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Good Luck Charlie

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Good Luck Charlie
File:Good Luck Charlie - logo.PNG
Created byPhil Baker
Drew Vaupen
StarringBridgit Mendler
Leigh-Allyn Baker
Bradley Steven Perry
Mia Talerico
Eric Allan Kramer
Jason Dolley
Theme music composerJeanne Lurie, Chen Neeman
and Aris Archontis
Opening theme"Hang In There Baby", performed by Bridgit Mendler
ComposerStephen R. Phillips & Tim P.
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons3
No. of episodes64 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producersPhil Baker
Drew Vaupen
Dan Staley
Camera setupVideotape (filmized);
Multi-camera
Running time23 minutes
Production companiesIt's a Laugh Productions
Disney Channel Original Productions
Original release
NetworkDisney Channel
ReleaseApril 4, 2010 (2010-04-04) –
present

Good Luck Charlie is an original Disney Channel television sitcom, which premiered April 4, 2010. The series was created by Phil Baker and Drew Vaupen, who wanted to create a program that would appeal to entire families, as opposed to children only. It revolves around a Denver family, the Duncans, as they try to adjust to the birth of their fourth child, Charlotte "Charlie" Duncan (Mia Talerico). In each episode, Teddy Duncan (Bridgit Mendler) creates a video diary containing advice for Charlie about their family and life as a teenager. Teddy tries to show Charlie what she might go through when she is older in the video diaries for future reference. Each video diary ends with Teddy (or someone else from the family, even Charlie) saying the eponymous phrase, "Good luck, Charlie."

Among other decisions, executives included adult-centric scenes and changed the series title from Oops to Love, Teddy and finally to Good Luck Charlie in order to ensure the series would appeal to all family members. Good Luck Charlie premiered on Disney Channel in the United States on April 4, 2010.[1] It premiered in Canada on April 5, 2010, the United Kingdom and Ireland on May 14, 2010, and in Australia and New Zealand on July 23, 2010. Good Luck Charlie was renewed for a second season, with production beginning in August 2010 with a season premiere on February 20, 2011.[2] A feature-length Christmas Disney Channel Original Movie based on the series entitled Good Luck Charlie, It's Christmas! began production in March 2011 for a December 2011 premiere.[3] On August 29, 2011, Disney Channel announced that they had renewed the series for a third season.[3] The third season premiered on May 6, 2012.

Premise

The series centers on the Duncan family, who are still adjusting to the birth of their fourth child, Charlotte "Charlie" Duncan (Mia Talerico).[4] When parents Amy (Leigh-Allyn Baker), a nurse, and Bob (Eric Allan Kramer), an exterminator, return to work, they ask their three older children—PJ (Jason Dolley), Teddy (Bridgit Mendler), and Gabe (Bradley Steven Perry)—to help raise their little sister. At the same time, Teddy, PJ, and Gabe try to deal with school and typical social challenges in their life.[5]

The events of each episode become material for a video diary Teddy is making for her younger sister. Teddy hopes the videos will provide useful advice for Charlie after they have both grown up and Teddy has moved out. Also at the end of each video, she (and/or other cast members) states, "Good luck, Charlie" or may even say it indirectly such as "Wish them good luck, Charlie".[6] During the movie, Amy reveals to Teddy that she is pregnant with her fifth child, which Teddy is trying to adjust to but this story plot is not carried into the actual series until the third season. In the third season the baby is born and is a boy named Toby.[7]

