her, Donna was distraught and eventually went back to Eric. However, he pushed her away on the grounds that he won't just be some second choice on the rebound. He had too much dignity for that, much to the confusion of his parents. Kitty calls him a dumbass for it.
    Red: So, you're too proud to take her back? And what do you have to be so proud of? You're not an athlete. The only smart thing about you is your mouth. And look at you.
    Kitty: Red, he looks fine. He's just so darn stupid!
  • Hypocritical Humor: He wasn't happy about Kelso fooling around with Laurie, in part because of how annoying he found Hyde's "nailed your sister" jokes. He gleefully changes his tune in Season 7 when Kelso hooks up with Angie (Hyde's half-sister), saying he "suddenly" realized how funny those jokes can be.
    Eric: Sticks and stones may break my bones, but Kelso nailed your sister.
  • Informed Flaw: Is constantly mocked as geeky and unattractive. While he is a geek through and through, he is far from ugly. Though most insults tend to focus on him being a geek rather than his looks. Aside from Donna, several attractive women (and even one man) express an interest in him over the course of the series.
  • I "Uh" You, Too: When Donna first tells him that she loves him, his response is "I love... cake."
  • Jerkass Ball: More and more often as time goes on.
  • Last-Name Basis: He is referred to by his last name by Hyde.
  • Lazy Bum: After Hyde moves in with the Formans and starts pitching in with chores, he discovers that they're actually not too difficult and concludes that Eric's constant complaints about them were because he was just being lazy. It gets worse in season seven where after calling out his wedding with Donna, he spends an entire year lazing around until he realizes how much time had wasted. In the sequel series, it is shown that he has become a Lazy Husband who wouldn't help his wife to carry the luggage.
  • Like Father, Like Son: That '90s Show reveals that despite being as geeky as ever, he has become both of his parents. He's clingy and always worried about his daughter just like Kitty, but tells Leia that if she doesn't listen to him he will put his foot in her ass just like Red.
  • Lovable Nerd: He's socially awkward, clumsy, and geeky but usually manages to be charming, sweet-natured, and lovable.
  • Masculine Girl, Feminine Boy: Feminine boy to Donna's masculine girl.
    Kitty: "Eric? Honey, could you get the Thanksgiving turkey out of the freezer? Oh, wait. It's a 20-pounder. Donna, could you get the Thanksgiving turkey out of the freezer?"
  • Manchild: Interest aside, Eric gets progressively immature as the series progress and acts like a lazy spoiled brat. He becomes better in the sequel series but still believes that Star Wars is real and often takes quotes and lessons from the movies in his parenting.
  • Mature Younger Sibling: Despite being a nerdy stoner, he's much more responsible and level-headed than his slutty and ditzy older sister, Laurie.
  • Maybe Ever After: The show ends with Eric returning to Point Place with his relationship with Donna unclear, but the sequel series showed they did get married and had a daughter.
  • Mistaken for Gay: By Buddy in Season 1. When Eric asks Buddy why he made a move on him, Buddy explains his attraction is very likely the same things Donna likes about him and there was probably a little wishful thinking involved too.
  • Momma's Boy: To Kitty. Eric has a better relationship with his mother than Red and doesn't refer to her by her first name even in private (unlike his father). And Eric becomes notably protective of Kitty if she is wronged by someone in some way.
  • Motive Decay: Deconstructed. Previously, Eric wanted to leave home and be with Donna, but the former got derailed by Red's heart attack at the end of Season 5, while the wedding was ultimately called off at the end of Season 6. At the start of Season 7, Eric decides to just take a year off and do various goofy activities—much to Red's increasing irritation. It reaches a head in "You Can't Always Get What You Want" and Eric admits he just doesn't want to lock himself into a path he might hate later. Red agrees to give him six months to figure out what he wants, and Eric ultimately decides to become a teacher.
  • Muscles Are Meaningless: Zigzags. He is shown to be not very strong, but when he fights he completely dominates guys that have much more weight, except for Hyde.
  • Naked People Are Funny: One episode reveals that he sleeps in the nude sometimes. Red spends the rest of the episode ribbing him about it.
  • Never My Fault: Often does this in many episodes. He was caught masturbating in the bathroom by Donna in one episode and then blames her because she doesn't want to have sex with him.
  • Nice Guy: This quality makes him stand out from the rest of the group; Eric is always willing to help someone out. But he can be very cocky, brash, and insensitive sometimes.
  • Noble Male, Roguish Male: Noble to Hyde's Roguish. Zigzagged in later seasons.
  • Oblivious to Love: He's actually oblivious that he is still in love with Donna in season four after breaking up with her in the previous season. His family and friends on the other hand can still see it. It took some scolding from his parents and seeing Donna moving on for him to finally realize his feelings for her.
  • Only Sane Man: To his friends and usually his parents.
  • Open Mouth, Insert Foot: There's a reason why Red tends to call him a smart-mouth. Whenever he says something, he tends to piss off someone else, either by saying the wrong thing or trying to act smart.
  • Parental Favoritism: Played with. It's obvious in the early seasons that his sister Laurie is Red's clear favorite and she can do no wrong in his eyes, whereas he is constantly belittling Eric, his friends and his interests. However, while Red may dote on Laurie, it’s also revealed he doesn't think she's capable of much and only sees her as someone others have to take care of. Meanwhile, Red is hard on Eric because he expects a lot more from him. Played straight with Kitty, as it's shown many times that she prefers him over Laurie.
  • Parents as People: In That '90s Show, he's shown trying to be a more involved father with his daughter Leia, likely to make up for Red's strict parenting style. However, he doesn't stop to consider that Leia doesn't share the same interests as him and wants her own experiences.
  • Promoted Fanboy: In-Universe example. He goes from a Star Wars fan in the 1970s to a college professor in That '90s Show who teaches a 'course' on Star Wars.
  • Put on a Bus: At the end of Season 7.
  • Ridiculously Average Guy: Eric is the most average and normal of his group of friends. Eric also has a string-bean physique which is referenced multiple times. Lampshaded by Jackie.
    Jackie: Michael's the looks, Steven's the brains, and you? Your house has food.
  • Runaway Fiancé: By the end of Season 6, Eric had doubts about going through with his marriage with Donna and runs away. Donna was initially furious, but after a talk with a returning Eric, both of them admitted that they were not ready for marriage.
  • Sensitive Guy and Manly Man: Sensitive guy to Hyde's manly man.
  • Small Name, Big Ego: As Red usually scolds him, "The only smart thing about him is his mouth," yet he often brags about how great he is.
  • Spoiled Brat: Hyde feels that Eric's one because he's a lazy, mouthy, selfish, and whiny Momma's Boy but he's obviously not as bad as his sister.
  • Took a Level in Dumbass: Eric seems to have lost a lot of brain cells in later seasons and tends to make stupid mistakes or said the wrong things that get him into trouble. Heck, he even makes Kelso smart at times. If he isn't a dumbass at the beginning of the series, he sure is now.
  • Took a Level in Jerkass: Later seasons portrayed Eric as a selfish, brash, and lazy manchild with zero ambition and doesn't treat his girlfriend with much respect as he does in previous seasons.
  • The Unfavorite: He begins the show as this to his father Red. Red seems to find it difficult to relate to him as he's not into sports and his personality isn't very similar. This changes over the course of the series as Eric proves himself the more responsible sibling upon learning of Laurie's behavior, and on occasion will tell Eric how proud he is of him.
  • "Well Done, Son" Guy: He's always looking for Red's approval.

    Donna Pinciotti 

Donna Pinciotti

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/That70sShow-Donna_7869.jpg
"If women don't learn to stand up for themselves, men will always control the world."

Played By: Laura Prepon

Appearances: That '70s Show | That '90s Show

The Girl Next Door to Eric's house. Has a fling with Eric that over time turns serious. Their relationship is generally the main focus of the show. Has some ups and downs with Eric and has broken up with him a few times. Was intending to go to college but decided to stay behind to continue her relationship with Eric. After Eric leaves, she starts dating a new guy named Randy.


