Who's The Boss?
A series of accidents temporarily confines Tony to a wheelchair, but things get worse when Angela declares that she's going to nurse him back to health.
A series of accidents temporarily confines Tony to a wheelchair, but things get worse when Angela declares that she's going to nurse him back to health.
When Samantha's grandfather passes away suddenly, Tony is concerned about her unusual reaction to the loss.
When the Parents Association embarks on a fund raising drive, President Tony volun-teers to camp out on a billboard for donation pledges.
Tony is pitted against a typing teacher from Brooklyn, nicknamed "The Terminator," in a charity boxing match.
Angela talks legendary performer Ray Charles into recording a love song written by Samantha's boyfriend as a jingle for an important account but when the young couple splits up, Samantha insists that Angela call the whole thing off. Ray Charles appears as himself.
Tony wrestles with his conscience over whether to try to patch things up after Angela and Geoffrey call it quits.
When Tony learns of a facet of his late wife's personality he never knew existed, he doubts his worth as a husband.
A timid Jonathan goes on his very first date with a girl, only to have his hopes for a relationship dashed when the young lady falls for Tony instead.
The family reminisces about how Tony came to take on the job as Angela's housekeeper.
It's a comedy of errors when Tony and Angela exchange Christmas gifts and Tony receives a very special card.
Samantha finds that trying out for the girls' basketball team puts a damper on her love life, while a friendly game of miniature golf escalates into all-out war between Tony and Angela.
Tony has a reunion with a former schoolmate he has held a grudge against for many years and finds, to his astonishment, that the man is a priest.
When Tony and Angela engage in separate dating, thoughts of each other creep into their minds and play havoc with their romantic reflexes.
Tony decides that Jonathan has became an intellectual wimp, and against Angela's better judgment, enrolls him in gymnastics competition designed to heighten the youngster's machismo -- and his own self-image.
While serving as members of a wedding party, Tony and Angela envision themselves as the bride and groom.
When Samantha returns from a party with a hickey on her neck, she considers it a romantic status symbol, while her dad regards it as an ominous portent of things to come.
When Mona starts her own limousine rental service, it sets the wheels in motion for new business for Angela's ad agency.
Angela's dealt a full house when she agrees to host Tony's poker party with one condition -- that he keeps his roughneck buddies away from her "seemingly" prudish friend.
Samantha's babysitting days are over when Tony catches her sweetheart with his hand stuck in the kitchen plumbing and her girlfriends romping through the house while Jonathan is supposed to be sleeping.
Samantha's "discovered" talents as a ballerina has Tony ready for them both to pirouette up the ladder of success - until Mona steps on his toes and suggests he hang up his tutu before becoming an overhearing stage parent.