Characters

Main characters

The cast of Good Luck Charlie (The Duncan family, from left to right), Eric Allan Kramer as Bob, Leigh-Allyn Baker as Amy, Mia Talerico as Charlie, Bridgit Mendler as Teddy, Bradley Steven Perry as Gabe and Jason Dolley as PJ.
  • Teddy Duncan
Teddy R.[8] Duncan (Bridgit Mendler) is the protagonist of the series and Charlie's older and only sister. Feeling that she will not be around as much when her baby sister Charlie is grown, she produces and directs video diaries for her, hoping that it will give her advice that will help her be successful as a teenager. Her best friend is Ivy Wentz. She is usually a straight A student. It was mentioned in "Sun Show part 1" that her parents were expecting a boy, hence her usually boyish name "Teddy". She dated Spencer Walsh in season one but they broke up after she caught him hanging around with a pretty, dim-witted brunette named Skyler, breaking her heart. She and Skyler later become friends despite Teddy and Ivy being annoyed by her at times because of her dumbness but they get used to it, as it is her nature. She and Skyler also compete in a Battle of the Bands contest, but when Skyler and PJ get together, they combine the two bands together, winning the contest. She and Spencer later get back together in season two, where Spencer kisses her and says that hurting her was the stupidest thing he's ever done. Throughout the show Teddy has had numerous boyfriends including Derek, a very relaxed guy with a motorbike who has not very interested in Teddy, and Evan, a boy that Teddy once liked until she realized that he was into Pokio a little kids card game and dumps him because of this in a larp (live-action role play) in the park. Teddy shows a lot of care towards her brothers, as demonstrated when she saves PJ from falling out of a tree house window on the condition of him needing to drive her where ever she wanted for a month, or when Gabe gets a black eye from Jo and Teddy offers to help him with his problem. Teddy is known as a "goody-goody" (GG) from her best friend Ivy. It is revealed in "Bye Bye Video Diary", that the reason she wants Charlie to have video diaries with advice in them because she wants Charlie to grow up to be a good girl.
  • PJ Duncan
PJ[9] Darth[10] Duncan (Jason Dolley) is the oldest of the Duncan siblings. He and Teddy often fight, although they care about each other, and he usually gets along well with his younger brother, Gabe. He often appears awkward, absent-minded and childish, but has shown on numerous occasions to be resourceful, creative and intelligent. Also, he has also been shown to be a good cook. He and his best friend, Emmett, have their own band entitled "PJ and the Vibe". PJ occasionally uses his younger sister, Charlie, for his personal gain like when he uses her to make big tips while working for Kwikki Chikki by saying that his mother, Amy was ill in the hospital when really she works there. He dated Teddy's friend and ex-girlfriend of Spencer Walsh, Skyler, who has the same type of scatterbrain he has, but they broke up in "PJ in the City" when Skyler had to move to New York City because of her father's new job. When he dated Skyler, he became concerned when her ex-boyfriend kept texting her to get back together, he tells him to leave Skyler alone. He was originally supposed to be named after his great-grandfather Patrick John, but Bob was nervous when writing on his birth certificate, resulting in the legal name "Potty John" instead. Despite Bob trying to correct this in the season 2 episode "Can You Keep a Secret?", he accidentally changed the name to "PP" instead.[9]
  • Gabe Duncan
Gabriel[11] "Gabe" Duncan (Bradley Steven Perry) is the younger brother of Teddy and PJ and older brother of Charlie and Toby. It is demonstrated early in the series that Gabe does not approve of Charlie's arrival and takes the longest, of all the Duncans, to get used to her. However, he often reluctantly assists with taking care of his younger sister and is gradually beginning to demonstrate more fondness of her. He is a prankster, and a troublemaker, often sarcastic and lazy, but can also be dutiful and determined at times. He is front-man when it comes to the Duncans' running rivalry with Mrs. Dabney, the Duncans' neighbor, who is often the target of Gabe's pranks and cracks, which is the only time the family doesn't mind them. He is the only Duncan to have short brown hair, unlike the rest of his family, who are blond. One time he was in a commercial with a fake mom (Perry's real life mother, Kim) where he claims "she looks more like my mom than my real one." A running gag in the show is that he insults his father because of his weight and baldness, his mother's cooking, PJ being a goofball, Teddy being a "goody-goody", and occasionally Charlie. Whenever there is a special occasion, he wants to skip the ceremony and get to the cake.
  • Charlie Duncan
Charlotte "Charlie" Duncan (Mia Talerico) is the title character and the second youngest of the Duncan siblings. She is mostly portrayed as being happy and seldom cries. Charlie appears the least of the Duncans in the series as she is little. It sometimes takes a few tries to get her to do the right thing. Charlie can also be mischievous at times. Many of the Duncan family's adventures revolve around Charlie. Her older brothers, PJ and Gabe, are often seen using Charlie for their own benefit, although PJ shows that he cares about her deeply. However, Gabe seems to dislike Charlie the most although, in some episodes, he is seen being quite fond of her. Amy thinks of Charlie as the perfect baby, being cute and all that. Bridgit Mendler played the older version of Charlie in "Bye-Bye Video Diary" in a dream sequence that shows what Teddy fears if Charlie does not receive the video diaries, Charlie might act bad, quit school, run away with her juvenile boyfriend, and resent Teddy. It was revealed in "Charlie is 1" that it was Teddy's idea to nickname her Charlie. Charlie was seen having short hair, usually tied up like a bun in the first season, but as she grew older, had longer hair in a ponytail or pigtails. Charlie and Toby share the same birthday. Charlie speaks more often in Season 3.
  • Amy Duncan
Amy B.[12] Duncan – (née Blankenhooper[13]) (Leigh-Allyn Baker) is the mother of PJ, Teddy, Gabe, Charlie, and Toby and wife of Bob Duncan. She works as a hospital nurse and is often portrayed as dutiful, protective and comedic. She is very fond and loving of her family, and does everything she can to care for and protect them. She appears to be somewhat uncomfortable when she is not taking care of her family, specifically Charlie, but as the series progresses, she begins to feel assured that her youngest daughter and family are in good hands and now trusts that her husband and three eldest children can take care of Charlie. She used to be on the local news team and was also a poet in her high school days. She lets special opportunities, such as being on TV or singing in front of a group, go to her head. She has a habit of taking any chance of any publicity that may shine on her family to focus onto her. This never works out well, usually she ends up being cut from the project or tossed out of certain groups (Mommy & Me, etc). Amy seldomly accepts her children's misbehavior. It is revealed in the episode "Teddy's Bear" that whenever Amy gets involved in things that may tick her off, she turns into "Mama Bear" and loses control. It is revealed in the movie, that she is pregnant again with her fifth child. In "Teddy on Ice", she reveals that Charlie is the perfect combo of the three older kids – "The intelligence of Teddy, the sweetness of PJ, and none of Gabe!" According to Bob, Amy is usually grumpy during her third trimester in pregnancy.
  • Bob Duncan
Bob William Duncan[14] (Eric Allan Kramer) is the father of PJ, Teddy, Gabe,Charlie, and Toby and husband of Amy Duncan. He owns his own pest control company, "Bob's Bugs Be Gone". He loves bugs and attends the bug convention every year. Bob is the coach of Gabe's basketball team, but he was temporarily replaced by his wife. It is also mentioned in "Snow Show Part 1" that Bob and Amy are not married legally because they were scammed by a con man who impersonated a judge. Then they get married legally with their four oldest children present. His dream as a child was to be a professional wrestler named "Bobzilla", which he showed in his company's commercial. Bob gets made fun of a lot throughout the series because of his weight and baldness, usually by his younger son, Gabe. He is very "cheap" and "tight" with his money. He wants his family to know him as a "fix-it" man, though his projects never seem to work out. He is slightly afraid of Amy, but he calls it a "strong respect". He has two positions of authority when it comes to the children: driving lessons and barbecuing. He can be lazy but is determined to spend quality time with his wife and children. Especially his two sons; PJ and Gabe, they often go on a fishing trip which is a nightmare for PJ and Gabe especially when Bob makes his egg salad sandwiches. He has issues with his mother-in-law, Petunia in the movie that he gets a timeout just because Petunia blames him for not raising Charlie properly. In the end, Petunia says he is good at making beautiful babies, with a little sarcasm. It is revealed he has apologized to Amy 162 times.