  • All Girls Want Bad Boys: She spends much of the show hooked up with Eric, but otherwise is very attracted to bad boys like Hyde or Aerosmith's Steven Tyler. Eric will often attempt to be more rebellious to impress her, and she's visibly more into him when he shows his wild side. This is what made her briefly hook up with the roguish-but-selfish Casey Kelso.
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: A lot, though not quite as much in later seasons.
  • Bratty Teenage Daughter: To Bob, both out of rebellion and when he's doing something she doesn't want or like. The only reason she's not called out on it is because Bob's an Extreme Doormat. He does, however, snap back at her when she tries to get him to stop dating Jackie's mom.
  • But I Would Really Enjoy It: She loves Eric, but both of them have doubts about consummating their relationship until mid-Season 2.
  • Buxom Beauty Standard: She has a well-endowed figure, which is often pointed out by the boys, especially Fez and Eric. Humorously, Jackie frequently treats it like it's a defect, due to her own Petite Pride.
  • Catholic School Girls Rule: In Season 5, Bob sent her to Catholic school as punishment for running away to California. Eric, and all the other guys for that matter, doesn't mind the uniform at all.
  • Childhood Friend Romance: With Eric, as they befriended each other as children, dated as teens, and continue with a Will They or Won't They? to their adulthood.
  • Closer to Earth: Tends to be the voice of reason in the group, though she occasionally shares this role with either Eric or Hyde.
  • Deadpan Snarker: She's often making deadpan sarcastic remarks, especially around Jackie, who rarely gets them.
  • Does Not Know Her Own Strength: In "The Seeker", Donna accidentally knocks Hyde off the water tower with what is supposed to be a light, friendly tap.
    Donna: How am I stronger than all the guys I hang out with?
  • Drugs Are Bad: Her smoking ends up getting Eric suspended. She asked him to hold her cigarette, and a teacher caught him with it.
  • Dude Magnet: A vast majority of male characters from Hyde, Kelso, Kelso's brother Casey, Fez to many one-time minor characters had an interest in Donna (although Kelso and Fez are into anything that moves). Emphasized later when she works in the radio station's booth as "Hot Donna". She's initially embarrassed at being a Lust Object for guys to leer at ("Hot Donna has now signed 87 guys! And two girls") but then she starts enjoying it.
  • Everyone Loves Blondes: Dyeing her hair blonde caused quite a stir in Point Place. Granted, she was considered attractive when she was a redhead. (Laura Prepon dyed her hair for a different role.)
  • Fiery Redhead: A redhead with an aggressive and passionate personality, until she dyed it blonde in Season 7.
  • Genius Bruiser: She is the most muscular and the strongest in the group, and one of the smarter ones.
  • Girl Next Door: To Eric.
  • Hollywood Genetics: Donna is a natural redhead, however her mom is a blonde and her dad has dark brown hair.
  • Hypocrite:
    • In one episode she gets angry with Eric for making plans with his friends without checking with her first. At the end of the episode she makes him promise that he'll always check with her before making time with his friends. Eric then asks Donna if she needs his permission to hang out with her friends, to which she replies "no" and leaves to go see a friend.
    • And in another episode she yells at Eric for going on two dates with another girl while she and Eric were broken up. Donna, meanwhile, had slept with Casey Kelso around the same time.
    • Also calls Eric out for his insecurity and not trusting her in "Radio Daze" after she announced to the whole town (including the DJ who was clearly attracted her based on calling her "Hot Donna") that she was single and never bothered to talk to him about it. While this wasn't the first time Eric had been jealous, she behaved the same way to him in "Eric's Panties".
  • Informed Attractiveness: While not ugly by any means, she's repeatedly stated to be one of the most attractive girls in town. Except by Jackie, who states that she looks like a trucker. Though this is Jackie we're talking about.
  • Jerkass: From time to time. She can be really petty, abrasive and arrogant.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: What she really is.
  • In Vino Veritas: When drunk or in "the circle" she has a tendency to act the loopiest of any of the gang, to downright Cloud Cuckoolander levels.
  • The Lad-ette: A trait that Jackie bemoans all the time.
  • Male Gaze: In the episode “The Best Christmas Ever,” Donna is on a ladder, bending over to put decorations on the Christmas tree. She asks “Okay, how does that look?” in reference to the tree. But Eric and Hyde look over and look at her butt for a moment. In the episode “Moon Over Point Place,” in the circle, the camera focuses on her shaking her ass. In the credits of the episode, the same thing occurs, though it involves the whole cast this time.
  • Masculine Girl, Feminine Boy: Masculine girl to Eric's feminine boy. also with Randy, who is quite vain.
  • Maybe Ever After: The show ends with Eric returning to Point Place with his relationship with Donna unclear, but the sequel series showed they did get married and had a daughter.
  • Ms. Fanservice: Donna is very attractive, and everyone knows it, and on the radio, she is known as "Hot Donna" for obvious reasons. She also shook her ass at the camera.
  • Old Shame: In That '90s Show she clearly isn't proud of having dated Casey Kelso. Unless it is a goof and not an intentional omission, it also extends to Season 8 of That '70s Show where she states twice that she only ever dated Eric.
  • One of the Boys: She's just as likely to get down and dirty as the rest of the guys in the group, if not more.
  • Only Sane Woman: Just like Eric, to the point where Kelso jokingly refers to them as "Mom and Dad".
  • Real Women Don't Wear Dresses: She hates the notion that being feminine automatically means being "girly", and so she typically wears jeans and long-sleeved or plaid shirts. Jackie often calls this her lumberjack look. Despite this, she's worn long dresses on special occasions and had to wear a skirt as part of her school uniform.
  • Shaking the Rump: In “Moon Over Point Place,” she shakes her butt at the camera.
  • She Cleans Up Nicely: In her prom dress, she gets the attention of many male background characters. Also, when she wears the catholic schoolgirl outfit in "I Can't Quit You, Baby", she gets this reaction from the other characters.
  • Shoe Size Angst: Has big feet which she is sometimes teased about, usually by Jackie.
  • Statuesque Stunner: She's a Dude Magnet and quite tallnote , especially compared to Jackie and to the point of Tiny Guy, Huge Girl proportions with Eric.
  • Straw Feminist: Verges on this at several points, mostly Depending on the Writer. Sometime's it's portrayed realistically, sometime's it's Played for Laughs.
  • Strong Girl, Smart Guy: The strong girl to Hyde's Smart Guy.
  • Tomboy and Girly Girl: The Tomboy (The Lad-ette, Fiery Redhead, and One of the Boys) to Jackie's Girly Girl (Proud Beauty and Lovable Alpha Bitch).
  • Tomboyish Voice: She's a tomboy played by deep-voiced Laura Prepon.
  • Took a Level in Kindness: Donna is noticably far less bitchy in the second half of the series. In the sequel series, she’s quite warm and levelheaded as a mother.
  • The Ugly Guy's Hot Daughter: She definitely takes more after her mother.
  • Unkempt Beauty: In universe, gets the most compliments from the guys when she isn't dolled up.
  • Vitriolic Best Buds: With Jackie, much to Donna's dismay.
  • What Does She See in Him?: Many people (including Eric himself on occasion) don't understand what the heck Donna is doing with Eric.
    Eric: Donna? I just have to ask... why me? I mean there are so many other guys who are way better looking.
    Donna: You know you're right, if only I could be with some handsome jock who was mean and shallow and didn't make me laugh.

    Steven Hyde 

Steven Hyde

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/That70sShow-Hyde_8971.jpg
"The government is out to get you."

Played By: Danny Masterson

Appearances: That '70s Show

Troubled kid with a dysfunctional family and rarely attends school. His mother is very loose and he lived alone in a dilapidated house until he moved in with the Formans. Has a tendency to suspect various doings behind the scenes. Is usually the one who brings "the stuff" to the Formans' basement.


