Roseanne : How the Revival Torpedoed the Show’s Divisive Finale—Sort Of

This post contains spoilers for the series premiere of ABC’s Roseanne reboot.

Most devout fans prefer to pretend like the final season of Roseanne—in which the Conner family wins the lottery, and everything subsequently goes off the rails—never happened. The series finale, especially, has become infamous. In it, Roseanne reveals that the show we’ve been watching has actually been a fictionalized version of her “real” life, dropping bombshells including the biggest shocker of all: that Dan actually died in the hospital after his heart attack at Darlene’s wedding in Season 8.

As ABC announced its decision to reboot its most iconic sitcom, many wondered exactly how the new series would square with this revelation, and Season 9 in general. They got their answer when the revival’s pilot ended up simply ignoring most of the original series finale—much like the first episode of the new Will & Grace, which faced a similar hurdle. Those who watched the new Roseanne closely, however, might have found themselves left with a few key questions.

First, let’s get this out of the way: as promised, Dan Conner is, in fact, alive. (Good thing, too—John Goodman’s talents would have been wasted playing a corpse.) Naturally, the show makes a few jokes to acknowledge what had once been Dan’s fate—including Dan himself asking, “Why does everybody always think I’m dead?” Goodman himself was apparently a fan of that approach; as he told reporters in January, “I thought [this] was a clever way to do it, handle it and get it out of the way.”

When Will & Grace returned to NBC, it used a similar maneuver--but in reverse. In the revival pilot, Karen Walker (Megan Mullally) told the group, "I had the craziest dream. . . Will was living with a swarthy man in uniform, and Grace was married to a Jew doctor.” When she found out both Will and Grace were childless and once again single, she breathed a sigh of relief, saying, "Nobody wants to see you two raise kids!" The new Roseanne pilot takes the opposite approach, defying the original finale to say that none of what viewers saw was actually a dream.

Dan's resurrection is the most dramatic turn from the original series finale, but there’s another possible Roseanne retcons as well. Episode 1 also reveals that Darlene has moved in with Roseanne after losing her job. She’s a single mom now, raising two kids—her teenaged daughter, Harris, who was born premature in Season 9, and her eight-year-old son, Mark.

Which is interesting. We don’t learn the names of either Darlene or Becky’s husbands, though the show does indicate that Becky’s husband is dead. In the original series, Darlene was married to David Healy, and Becky was married to his older brother, Mark. Then, in the first finale, Roseanne revealed that in “reality,” Darlene was actually married to Mark, while Becky was married to David. (She switched their partners in her fictionalized version because, as Roseanne put it, “In my writing, I did what any good mother would do; I fixed it.”) Is there any chance that this detail carried over to the reboot, and that little Mark is the son of Mark Healy?

This series has done enough weird stuff that such a husband swap would hardly be a total shock; remember that Patty Duke Show send-up involving the two Beckys? Then again, it would be ill-advised to toss aside the years of chemistry and nostalgia between David and Darlene—especially when Johnny Galecki is set to come back and reprise his role as David. Considering that Becky's husband is dead, this means David is almost certainly Darlene’s ex.

Still, it’s worth asking why Darlene would name her son after Mark—a guy she was never crazy about, even if he was her husband’s brother. Has the show entered a reality in which Darlene and Mark get along?! Maybe; maybe not. After we learn the truth, all that’s left to find out is whether Jackie was actually a lesbian the whole time.

22 Movies and TV Shows That Will Save Us in 2018

HBO is once again hoping you’ll ignore the big Game of Thrones-shaped hole in its schedule and turn your attention back to the sci-fi mind game that is Westworld. The Emmy-nominated series, starring Evan Rachel Wood and Thandie Newton, is ready to confound you once again in its second season. Until its spring 2018 premiere, take a trip back in time and revisit nine burning questions we still have about the finale.
Yara Shahidi takes the lead in this youthful Black-ish spin-off set to air on Freeform starting Jan. 3, 2018. In this series, Zoey is finally off to college, stumbling through cringeworthy rites of passage like embarrassing herself at a frat party and hiding secrets from her parents.
Every superhero you love is coming out with a new movie in 2018. In no particular order, get ready for a bounty that includes: Black Panther, Avengers: Infinity War, Deadpool 2, The New Mutants, X-Men: Dark Phoenix, Ant-Man and the Wasp, Venom, and Aquaman.
’Tis the season to watch a bunch of perfect human specimens fight for tiny gold medallions. This year’s Winter Olympics will kick off on Feb. 9, 2018 in Pyeongchang, South Korea.

