
Who's The Boss?
Tony thinks he's a cinch to become the TV sports announcer for Ridgemont College, but meets his match when daughter Samantha decides to audition.

Tony thinks he's a cinch to become the TV sports announcer for Ridgemont College, but meets his match when daughter Samantha decides to audition.

Tony and Angela have some explaining to do when a social worker makes a surprise visit and Billy is nowhere to be found.

Tony is invited to Italy to claim an inheritance from his late Uncle Aldo -- which means he'll soon have the proud task of acquainting Samantha and Billy with their ancestral roots. But when he arrives and finds that Aldo's past dealings have besmirched the revered family name, he's determined to restore its integrity for the sake of the children.

At a dance which Tony and Angela are attending with separate dates, a longtime happily married couple -- who reminds them of themselves -- indulges in happy reminiscence. It awakens Tony's and Angela's romantic interest in each other and prompts them to fantasize about what their own love story might be like, played out in 1940s Hollywood style.

Tony's childhood dream of becoming a fireman comes true when he becomes a volunteer for the Fairfield Fire Department, but his enthusiasm lands him in hot water.

Tony and Angela befriend Brad and Jane, a newly engaged couple who seem perfect in every way, until their friendly evenings out become a little too friendly.

Tony is delighted to meet his maternal grandfather from Italy for the very first time, but is shocked to discover that his houseguest may not be a member of the "famiglia" after all.

Angela's prospective client, a famous professional baseball player, seems to have everyone charmed but Tony, who has some serious concerns about Charlie's obsession with money.

Samantha and her friend Bonnie head for Ft. Lauderdale during spring break but find themselves in over their heads when two local boys begin to make their move.

When Tony agrees to coach Angela's volleyball team, his sympathetic ear and winning spirit score points with the girls but Angela feels left out of bounds.

Tony and Angela unwittingly fix Mona up with the grandfather of Samantha's boyfriend, and he turns out to be the fiancée she walked out on 40 years ago.

Angela invests in a rental house and appoints Tony as the superintendent, but is shocked to find that he has rented it to a beautiful young actress instead of the nice, retired gentleman they'd agreed on.

Tony fears that his zealousness to "destroy" obnoxious neighbor Fred Hartwell in a tennis tournament may have had tragic consequences and bends over backwards to make amends when Fred's identical twin, Ed, shows up.

When Sam sees Angela being kissed by her date, she begins to worry about Tony spending the rest of his life alone after she leaves for college.

After Mona loses Angela's car and diamond necklace to a hustler in Atlantic City, Tony and Angela team up to win them back in a high-stakes poker game.

Tony calls on his old friend Bobby to help Jonathan build his self-confidence after he's forced to trade in his baseball glove for an accordion.

Tony hopes a student-teaching course will give him the "easy A" he needs to win a business school scholarship, but instead it gives him the inspiration for an entirely new career goal.

Angela unwittingly sets the neighborhood gossip wheels in motion when she tries to impress the girls at her new health club by implying that she and Tony are having an affair.

Tension between Samantha and Jonathan leads to a session with a family therapist, but it's a burnt -out Tony who finds himself in a support group for "Supermoms."

When her friend Al forms a rock & roll band, Samantha jumps at the opportunity to take the music business by storm by becoming their manager.