  • Abusive Parents: Even before his mother abandoned him, she was shown to be very emotionally abusive towards him. 90% of his mom's dialogue towards him was filled with contempt and blaming him for ruining her chances at being successful.
  • Accidental Marriage: His relationship with Sam was this as they drunkenly got married during Hyde's stay in Vegas. And like many other example of this, it was also "Accidental Bigamy" as Sam was already married and never divorced her first husband, so her marriage with Hyde isn't valid, and she returned to Vegas.
  • Brilliant, but Lazy: He's probably the smartest character on the show, but has no ambition or motivation to do anything but sit around in a basement.
  • Brutal Honesty: Well let's just say don't expect him to sugarcoat anything. When interviewed for a job at Fatso Burger, he even states that his weakness is being brutally honest, and immediately calls the interviewer a pinhead.
  • Calling Parents by Their Name: Because of his poor relationship with them, Hyde calls his parents by their names, sometimes right at their faces. Since Edna and Bud are horrible parents to begin with, they don't seem to mind. Hyde also calls his actual (and much nicer) father as his name as well though this is mostly because he doesn't know him well.
  • Calling the Old Man Out: After holding it, Hyde finally vents at Bud for abandoning him and then coming back like nothing happened. Bud doesn't even try to fight back, copping to every bad thing he did and saying he deserves to be yelled at. This infuriates Hyde even further because it's no fun doing this trope when the target immediately caves. They have some beers instead.
  • Character Development: While he still stays the same lazy stoner at his core, he does mature and become more responsible thanks to Kitty and Red's influence.
  • Chocolate Baby: After Hyde meets his real father, William Barnett, who's black, Hyde mentions his mother must have been pretty relieved when he came out white.
  • Chuck Cunningham Syndrome: There’s not a single mention of him in the sequel series.
  • Conspiracy Theorist:
    • "There's this car that runs on water, man."
    • According to Hyde, Steven Spielberg directed a fake moon landing for the government - which "is how he got the job for Jaws."
  • Commitment Issues: Mostly the reason he and Jackie broke up.
  • Cool Shades: He is always seen wearing circular shades. He even wears them in dark places. This is partially to hide how often he's stoned.
  • Cop Hater: As expected from a delinquent, Hyde hates police officers, a trait he shared with his real father.
  • Deadpan Snarker: He's the king of sarcasm among the group with practically every word that comes out of his mouth to snark at someone.
  • Don't You Dare Pity Me!: Hates the idea of anyone feeling sorry for him, after his mother abandoned him Eric had a hard time getting him to accept help, it took Red basically forcing him to move in with the Foremans to snap him out of it.
  • Early-Installment Weirdness: The writers for the show initially had plans for a Hyde-Donna-Eric love triangle, and that dynamic was very clearly present in Season 1. However, plans changed to have Hyde's character revolve around his familial bonds, and hence in future seasons he didn't treat her any different that he did with the guys.
  • Erudite Stoner: Fits this trope to a T.
  • Even Bad Men Love Their Mamas: More than anyone else, Kitty can bring out Hyde's softer side. In one episode he's the only person who remembers her birthday.
  • Everyone Has Standards:
    • He's tempted but stops himself from stealing jewelry at Beatrice's funeral.
    • During the period Kelso was cheating on Jackie with Laurie, Hyde repeatedly needled him and set up traps to expose or embarrass him. That amused him, but he absolutely refused to tell Jackie himself, as he sincerely believes friends shouldn't rat on each other. For this particular example, Hyde also chides Donna for giving Eric a hard time for not telling her about any of this and says the guy deserves a break in return for all the things he does for her.
  • Family of Choice: He's not blood related to the Formans, but he's essentially a surrogate son to Red and Kitty and a surrogate brother to Eric and Laurie. Notably, he’s the only one of Eric’s male friends that shows zero attraction to Laurie and shares Eric's disdain for her.
  • Forgiven, but Not Forgotten: In the second season episode, "Halloween", Eric learned that Hyde tried to kiss Donna in the first season episode, "Ski Trip". In "Eric's Stash", a few episodes later, though inflamed by Laurie, it's revealed that Eric still resents Hyde for it to the point he blames Hyde for stealing some money from him. It was Red who took the money to buy a new hot water heater.
  • Four-Temperament Ensemble: Melancholic.
  • Genius Bruiser: He is both the strongest and smartest of his friends.
  • Heroic Comedic Sociopath: Often takes joy in seeing others misfortune or them getting hurt.
  • Heterosexual Life-Partners: With Eric.
  • Hidden Heart of Gold: He's a genuinely good-natured and upstanding guy, but he hates openly displaying it. Being around Kitty and, eventually, Jackie has drawn that side out of him a bit more.
  • Hilariously Abusive Childhood: "They didn't leave me at the mall. They forgot me. They were drunk." The rest of it, though, is genuinely upsetting and taken seriously.
  • Jerkass: If anyone can insult someone to that person's face, it's Hyde.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: He's mean, insensitive, blunt and aloof but does care for his friends and was eventually a great boyfriend to Jackie when they were dating.
  • Knight in Sour Armor: Long before they hooked up, Jackie had a crush on Hyde from his defending her. When he beats up a guy who insulted her at Red's barbecue, she sees him as a Knight in Shining Armor, much to his embarrassment and frustration.
  • Lack of Empathy: He rarely feels compassion or sympathy for others, it's even lampshaded in an episode by Eric.
  • Ladykiller in Love: Had this dynamic with Jackie.
  • The Lancer: To Eric's hero. He even dresses up as the the trope image character in one of Eric's Imagine Spots.
  • Last-Name Basis: He's called Hyde by everybody except Red, Kitty, and Jackie (who started calling him Steven after she got a crush on him).
  • Lean and Mean: His slim build goes with his sadistic and abrasive Jerkass status.
  • Mellow Fellow: Always maintains his laid-back and nonchalant attitude.
  • Meaningful Name: "Hyde" likes to hide his feelings a lot.
  • Metal Head: Was a 70's variety of this.
  • Morality Pet: Jackie & Kitty are his, with both of them bringing out the best in him.
    • For Jackie, he goes to prom and helps her get back with Kelso, takes the fall for the weed at the end of season 2 and defends her when her date (who is just trying to sleep with her then dump her) insults her. And that's before they start dating.
    • He goes out of his way to be good to Kitty, wishing her happy birthday long after he'd moved out.
  • My Sister Is Off-Limits: Did not like Kelso fooling around with Angie.
  • No Good Deed Goes Unpunished: At the end of Season 2, Jackie's about to get busted for holding, so Hyde takes the blame and goes to jail. In the Season 3 premiere, Red kicks him out of the house for this and only relents when Donna explains the whole story. However, Red still gives him a lengthy, angry lecture about everything that went on during this entire ordeal, which overwhelms Hyde. It's transcribed in full here.
  • Noble Male, Roguish Male: Roguish to Eric's noble. Zigzagged in later seasons.
  • Only Sane Man: Downplayed. He usually has the most common sense in the group but can sometimes do stuff that will get gang in trouble.
  • Opposites Attract: He's a smart, dry-witted, cynical Conspiracy Theorist whilst Jackie is a ditzy, rich, loud cheerleader. Gradually deconstructed; their respective differences cause a lot of conflict in their relationship, and they break up and get back together several times. Eventually they break up for good because Jackie wants to know that they have a future together while Hyde feels he is too young to commit to marriage and is more content to live in the moment.
  • Parental Abandonment: His dad left when he was a kid and his mom was gone by the end of Season 1 - requiring the move-in with the Formans. His dad returned in Season 3 and Hyde moved in with him, but reversed in Season 4. Off-screen, Hyde's parents got back together, but then left him again.
  • Really Get Around: Not as much as Kelso, but still qualifies as he only has one serious relationship.
  • Real Men Hate Affection: He denies even having feelings. It ends up causing problems when Jackie needs emotional support in Season 5.
  • Savvy Guy, Energetic Girl: Savvy Guy to Jackie's Energetic Girl. They had this dynamic long before they were together, as depicted in the episode where he teaches her to be "zen" in order to piss Laurie off. She ends up pulling it off so well, he compliments her for the first time in the series, saying she was totally badass.
  • Sensitive Guy and Manly Man: Manly man to Eric's sensitive guy.
  • The Slacker: "Just imagine what I could do if I applied myself. Oh well, guess we'll never know." Jackie tries to break him of this, to no avail. Amusingly, he has had several jobs where HE is the responsible one, as his bosses are usually even lazier than he is, or in Leo's case, can barely remember he owns a business in the first place.
  • The Stoner: He's the source of the gang's stash.
  • The Snark Knight: He's pretty the Troll with his snarkiness and schadenfreude sense of humor.
  • Strong Girl, Smart Guy: The Smart Guy to Donna's Strong Girl.
  • Suddenly Ethnicity: Season 7 reveals that his real father is black.
  • Sunglasses at Night: Hyde is very rarely seen without his Cool Shades, wearing them even at nightime.
  • Team Dad: Along with Donna, Hyde is the most mature in the group and tends to act as a big brother figure to his friends and often gives them advice on life.
  • Technician Versus Performer: With his sister she's been dreaming of taking over her dad's business all her life (to the point that when she was 8 she was disappointed with a pony as a gift) whereas Hyde has no life goals, only took a job managing the record store because he likes music and wanted to spend time with his dad, hates hard work and spends all his time slaking off and smoking weed, however Angie is a Control Freak who freaks out if things don't go exactly according to plan and needs Hyde to improvise.
  • Tin Man: While he is very aloof and good at keeping his emotions, he can be very passionate.
  • Token Evil Teammate: While Jackie and Kelso are not nice people, it's mostly because they are too ditzy and immature to know better. Hyde is smart enough to understand what he's doing, but he's still mean and insensitive towards everyone, and his Lack of Empathy is even lampshaded in one episode.
  • Token Houseguest: Hyde moves in with the Forman family at the end due to his parents leaving him, living in their basement for much of the rest of the show. He even stays with them after Eric leaves.
  • Took a Level in Kindness: Because his life starts to turn around as well as having several positive influences in his life, Hyde starts to mellow out more.
  • Toxic Friend Influence: He encourages everyone to make stupid choices and if they try to protest, he mocks them until they give in.
  • Troubled, but Cute: He is a delinquent with parental abandonment issues but still sleeps around and has a good heart.
  • Vitriolic Best Buds: With everyone, but especially Eric. They insult each other a great deal, but Hyde goes out of his way to help Eric a few times.
  • What Does She See in Him?: Eric doesn't understand how Hyde can be attracted to Jackie, whom Eric can't stand. Subverted when Hyde tries to explain his attraction to Jackie to Eric, making Eric realize it's not so much that Jackie isn't hot as much as her attitude is so annoying that it distracts him from her hotness.
  • With Friends Like These...: He's good at getting the guys in trouble.
  • Un-person: Due to his actor's legal troubles, he isn't referred to at all in That '90s Show, nor are any clips of him included in Fez's flashback scene in the season finale.

    Michael Kelso 

Michael Kelso

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/That70sShow-Kelso_7163.jpg
"You have the right to remain burned!"

Played By: Ashton Kutcher

Appearances: That '70s Show | That '90s Show

A pretty-boy with a few crayons short of a box. Often says the weirdest things and believes he's the center of attention when it comes to the ladies. Dated Jackie but his cheating broke them up. Eventually becomes a police officer.


