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17 May, 2025
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Jodie Sweetin and Andrea Barber Won't Rule Out Another “Full House” Series, Maybe One That's '“Golden Girls”-esque'
@Source: people.com
Jodie Sweetin and Andrea Barber are not ruling out another Full House series. Asked by a fan on their rewatch podcast How Rude, Tanneritos!, Barber said, "never say never," to a question about a Fullest House series — on the heels of the original show, which aired from 1987 to 1995, and its followup, Fuller House, which aired from 2016 to 2020. "We need some more time. It's too soon," Sweetin, 43, said. "But I absolutely would do it. Again, if we could come back and like, finally, I feel like do that ridiculous sort of adult sitcom because then we would be ... you know, give us another 15 years or whatever." Sweetin continued: "The kids that were watching Fuller House will now be the age, like, in their 20s with their own [kids], so I feel like all the generations would have moved up enough that you could do kind of a bawdy, Golden Girls-esque silliness of the three." The three would be Barber's neighbor Kimmy Gibbler, alongside Sweetin's Stephanie Tanner and her big sister D.J., played by Candace Cameron Bure. Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. "That's the challenge is because if we follow the format, Fullest House would focus on our kids. But I think the audience, like the OG Full House audience, they're invested in the OG characters," Barber, 48, added. "Yeah, they would want to see us in the retirement home," Sweetin said, adding that the characters might all be "living together in the same full retirement community" and "sharing a golf cart." Barber's character Kimmy, the two said, would no doubt be the resident party planner of the community. "Banners everywhere. The whole retirement committee," Sweetin joked. "Forget it. Just lousy with banners everywhere." Barber added: "I would watch this show. I mean, even if I wasn't on it, I would watch this show." In terms of how they could make the show happen, Sweetin said, "Just keep hanging on — just for another 15 or 20 years and, you know, keep up that enthusiasm." "It just means the world that you guys still love these characters so much that you still want to see what happens to them," Sweetin added. In an earlier interview with PEOPLE, Barber noted that Full House was a formative part of the women's lives, and that the podcast helps renew interest in the show, and deepen their bond. “Full House was our childhood for eight years, eight very formative years,” Barber told PEOPLE last year. “And so getting to relive those memories, things that we haven't thought about in 35 years, I expect it's going to deepen our bond even more than it already is."
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