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'Full House' Comeback: A Sneak Peek into the New Look of the Home

The 1980s sitcom "Full House" will soon be back featuring a new abode and a new title through Netflix's spin-off series entitled "Fuller House." The Today I Found Out website refreshes the minds of the older generation, informing the younger ones that this American hit  program was created by Jeff Franklin and was aired in ABC from 1987-1995. It is about a man whose wife died, leaving him the responsibility of raising their three daughters. He then enlists his best friend and his brother-in-law to help him take care of his three kids in their home in San Francisco.

Lisa Davis writes in Realtor that Netflix's "Fuller House" will re-unite most of the program's original cast, as well as will feature the iconic home into the limelight, although it will be better and more colorful this time. "Full House" and "Fuller House" star Candace Cameron Bure (who plays DJ Tanner in the show) posted last Thursday on her Facebook a photo of her in front of the replica of the house, which was still being built on the Warner Bros lot. She wrote this caption: "They are building the Full House house on the Warner Brothers back lot! Welcome to my childhood home."

According to Davis, many of the viewers thought that the original house belonged to the Victorian homes, known as the Painted Ladies in San Francisco, but the red house at 1709 Broderick Street, which was used for the exterior shots, is actually a less fancy building in the Lower Pacific Heights. During its airing in the 1980s, the house was painted all white and its door was painted red.

Macolm Venable describes in the TV Guide that the house's new exterior is light blue with a white trim.

Venable also relates that on "Fuller House," a now grown-up DJ enlists her best friend Kimmy Gibbler (Andrea Barber) and sister Stephanie (Jodie Sweetin) to help her take care of her three kids. Dave Coulier, Lori Loughlin, Bob Saget and John Stamos, have all signed to guest-star on the show.

As early as April this year, The Washington Post came out with an article by Emily Yahr announcing that Netflix will have a reboot of the popular sitcom with 13 episodes to debut in 2016. Yahr added that the revival was not that surprising with the cast seen awfully close in the past years. It is as if they were already secretly plotting a comeback, says Yahr.  


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