  • Advertised Extra: In Season 8. So much to where he’s prominently featured on the cover and disc art of the season’s initial DVD release (via Twentieth Century Fox, which is now out of print, as of 2019).
  • Ambiguously Bi: During a discussion about whether Eric's new friend, Buddy, is gay, Michael doubts it since if Buddy is indeed gay, he would have been fawning over him, indicating that while Michael prefers being with women, he also doesn't mind being with men.
  • Amusing Injuries: If Kelso does something stupid (which is usually Once per Episode) he will invariably hurt his eye.
  • Attractive Bent-Gender: Played with. Jackie seems to have a Fetish for androgynous men wearing feminine clothes, so she makes Kelso wear a summer dress and put makeup on.
  • Back for the Finale: After being Put on a Bus for most of Season 8.
  • Braces of Orthodontic Overkill: Flashbacks in "Reefer Madness" and "Class Picture" show him with braces and headgear during his junior high days.
  • Brainless Beauty: An idiotic male bimbo.
  • Breakout Character: Season seven even saw a shift of storylines focusing more on his Character Development than Eric's.
  • Brilliant, but Lazy: Scored surprisingly well on the SATs. He initially tries to exploit his newfound potential, but gives up when he learns it won't help him get women. Also in one early episode, he was able to tinker with a video game to make it more challenging, and in another, he was able to quickly calculate in his head how much money they would make from a kegger and was even able to quickly change his calculation to account for how much less the younger partygoers would drink.
  • Boisterous Weakling: Kelso talks a good game, but he can never back it up. To the point where he has never won a fight, except possibly when he and Hyde took on the guys who harassed Fez and punched out Eric in a bar fight.
  • Butt-Monkey: Downplayed. Most of his comical mishaps are well-deserved, he usually brings them onto himself with his own stupidity. Its more Karmic Butt-Monkey than this trope.
  • Catchphrase: "BURN!" and "Damn, Jackie" (when he's upset with Jackie). He also immediately whines "My eye!" when dragged into a fight.
  • Character Development: Matures significantly during the final two seasons, though he never becomes unrecognizable. Becoming a father motivates him to get his life together and become a (somewhat) functional adult.
  • Chick Magnet: He's very successful with girls. Humorously, he doesn't seem to understand that this doesn't apply to everyone, as he once cluelessly asked Fez how he could still be a virgin with all the women constantly throwing themselves at him, much to Fez's anger.
  • Childhood Brain Damage: He was apparently dropped on his head when he was a baby.
    Kitty: What is wrong with you?! Were you dropped on your head?!
    Kelso: Yes! I was! And up until now, everyone had the good grace not to mention it!
  • Children Raise You: After getting Brooke pregnant, Kelso initially wants nothing to do with the child but eventually comes to accept it. Kelso slowly becomes more responsible such as sending Brook to the hospital and finding a job so his daughter can have someone to look up to. He even dials down his pervertedness because of her and is visibly disturbed by Fez's obsession with breast milk.
  • Chronic Backstabbing Disorder: He will gladly sell out his friends in the hopes of saving himself. When Red caught them in "Misty Mountain Hop" with a stash, Kelso insisted he knew nothing about it while saying Hyde did. He added in Fez just for the hell of it. And oh yeah, Kelso paid for and hid the stash in the cabin in the first place.
  • Cloudcuckoolander: Being the idiot of the group, he's probably the biggest offender.
  • Crazy Jealous Guy: With Jackie despite the fact that he constantly cheats on her.
  • The Ditz: His most famous personality traits are conceit and sheer stupidity, performing a great number of idiocies on a regular daily basis.
  • Dumbass Has a Point: Occasionally shows flashes of common sense:
    • When Kelso wants to find out if he's the police academy stooge, Donna suggests just asking his commander, but Kelso reminds her that not knowing is the whole point.
    • In the above-mentioned keg episode, two bullies get mad at him for not having a working tap, but Kelso angrily reminds them that they're the ones who broke it.
    • In a later episode, when the guys were paranoid that Kitty's vacuum was bugged by the feds, they end up destroying it, only for Kelso to be the first one to realize that they could have just put the vacuum outside.
    • He was the one who identified his brother Casey as bad news and warned Eric about it long before anyone else.
  • Even the Guys Want Him: Describes himself as "man-pretty". Kelso and Fez freely admit they find each other mutually handsome.
  • Everyone Has Standards:
    • Despite being oversexed, constantly sleeping around and even making small passes at Donna from time to time, he's the most vocal opponent of anyone doing anything sexual in the circle, which he considers sacred. In defending this stance he admits he's had sex in both a church and a cemetery.
    • He is literally the only one in "Everybody Loves Casey" besides Eric to speak poorly of him and his relationship with Donna.
      Kelso: [to Eric] And I'm telling you as his brother, Casey is bad news. He's either gonna get bored and split, or something worse is gonna happen, so you gotta do something.
  • Fair Cop: Became a police officer specifically because the uniform would prolong his beauty many years.
  • First Guy Wins: The first guy Jackie dates and, as That '90s Show reveals, the one she ultimately ends up with.
  • Four-Temperament Ensemble: Sanguine
  • The Friend Nobody Likes: He's an immature teenager who ends up causing problems for his friends and constantly goes out of his way to make their lives worse For the Lulz. By the later seasons, it's more that he's tolerated by the others and allowed to hang around because he's easy to make fun of than genuinely liked.
  • Fun Personified: Even lampshaded by Red at one point.
  • Genius Ditz: He has occasional flashes of intelligence showing there is a brain somewhere underneath his ditziness.
  • Handsome Lech: A dumb, oversexed Pretty Boy who is capable of getting women with his good looks.
  • Has a Type: All of his prominent love interests boss him around to a degree. By his own admission, he likes being on the short leash and under a woman's thumb. It only goes so far, though; he realizes he cheated on Jackie because of her repeated insults, while Laurie treated him even worse and ultimately broke his heart. Brooke and Angie clearly wore the pants, as it were, but they consistently treated Kelso with respect, and he was much happier for it.
  • Henpecked Husband: He ends up this to Jackie, to the point that half of their dialogue on-screen is her yelling at him.
  • Heroes Love Dogs: There are several episodes where he shows up late for something because he was busy playing with some random dog he met on the way, and he considers a neighbor getting a new dog to be a major event.
  • Heterosexual Life-Partners: With Fez.
  • Hidden Depths:
    • Because he was one of the older siblings, he has a real knack for taking care of babies. Related, he lets it slip in "Moon Over Point Place" that he makes a good bit of money babysitting.
    • He also comes to realize that his constant cheating on Jackie was due to her domineering attitude towards the relationship, and decides that he does not apologize for it in an argument. Notably, he never cheats on Brook or Angie, who are actually nice to him.
    • While he was mostly Book Dumb (and other kinds of dumb), he seemed to understand electronics pretty well. Helping Red fix an Atari, when Red’s about to “take off the doohickey”, Kelso says “ Don’t you think we should disconnect the transistor from the secondary circuit board first?”
  • Hypocrite: He becomes angry at Jackie for dating Hyde while he is away when he cheated on her several times with Laurie.
  • Informed Attractiveness: He goes on and on about how hot he is, and is never corrected. Apparently his hottitude is a matter of record in the T70S 'verse. While Ashton Kutcher is certainly good-looking, Kelso's attractiveness reaches memetic levels on the show.
  • It's All About Me: He manages to be more selfish then everyone else in the group except Jackie.
  • Iron Butt Monkey: He's the member of the group most likely to be injured, whether by falling flat on his face while trying to show his dance moves, falling off the local water tower, jumping out of a moving car, constantly setting himself on fire, trying moronic stunts like "car skiing" or somehow burning himself under water.
  • Jerkass: Kelso's worst traits are his shallowness, narcissism, insensitivity and self-absorbtion. Though he becomes more of a Jerk with a Heart of Gold as the series progresses.
  • Jerkass Has a Point:
    • He points out in episode 17 of season 6 that Fez and Hyde are immature, stuck in high school and are afraid to let him move on with his life after they shaved his mustache to make it look like Hitler's.
    • He's right that it's easy to judge him regarding Brooke and that they're going to be parents when they have no investment in the situation.
  • Karmic Butt-Monkey: Probably the biggest and most satisfying one in the show. Courtesy of Hyde mostly and occasionally from his other friends too. Hyde frequently retaliates against Kelso's trouble-making by attacking him physically, and occasionally even threw him under the bus unprovoked. Almost all of Kelso's comical mishaps are well-deserved be it either his own idiocy or his own irresponsibility.
  • Large Ham: Kelso's energetic, dramatic and boisterous and his loudness is consistently Played for Laughs.
  • Laser-Guided Karma: Kelso cheated on Jackie with Laurie, only to later on learn that Laurie is cheating on him. Unlike other examples in this trope, a hurt Kelso (dumb as he is) realizes how much he hurt Jackie and therefore believes he deserved to be hurt like this himself.
  • Last-Name Basis: Just like Hyde, he's called Kelso by everyone except for Jackie and Kitty.
  • Long-Haired Pretty Boy: Pulled this off for some of the seasons, in classic '70s Hair fashion, but gets his hair cut in season 7 right after his daughter is born, though he says it's because he got gum in it.
  • Lovable Coward: Can be either this or a Dirty Coward. Invoked in episode Halloween, when Kelso hears a noise which he takes for a vengeful spirit; he pushes his girlfriend out of the way in his haste to flee.
    Jackie: I can't believe Michael pushed me aside.
    Donna: Me neither. I thought he'd use you as a human shield.
  • Manchild: He possesses numerous infantile qualities such as enjoying Christmas specials deemed childish by his peers and fussing when something is preventing him from viewing them. Although to be fair, calling him a manchild is slightly a little stretching given the character's age (17-19).
  • Massive Numbered Siblings: Michael is one of 7 siblings.
  • Narcissist: To the point that he literally dreams of another Kelso sponge bathing him.
  • Never My Fault: He tells his friends that he is not responsible for the fire at the police academy...while explaining what was he doing prior to the fire.
  • No Indoor Voice: He has the loudest voice of anyone in the group, especially when he's angry or excited. There's a reason why his catchphrase is yelling "BURN!!!" at the top of his lungs.
  • One Head Taller: With Jackie.
  • Playboy Has a Daughter: Brooke reveals to him she's pregnant with his daughter in one of the show's later seasons, forcing him to grow from shallow and oversexed into a responsible adult who respects women. He even refused to grope Donna's breasts when given the opportunity. To drive this point home, earlier episodes have shown him to be quite eager to even glimpse Donna's breasts.
  • Put on a Bus: Somewhat in season 8. He only appears in the first four episodes and the series finale. For these five appearances, Ashton Kutcher is credited as a “Special Guest Star”.
  • Pretty Boy: Necessary component of his The Brainless Beauty act.
  • Proud Beauty: One of the things he has in common with Jackie.
  • Really Gets Around: "I had two girlfriends. And a little action on the side."
  • Sensitive Guy and Manly Man: Manly man to Fez's sensitive guy.
  • Shipper on Deck: He surprisingly becomes one for Jackie and Hyde in later seasons, even trying to help get them back together in one episode.
  • Small Name, Big Ego: Like Jackie, he thinks he is the most handsome person in town.
  • Stupid Sexy Flanders: Oh, Fez.
  • Token Evil Teammate: "Evil" may be too strong of a word, but Kelso is childish, selfish, cowardly, and has no qualms about selling out anyone to save his own skin.
  • Too Dumb to Live: For starters, fell off the water tower... once a year... throughout every year of school.
  • Took a Level in Dumbass: Though the initial dumbass level was very high.
  • Toxic Friend Influence: It's between him and Hyde over who is the more toxic, but Kelso goes out of his way to make his friend's lives worse.