The Winter Olympics

’Tis the season to watch a bunch of perfect human specimens fight for tiny gold medallions. This year’s Winter Olympics will kick off on Feb. 9, 2018 in Pyeongchang, South Korea.
By Julian Finney/Getty Images.
If the title alone doesn’t catch your eye, the artists behind it surely will. Spike Lee is directing this thriller, produced by nascent horror maestro Jordan Peele, about a black detective who infiltrates the KKK in the 1970s. John David Washington (son of Denzel) plays the lead, while the rest of the cast includes Adam Driver and rising star Laura Harrier. Black Klansman does not yet have a release date.
This superhero movie, which hits theaters on June 15, 2018, gets its own slide—because fans have been waiting for this sequel for 13 years. At long last, the Parr family is back fighting crime, with a little help from close friend Frozone (voiced by Samuel L. Jackson). It’s time to find your supersuit—and remember, no capes!
Brian Henson’s (son of Jim) dark detective twist on the pleasant world of puppetry promises to be a baffling pop-cultural delight in the vein of Who Framed Roger Rabbit. Humans and puppets coexist in this dark tale about a serial killer who’s out to murder the stars of hit 80s series The Happytime Gang. The cast is stacked with comedy stars, led by Melissa McCarthy, Maya Rudolph, and Elizabeth Banks. The film will hit theaters on Aug. 17, 2018.
Everyone’s favorite grouchy, hard-drinking superhero is finally back for a second season on March 8, with Krysten Ritter slipping on the familiar leather jacket for Jones’s latest adventures. Though the plot is still fairly under wraps, a teaser trailer promises that she’s still a sardonic and deliciously violent destroyer of men.
My, my, how can you resist this? The sequel to the 2008 blockbuster musical is finally on its way, and it’s already guaranteed to be your favorite guilty pleasure of 2018. The story is a prequel to the original, revolving around Meryl Streep’s character when she was a young woman (perhaps even . . . a young dancing queen). Not only is its core cast back in action, but the truly iconic Cher has decided to bless the sequel with her presence. Catch it in theaters on July 20, 2018.
Break out your flannel and sarcasm, because Roseanne is back. The classic 90s sitcom is getting the nostalgia reboot treatment on March 27, more than 20 years after it first ended.
The all-female Ocean’s 11 reboot is easily one of the most anticipated films of the year, not least because of its excellent cast (Rihanna! Sandra Bullock! Cate Blanchett!). The glitzy heist movie revolves around the Met Gala, promising a coterie of celeb cameos, and is slated to hit theaters on June 8, 2018. Satiate yourself until then by re-watching the perfect trailer.
We may be in the midst of a true-crime revival, but few productions promise to be as opulent as this Ryan Murphy mini-series. The horrifying true story about the murder of fashion icon Gianni Versace will be retold with a stellar cast that includes Édgar Ramírez as Versace himself, Penélope Cruz as his sister Donatella, and Ricky Martin as Versace’s partner, Antonio D’Amico.
After breaking out on Master of None and winning a historic Emmy for one of this year’s best TV episodes, Lena Waithe is ready to claim her spot in the prestige-TV realm. Enter The Chi, her Showtime series about young people coming of age in Chicago, set to premiere on Jan. 7.
The classic Madeleine L’Engle tale is finally coming to the big screen on March 9, 2018, thanks to Disney and director Ava DuVernay. The sci-fi story about a girl tesseracting her way through time to find her missing father will star newcomer Storm Reid alongside stars like Oprah Winfrey, Mindy Kaling, Reese Witherspoon, and Chris Pine.
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