    Jackie Burkhart 

Jacqueline Beulah "Jackie" Burkhart

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/That70sShow-Jackie_6588.jpg
"Look, the sooner you realize I'm a genius, the better off we'll both be."

Played By: Mila Kunis

Appearances: That '70s Show | That '90s Show

A bit of an airhead who has a tendency to condescend to everyone. Strangely, no one is offended by this, and they tend to ignore it. She has dated both Kelso and Hyde over the course of the series and gets together with Fez in the second-to-last episode.


  • All Girls Want Bad Boys: Her relationship with Hyde.
  • The Beautiful Elite: She's pretty, she's rich, and she won't shut up about it.
    "If I'm not a rich, popular girl, I'm nothing. I'm like Donna."
  • Beauty Is Bad: Downplayed. She's pretty and popular as well as snobby, rude, and self-absorbed, but deep down not a bad person.
  • Berserk Button: Don't tell anyone her middle name is Beulah.
  • Beware the Silly Ones: A girlish cheerleader who's normally even more useless in a fight than Eric. When Laurie insulted Jackie though, Jackie finally snapped and attacked Laurie in a vicious Cat Fight. Even Hyde was impressed, telling Jackie that “you kicked her ass, man!” Jackie also beats up her karate instructor in her first lesson after Donna makes a point about her (Jackie's) breakup with Hyde.
  • Big Eater: When down on her luck or unable to find a boyfriend, she tends to eat. A lot.
  • Brainless Beauty: Downplayed. She's shallow, vapid, ditzy and sometimes comes across as an airhead, but she's not as stupid as Kelso.
  • Brutal Honesty: She is pretty tactless and speaks her mind without a filter.
    Hyde: Roy has some problems with people.
    Roy: They don't like me. You don't like me, right?
    Jackie: Not really. But to be fair, I have very high standards.
    Roy: Yeah? She's really nice, Steven.
  • Character Development: When she started dating Hyde. She could very well be the most developed character in the entire show. Many of the characters remain rather static throughout the series but Jackie goes from being a vapid, money-obsessed cheerleader stifling her true self for the sake of popularity to a competent, though still headstrong woman who isn't afraid to take care of herself and doesn't hide who she is.
  • Control Freak: Often bossing Kelso around and telling him what to do. In That 90s Show, she's still controlling towards him.
  • Cute, but Cacophonic: She once describes herself as "a beautiful girl with a shrill, demanding voice".
  • Dating What Daddy Hates: Her father doesn't like Kelso, even going as far as cutting off Jackie's financial support when he discovers she's still dating him.
  • The Ditz: Along with Kelso in a Ditz couple, although she's definitely smarter than him.
  • Dude Magnet: Just ask Kelso, Hyde, Fez, and other guys who are attracted to her throughout the show.
  • Embarrassing Middle Name: Her middle name is Beulah; for some reason, she considers it horribly embarrassing and wants to keep it in secret. In the Halloween episode where they find out, she actually beats Hyde up for saying it...though it could be just an Imagine Spot.
  • The Fashionista: Down to the shopping addiction and the affection for makeovers.
  • The Friend Nobody Likes: Jackie starts out as this, with everyone including her primarily because she's Kelso's girlfriend (while urging him to dump her). Eventually, she and Donna become best friends to Donna's surprise. The guys all start accepting her for different reasons—Hyde alternately starts burning her and protecting her, Fez develops a major crush on her, and Eric takes a liking to her after she beats up Laurie (although Eric would still mostly keep her at arm's length for the rest of the show).
  • Girls Love Stuffed Animals: Has a collection of stuffed animals. Her favorite is a unicorn that she calls "Fluffycakes".
  • Girly Girl with a Tomboy Streak: Normally very feminine (especially in contrast to Donna), a cheerleader and high-maintenance rich girl, but in one episode she helps Red fix a car, after Eric proves inadequate.
  • Informed Attractiveness: It's Played for Laughs once; when Eric asks Hyde why he'd hook up with Jackie. Hyde tells Eric to imagine being stranded on an island with Jackie in nothing but a coconut-bikini, he still doesn't get it. Then he tells Eric to do what he does and tune her out. So Eric re-imagines the same thing but without sound, only to realize Jackie is kind of hot.
  • Informed Deformity:
    • Ironically, considering her Informed Attractiveness mentioned above, Jackie is said to not look good without makeup. Of course, when the viewer sees her in situations where she wouldn't have makeup on, she is just Mila Kunis without makeup (except the time in "Hyde Moves In" when Kelso exaggerated her perceived ugliness in his mind), so running away screaming like Kelso in Season 1 or comparing her face to scrambled eggs like Fez in Season 8 feels excessive.
    • In Season 8 a go-to insult for Jackie became, of all things, "midget". While she is the shortest of the teens, she is still of average height and it is baffling when she is called this by Fez (who is only slightly taller than her) or, on one occasion, Kitty (who is even shorter).
  • I Reject Your Reality: For the first couple of seasons, she has a major blindspot about Kelso, convinced that he's her ideal boyfriend underneath it all, and getting mad at anyone who tries to tell her that he really is a crass, selfish idiot who isn't going to change any time soon. Only when she actually catches him cheating on her with Laurie does the truth finally dawn.
    Jackie: Donna, how dare you say that about me and Michael?
    Donna: Jackie, you wanted my honest opinion!
    Jackie: Your honest opinion that we're great together!
  • Irony: The main reason that Hyde and Jackie break up is because Hyde refuses to even consider committing to a permanent relationship. While early Jackie couldn't give less of a rat's ass about the future, it was Hyde's challenging of Jackie's personality that causes her to grow up and begin to seriously think about her future. When Hyde declines to even give Jackie a simple maybe as to the future of their relationship they break up. If it wasn't for Hyde's influence Jackie would probably remain the same airhead of the early seasons, and wouldn't have cared about the permanence of their relationship.
  • It's All About Me: Especially in early seasons, she only cares about herself.
  • Jerkass: The reigning bitch of Point Place.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Thanks to Character Development, she becomes sweeter and less bitchy in later seasons.
  • Kick the Dog: When Fez politely rejects her, she becomes a full blown crazy psychopath who tries to hurt Fez badly just to get sadistic satisfaction. This is what later causes Fez to get fed up with her.
  • Lesser of Two Evils: In Season 2, most of the group barely tolerates Jackie (at best), but they'll still take her over Laurie.
  • Lethal Chef: She rarely tries to cook, but when she does, the results are disastrous.
  • Lovable Alpha Bitch: Donna eventually warms up to her, and they become a Tomboy and Girly Girl pair.
  • Lovable Sex Maniac: Subverted. With Kelso, initially, the two of them did everything but engage in intercourse, but Kelso being arrested (cementing him as a sexy bad boy in her eyes) was enough to push her over the edge, and after that you couldn't leave the two of them alone in a room with a flat surface. After their breakup and her subsequent near-obsession with Hyde, she started out this way with him.
  • Male Gaze:
    • Jackie was subject to this long before she became a full-fledged Ms. Fanservice.
    • In a famous scene in early season 5, Hyde shares a male gaze moment of Jackie with Eric to explain what he sees in her.
    • Jackie invokes this, as well as some fetish to attract Hyde's attention by wearing a toe ring. Hyde bravely retains his cool.
  • Morality Pet: To Hyde, as when they start dating he becomes more soft and less pissed-off.
  • Motor Mouth: To the frustration of virtually everyone else, she'll just go on and on and on.
  • Narcissist: In her own words, "if I could run across the beach into my own arms, I would."
  • No Accounting for Taste: Her relationship with Hyde. She's a rich, spoiled, selfish Alpha Bitch-type, he's a smart but lazy Conspiracy Theorist slacker. They both can see the improbability of their relationship.
    Jackie: Steven, do I really sicken you?
    Hyde: No. I sicken me because you're supposed to sicken me, but you don't.
    Jackie: Well, I feel the same way.
  • Odd Friendship: With Red. They become closer when Jackie helps him fix his car. Jackie and Hyde might be the only friends of Eric he actually likes, and Jackie tells Eric to put his father on the phone when she has to say goodbye.
  • One Head Taller: With Kelso (Mila Kunis is 5'4" and Ashton Kutcher is 6'2").
  • Parental Abandonment: Her father was arrested and went to jail. Her mother was traveling abroad at the time and was too busy partying to return for months on end. (Jackie and Pam did eventually patch things up, though.) From what we see of Jackie's father before he went to jail, he wasn't a particularly attentive parent either. Red and Kitty are much more like parental figures to her than her own parents.
  • Petite Pride: She often mocks Donna for her (relatively) large physique, as she goes into narcissistic rants about her gorgeously slender body.
  • Proud Beauty: So much. It was in many ways the main thing she and Kelso had in common. Often dips in the Screw the Rules, I'm Beautiful! pool.
  • Relationship Revolving Door: With Kelso. They are dating at the beginning of the series. In season 1, they briefly break up and then get back together twice. In season 2, they break up for a longer time after Jackie finds out that Kelso has been cheating on her with Laurie. They get back together in season 3, but Kelso runs of to California at the end of season 4 because he's afraid that Jackie will push him into marriage. They remain broken up for the rest of the series; Kelso proposes to her in season 8, but she turns him down (much to his relief). That '90s Show reveals that they get back together shortly after the the finale of That '70s Show, had a child together, married and divorced twice and about to get remarried yet again.
  • Savvy Guy, Energetic Girl: Energetic Girl to Hyde's Savvy Guy. They had this dynamic long before they were together, as depicted in the episode where he teaches her to be "zen" in order to piss Laurie off. She ends up pulling it off so well, he compliments her for the first time in the series, saying she was totally badass.
  • Screw the Rules, I Have Money!: She is a firm believer in this approach, though she sometimes needs reminding.
    Red: Look, Jackie. I know that things seem grim. But your father's rich, right? Well, then I'm sure that whatever trouble he's in, he'll buy his way out and wriggle free.
    Jackie: You're right! I mean, this is America. The rich are treated differently here.
    Red: Yep, and I'm so glad I took some shrapnel to make that possible.
    Jackie: Me too!
  • Small Name, Big Ego: She thinks she's the prettiest and most popular girl in Point Place and everyone could benefit from her advice. Others beg to differ.
  • Spoiled Brat: Especially in the first few seasons, until her father is arrested for embezzlement and her mother takes off to Mexico.
  • Token Evil Teammate: Along with Hyde, she's the most openly mean in the group. Due to her Alpha Bitch traits, she's snobby and prone to insulting her friends, although she gets better in later episodes.
  • Tomboy and Girly Girl: Girly girl to Donna's tomboy. Often lampshaded.
  • Took a Level in Kindness: She evolves into a Lovable Alpha Bitch in later seasons. She seems to have regressed in That '90s Show.
  • Tsundere: Type A, in all of her relationships.
  • Uptown Girl: Jackie is a rich girl and cheerleader, Hyde is a poor delinquent with a messed up family who lives with Eric's family because he has nowhere else to go. Initially Hyde stated their differences in social status as a reason they shouldn't go out, as they had nothing in common.
  • Why Did It Have to Be Snakes?: She's terrified of clowns.
  • Womanchild: "I want what I want when I want it, what is so immature about that?"
  • Wrench Wench: While the others are at career days with their parents, Jackie goes to the Forman house and helps Red in the garage. She demonstrates a real knack for helping fix the car.
    "I just fixed a car! I feel like Nancy Drew!"

    Fez 

"Fez"

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/That70sShow-Fez_582.jpg
"Whenever I look at naked ladies, I get really tired. Then I get my second wind, and then I want to look at more naked ladies."

Played By: Wilmer Valderrama

Appearances: That '70s Show | That '90s Show

A campy foreign kid who is always trying to get laid. Has a crush on Jackie and has made it known numerous times. Early in the series it was originally stated that "Fez" is not his real name, but rather a nickname the group came up with for him because his real name is something incomprehensible. However this idea was quietly discarded later on given that the mid to later seasons, along with That ‘90s Show, portray the name “Fez” as his actual given name.


  • Abhorrent Admirer: He had a crush on Jackie since the start but Jackie had never returned his feelings for most of the show, until the final season.
  • Ambiguously Brown: Part of his Non-Specifically Foreign characterization.
  • Appropriated Appellation: With time, he started using the nickname "Fez" as his actual given name, to the point of naming his business seen in That '90s Show "Chez Fez".
  • Big Eater: Coupled with his sweet tooth, he is nearly always seen snacking on something. He has a love affair with American junk foods after a lifetime of subsisting on the Foreign Queasine of his home nation. In the Scooby-Doo animated circle, Fez is seen eating almost like Shaggy.
  • Butt-Monkey: Being the effeminate, unlucky-with-the-ladies guy.
  • Camp Straight: Though it has been hinted from time to time that he's attracted to/in love with Kelso.
  • Casanova Wannabe: For most of the show he's a horny wannabe ladies’ man known for his pathetic attempts to get girls, until the final season when he becomes more successful.
  • Chivalrous Pervert: His creepy perversion and sex obsession rivals Kelso but unlike Kelso, he's more sensitive to women's feelings and is more gentlemanly than most characters. Fez shows that he can actually be quite charming and is also a good dancer but is often dismissed for being an eccentric and immature foreigner that's naive to American culture and etiquette which also makes Fez feel quite lonely and insecure.
  • Catchphrase:
    • "Good day." / "I said good day!"
    • Various uses of "son of a bitch!"
  • Characterization Marches On:
    • Fez's original character was that of a Funny Foreigner who misunderstood American culture. He didn't develop his constant desire to do it and love of candy for quite a while.
    • Early on, after making a tape of their ramblings in the circle, Fez called Kelso stupid. Later on, Fez would rush to his defense when Hyde or even Eric called Kelso stupid.
  • Cloudcuckoolander: Biggest one in the group along with Kelso. He is openly regarded as weird by his friends.
  • Culture Clash: Especially in the early seasons when his unfamiliarity with U.S culture was a Running Gag. Apparently, before becoming an exchange student, he had virtually no exposure at all to western media or pop culture.
  • Establishing Character Moment: Fez's first line in the first episode sums up everything you need to know about him.
  • Foreign Exchange Student: The name "Fez" is even short for "foreign exchange student", despite the difference in spelling, which the series' official website describes as "poetic license". His friends know Fez's real name but consider it unpronounceable.
  • Formerly Fit: Temporarily. He put on some weight at the beginning of the final season, prompting a couple of jokes from Kelso and a blunt "You're fat" from Hyde. The jokes stopped after episode 6.
  • Funny Foreigner: Even the characters aren't sure what country he's from, though Wild Mass Guessing favours Trinidad and/or Tobago.
  • Have I Mentioned I Am Sexually Active Today?: Early on, he sometimes tried to pretend he wasn't still a virgin, not that any of the other characters bought it for a second.
  • Heterosexual Life-Partners: With Kelso, with the two become very close friends over the course of the show. Which only makes it more sad that Fez now hates Kelso by That '90s Show due to Jackie leaving him for Kelso.
  • I'll Be in My Bunk: As the seasons go by, he gets more comfortable indicating this. On one occasion, Nina got him worked up, but it didn't go any further, so he made it clear this was to be the case. A squicked out Donna said they're all clearly getting too comfortable with each other.
  • Idiot Ball: Though, most of this has to do with him being unfamiliar with American customs. Because of his limited knowledge outside of his customs and his insatiable needs, he naturally thinks highly of Kelso.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: While he's easily the biggest overzealous pervert of the group to the point that he regularly pervs on his friends to try and watch them do it, he still manages to be a genuinely friendly, sensitive and sweet-natured gentleman, possibly even more so than Eric himself. In one episode, when he notices how hostile Caroline was being towards his friends, he confronts her and then breaks up with her.
  • Large Ham: Fez is a passionate, flirtatious and flamboyant character and like Kelso, his eccentric personality is always hilarious.
  • Lovable Sex Maniac: Fez's lechery is almost always played for laughs.
  • Mistaken for Gay: A running gag directed towards Kelso throughout the series. In S7 Ep 20, "Gimme Shelter" happens to him and Kelso. They're looking for an apartment and find a great one only to discover the landlord is Fenton, an enemy of Fez, who refuses them a lease. As they're leaving Kelso comments that they'll have to find someplace to live with the baby, referring to his with Brooke, however, Fenton misinterprets this and lets them move in since he can't turn away two men raising a baby.
  • My Sister Is Off-Limits: In a throwaway joke, Fez mentions his relief that his sister is thousands of miles away from Kelso.
    Kelso: And if things don't work out with Angie, I'm on the first plane out!
  • No Name Given: His real hame has never been revealed, it is only known that it is very long and hard to pronounce. When he introduced himself to the gang, his name was drowned out by the school bell. Those who try to read it either stop to ask how it's pronounced (like Christine St. George did) or immediately give up (like the announcer at the Roller Disco).
  • Non-Specifically Foreign: He is from some ambiguous foreign country (probably from somewhere in South or Central America). Most likely a former colony, as it's revealed in the last season it has a sizeable population of British and Dutch citizens. They also apparently won a war against the English.
  • Only Known by Their Nickname: "Fez". So-called due to his Overly Long Name, see below.
  • Overly Long Name: Fez' real name and home country in the early years; taken to the point of a Running Gag. When Fez does say his real name but is drowned out by the bell, in real life he was reciting all the actors on the series' names. This gag is eventually retired and “Fez” is depicted as being his actual name.
  • Progressively Prettier: Gets more muscular by each season.
  • Really Gets Around: In the final season he becomes a ladies' man and is seen with three different women in the same episode.
  • Sensitive Guy and Manly Man: Sensitive guy to Kelso's manly man.
  • Sitcom Arch-Nemesis: He and Fenton are this to each other.
  • Sixth Ranger: Fez is the newest member of the group at the beginning of the series.
  • Stalker with a Crush: He's this to Jackie and Donna. At some point, he tells Jackie, "You're a super cute high school girl that I've been spying on through a window for three and a half years".
  • Sweet Tooth: And how.
    "WHERE'S MY CANDY YOU SON OF A BITCH!?"
  • Those Two Guys: With Hyde up until season five, where Hyde starts dating Jackie, and Kelso starts hanging out with Fez.
  • The Unintelligible: The others treat Fez like his English borders on incomprehensible, rather than the notable but not overwhelming accent he actually has.
  • The Unreveal:
    • In one of the last episodes, his best friend from back home comes for a visit. He turns out to be... a different ethnicity and has a different accent (as he "comes from the other side of the island"). The end credits feature the gang quizzing them both about their country, but they only offer vague answers.
    • The same also applies to his real name: said best friend never calls Fez by any name throughout the episode.
  • Took a Level in Jerkass: Over the middle to later seasons he becomes even more creepy, perverted and all around disgusting towards his friends, to the point that he hides in closets and other locations to spy on women or on his friends in couples and repeatedly makes unwanted moves on women.
  • Took a Level in Kindness: Downplayed in the sequel series; While he’s still very fond of sexual relations, Fez no longer behaves the way he did as a teen and is content with committing to one woman. His pervy nature now seems a lot more silly than predatory.
  • What the Hell Is That Accent?: Enforced by Fez's actor, Wilmer Valderrama, to add to the Running Gag about Fez's unknown home country.
  • Where the Hell Is Springfield?: A Running Gag was that Fez often gave contradictory information about his home country while also never revealing exactly which one it was. He may have made some of these things up to mess with his friends, though.

    Randy Pearson 

Randy Pearson

Played By: Josh Meyers

Appearances: That '70s Show

The new guy for season 8. Very polite and laid-back. Quickly joins the group and dates Donna after Eric left for Africa.


  • The Ace: Ladies man, good with tools, and full of ideas.
  • Chick Magnet: Just like Kelso, he is good looking and successful with women.
  • Deadpan Snarker: He has also Eric's sense of humor.
  • Final Season Casting: Josh Meyers was put on the show after his contract with Mad TV was up and he chose not to continue being on the show.
  • Mr. Fixit: He forms a friendship with Red after showing Red how good he is at fixing things.
  • Nice Guy: Randy appears as a laid-back, gentle and polite young man.
  • Sixth Ranger: Joins the group in the final season.
  • Suspiciously Similar Substitute: Given that Kelso and Eric are Put on a Bus due to their actors' other commitments, Randy was clearly meant to replace the two. Like Eric used to be, he often acts as the ringleader for the youths' adventures, and he's good with the ladies just like Kelso was.

Other

    Laurie Forman 

Lauren "Laurie" Forman

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/download2_2427.jpg
"I'll do anything for ten dollars."

Played By: Lisa Robin Kelly (Seasons 1-3 & 5), Christina Moore (Season 6)

Appearances: That '70s Show

Eric's older sister, who studies to be a beautician. Happily slutty. Had a relationship with Kelso and is not liked by Kitty, who almost has nothing nice to say to her ever.


  • Beauty Is Bad: Proudly exemplifies this trope and will even shamelessly uses it as a means of seduction.
  • Big Sister Bully: Laurie relentlessly teases Eric and smugly rubs in the fact Red favors her whenever she can.
    Eric: Last time I trusted you, I wound up in the dryer with a pillowcase full of bees, so…
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: She is callous, manipulative and pretends to be nice when she is around her parents, especially her father. Her mother meanwhile knows exactly how selfish and reckless she really is.
  • Broken Pedestal: Red is sincerely disappointed to learn that his daughter sleeps around and isn't the devoted daughter she claimed to be. Even her flunking out of college didn't faze him, but this did.
  • Citizenship Marriage: A combination of this with Sexless Marriage. At the end of season 5, Laurie married Fez only so that he doesn't get deported. As season 6 showed, it was clearly a marriage in name only - They were never seen spending any time together, most of their brief interactions consist of trading barbs at each other, and much to Fez's chagrin, even after their marriage Laurie would still sleep around with anyone BUT him.
  • Commuting on a Bus: In Seasons 3, 5 and 6. She was upgraded into part of the main cast in Season 2, but disappeared in the second half of Season 3 and was removed from the opening credits scene. She returned in season 5 and 6 with her roles significantly reduced, and was then completely written out of the show with a Season 7 throwaway line mentioning she had moved to Canada.
  • Daddy's Girl: Red thinks that Laurie is perfect and lets her get away with murder, he seemingly has no idea that she's the town slut. When Red finally sees her for how his daughter really is, she's genuinely devastated to have fallen from his good graces.
  • Dating What Daddy Hates: Red doesn't take it well when he finds out that she's dating Kelso.
  • Demoted to Extra: In season 6, after having been recast. Despite appearing in most episodes of that season, she rarely speaks.
  • Disappointing Older Sibling: To Eric, who has no respect for his older sister, due to her being disagreeable to him. He even refers to Laurie as "The Devil".
  • Dumb Blonde: She's not as much dumb as she is willfully ignorant. This is likely due to a lifetime of taking short-cuts whenever possible. That said Laurie still isn't very bright and displays very little knowledge outside of anything directly affecting herself. Notably, she flunked out of the University of Wisconsin due to being more interested in fraternity guys than her studies.
  • Everyone Has Standards: Became horrified when Eric told her he saw Red and Kitty having sex, and then comforted him and told him it would be alright. She even tells their parents what he'd witnessed so they'd stop suspecting he was on drugs due to his behaviour, which was a rare instance of being a good sibling.
    Eric: You're actually being nice!
    Laurie: Yeah, it's just not my strong suit.
  • Flat Character: Her defining personality was that she was mean and nasty to everyone except to Red, whom she sucked up to and could do no wrong in his eyes, and she slept around. The main source of humor came from the fact that her nastiness and promiscuity were all there was to her. Some of the only attempts at breaking away from this were her comforting Eric after finding out he saw Red and Kitty having sex, becoming depressed after Red finally realized how nasty she was, and then later attempting to be a good person before she went back to her original, two-dimensional annoying habits in the later seasons.
    • On several occassions, she even seems to defy character development.
      • Upon growing attached to a baby she was forced to look after, she ultimately chose her hairdryer over it when pressed.
      • When she actually had the urge to talk about her feelings with Kelso, she ultimately concluded that she wasn't doing enough 'for herself.
      • While sleeping with Kelso, she actually got on surprisingly well with Jackie, but flipped right back to treating her as bad as everyone else once Kelso's cheating on Jackie was finally exposed.
    • That said, she does appear to be worried about her future when Red and Kitty confront her about it, and is genuinely excited to start Beauty School.
  • Foolish Sibling, Responsible Sibling: Foolish to Eric's responsible
  • The Friend Nobody Likes: Though none of the group (barring Kelso) like her at all due to Laurie's sociopathic and promiscuous nature, she often gets involved in their activities for one reason or another.
  • It's All About Me: Cares for very little outside of her own interests.
  • Jerkass: From Season 1 to 3 and early on in Season 5, she's egotistical, rude and enjoys tormenting Eric and manipulating her parents. Towards the end of Season 5 she seemed to become a better person. In season 6 she barely interacted with Eric and was instead mostly antagonizing Fez who was her legally-married husband.
  • Karma Houdini: She constantly tortures Eric, is incredibly promiscuous, purposefully ruins Kelso's relationship with Jackie, not to mention forcing herself on him, and routinely takes her barbs against Eric further than words and sabotages his plans with his friends. She never suffers any repercussions from her actions that last any further than a single episode and is always Red's little girl.
  • Karma Houdini Warranty: Until season 5 rolls around her father realizes exactly what she really is. That arguably ended in season 2 when her promiscuous ways was exposed to her father for the first time.
  • Long Bus Trip: Season 7, where it was eventually stated she was out of the country. Unlike before, she never came back, which was Lampshaded in the Grand Finale.
  • Ms. Fanservice: She is first introduced in only an oversized sweater.
  • Narcissist: Cares for literally no one but herself.
  • Parental Favoritism: Played with. While she is clearly Red's favorite- especially during the early seasons- it was also made clear Red didn't think she was capable of much. He saw her as his little girl, but nothing beyond that and didn't expect her to get far in life. This revelation actually hurt her, and it prompted her to pursue a career as a hair stylist for a while.
  • Pet the Dog: Comforting Eric after he told her he saw their parents having sex. Due to this, Eric was a complete basket case, and Red and Kitty thought he was on drugs. Since he couldn't bring himself to admit what was really wrong, Laurie bluntly told them "he saw you guys doing it!", then happily (and sincerely) told Eric "I helped!". She and Eric both lampshade this, Eric noting that her being nice is odd and Laurie apologizing for being poor at it, as she's not used to it.
  • Put on a Bus: Halfway through Season 3, she went to Chicago and was no longer in the main cast.
  • Really Gets Around: Oh, does she ever.
    Hyde: (To Kelso) "You're dating Laurie? That's not different, man. You're boldly going where every man's gone before!"
  • Satanic Archetype: Played for Laughs. Eric and his friends call Laurie the devil not just for being extremely smug and/or manipulative, but also for the fact that she was literally born with a tail. Not to mention her reaction to getting a 666 (which is actually the number used to invoke Satan) during a game of cards.
  • Sitcom Arch-Nemesis: Mostly antagonizing Eric, Hyde and Jackie. She became a better person towards the end of Season 5, when both Red and Kitty took over the Sitcom Arch-Nemesis role. When she returned in Season 6 (different actress and portrayal), most of her limited appearances involve trading barbs with Fez, with whom she married earlier on.
  • Sixth Ranger: Although Laurie dislikes most of the group, she still joins them for some of their activities, such as their graduation camping trip.
  • Slut-Shaming: If she's being nasty to someone, chances are they'll retaliate with a joke about her being "cheap" and "easy." Jackie even calls her a cheap slut after their Cat Fight.
  • Smug Snake: Laurie tends to act like she's smarter than she is and that she will always be seen as Red's favourite. Though it soon becomes apparent Kitty has long seen through the façade and even Red comes to realise she's nowhere near as responsible as Eric.
  • Spoiled Brat: This is how she is seen by Eric and the audience. Even her mother calls her this directly, believing she is far too selfish and nasty a person.
  • Stupid Evil: To quote Eric...
    Eric: She's stupid and evil. Mostly stupid.
  • Sibling Rivalry: Eric makes occasional references about her being the favourite child to Red, and they regularly roasted each other.
  • Teacher/Student Romance: Has an affair with her psychology professor.
  • "The Reason You Suck" Speech: Kitty delivers an epic one to her in Season 1 when sharing during a "therapy circle."
    Kitty: "Laurie, you're mean to your brother and you're screwing around at college. We don't even see you unless you run out of clean clothes or need cash. The fact is, you're an ungrateful spoiled brat."
  • Troll: Hyde observes that Laurie feeds off the pleasure she gets from insulting others. The more insulted the given person acts, the better.
  • The Unfavorite: To Kitty. By Season 5, even Red realizes how ungrateful she has been and calls her on it.
  • The Vamp: Laurie's habit of using men as her playthings is well known to Eric and his friends. Though Kelso isn't smart enough to be put off pursuing her, even whilst in a relationship with Jackie.
  • Took a Level in Kindness: Seems to make a genuine effort to change and be a good person towards the end of Season 5, although she still retained her promiscuous ways. Her change for the good (relatively speaking) seemed to waver in season 6, where the target of her Jerkass tendencies was shifted from Eric onto Fez instead (Her legally-married husband). However, this was largely because she had close to zero interaction with Eric in her final season: The character was played by a different actress and the script was clearly altered to reduce her character dynamics with the main cast in order to write her out of the show.

    Charlie Richardson 

Charlie Richardson

Played By: Bret Harrison

Appearances: That '70s Show

The new guy who hangs out with the gang at the end of season 7... for only four episodes. He's the son of a friend of Red's back in the war and has only a few memorable moments.


  • Accidental Pervert: He accidentally walks in on Kitty naked, much to Red's anger. Twice.
  • Dropped a Bridge on Him: After seemingly being Eric's replacement for the last season, he falls off the water tower in the first episode. Naturally, the audience thinks that he's okay...until the water tower is renamed the Charlie Richardson Memorial Water Tower. The character was intended to last longer, but Harrisson was offered the lead role for the short-lived series The Loop and left the show.
  • Naïve Newcomer: And how. After getting drunk in front of Red, he wishes to apologize to Red and that he'll understand, to which Eric understandably laughs. And if that wasn't enough, he even takes advice from Kelso before calling him a "genius". Though it is understandable since he just joined the gang and went to a Catholic school.
  • Nice Guy: Arguably the most nice person in the entire series, though incredibly naive.
  • Sixth Ranger: Played straight when he first appears. He quickly gains respect when he invites the boys into his father's beer warehouse.
  • Tempting Fate: He talks about how good it feels to fit in with the gang, calling it “the first day of the rest of my life”… right before his fatal fall from the water tower.

    Angie Barnett 

Angie Barnett

Played By: Megalyn Echikunwoke

Appearances: That '70s Show

Hyde's half-sister introduced in the 7th Season. She and Hyde co-own a record store. She only appeared in eight episodes of the show.


  • Black and Nerdy: She's black and is a mathematics major.
  • Contrasting Replacement Character: To Laurie. Both are sisters of a male character of the gang and both were in a relationship with Kelso. However:
    • Laurie is white while Angie is black.
    • Angie is a smart, hardworking young woman, while Laurie is lazy and prefers to sleep or scheme her way into an easy life.
    • While Angie and Hyde did start out as having an antagonistic relationship like Laurie and Eric, Angie and Hyde's relationship became more friendly.
  • Long-Lost Relative: Angie is Hyde's half-sister via their father William "WB" Barnett.
  • Named After Someone Famous: She is named after Angie Barnett, the first wife of David Bowie.
  • Put on a Bus: The 22nd episode of season 7 has her get a promotion that takes her to Milwaukee.
  • Shout-Out: She first appears in the episode "Angie" which is a reference to the song of the same name by the Rolling Stones.
  • Sibling Rivalry: She has one with Hyde and they bicker regularly, but they work well together and he's bailed her out of trouble a couple times.
  • Sibling Yin-Yang: Angie is serious and career-focused in contrast to her slacker of a brother.
  • Twofer Token Minority: She's a black woman and is the only racial minority of the entire cast besides Fez and Leo.

    Nina Bartell 

Nina Bartell

Played By: Joanna Canton

Appearances: That '70s Show

Fez's boss at the DMV and later girlfriend in Season 5.


  • Dating What Daddy Hates: Her parents are racist to Fez when he first meets them. She dislikes their racism and how they treated Fez, so she gets back at her parents by having sex with Fez on their bed.
  • Deadpan Snarker: She tends to respond to Fez and the group's antics with dry wit.
  • It's Not You, It's Me: She uses this excuse to break up with Fez when in reality, she dumped him because she found him too clingy and annoying.
  • Likes Younger Men: Fez was still a minor in high school during the time she dated him. Her exact age is never mentioned but it’s strongly implied that she’s at least in her early 20s, given that she isn’t in school and manages a DMV.
  • Only Sane Man: When it comes to dealing with Fez, she's clearly the more down to earth one and stops them breaking up a few times early on. She points out in one very short conversation with Fez that they clearly need more practice at having sex after their first time was horrible.
  • Put on a Bus: After she and Fez break up for good, she never appears again.

    Rhonda Tate 

Rhonda Tate

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/d70aeb9987096a25a2b9b7df18eedcee_400x400.jpeg
"I may not be popular, but given the chance, I'll put out something fierce."

Played By: Cynthia Lamontagne

Appearances: That '70s Show

Rhonda Tate, commonly called "Big Rhonda", is a student at Point Place High School who dated Fez during Season 4.


  • Characterization Marches On: In her debut episode "It's a Wonderful Life", she is dismissive, domineering, and overall unpleasant. The events of the episode taking place in Eric's imagination, that's the way he probably imagined her before knowing her. Throughout her subsequent appearances in Season 4, where she appears "in real life", she is revealed to be completely the opposite.
  • The Lad-ette: And how! She's fond of drinking beer and participating in hot-dog-eating contests.
  • Put on a Bus: Like Nina in Season 5, she disappeared after breaking up with Fez.
  • Tiny Guy, Huge Girl: She's taller than Fez, and is able to lift him up when they hug.
  • What Does She See in Him?: Is on the receiving end from the gang after Fez and her get together at a party. Donna's advice to Fez when she saw them the next day was "Sober up, man!". Nonetheless, Fez spent the entire season with her in a surprisingly stable relationship until he got dumped (and, in the moment, even choked) for being too handsy.

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