Recurring characters

  • Ivy Wentz
Ivy Renee[15] Wentz (Raven Goodwin) is Teddy's best friend. She is seen spending most of her time with Teddy at the Duncan's residence and often accompanies her on her dutiful, or personal, excursions. Ivy is energetic, witty and humorous and has proven to be quite intuitive; although she does not receive the best grades in school. She is passionate, if not obsessed, about clothes, money, popularity, boys and texting; but on numerous occasions has proven to be a loyal and comforting friend. Ivy briefly dated Emmett when they were younger, and now never misses a chance to insult him, but went to the school dance with him so she and Teddy can have a ride in "Dance Off". It is revealed that she loves country music and animal print clothes. She is dating a classmate named Raymond. Ivy is a major recurring character.
  • Emmett
Emmett (Micah Williams) is PJ's best friend. He is slender, comedic, and has a desperate, misguided & very one-sided attraction to Teddy, though Teddy constantly rejects him. Emmett accompanies PJ on the drums in his band "PJ and the Vibe", and sometimes assists PJ on his problematic excursions. Emmet has a nephew named Mason who, he claimed, was better than Charlie, until Charlie beat Mason in a "baby race" by learning to walk. Emmett is also an incredible dancer, with skills matched only by Spencer. He once went out with Ivy when they were younger. In his mind, he sees himself as being suave, sophisticated, and very attractive to girls.
  • Spencer Walsh
Spencer Walsh (Shane Harper) is Teddy's boyfriend. At first, they started dating after they begin studying together. He cheated on her in the episode "Girl Bites Dog" and Teddy broke up with him. In "Snow Show", he goes to the lodge that the Duncan family is staying at to get back together with Teddy. They share a kiss on the ski lift. At the end, they just decide to stay friends. He and Emmett share similar dancing abilities that rival each other, and they eventually become friends. In the episode, "Can You Keep a Secret?", he and Teddy get back together.
  • Mrs. Dabney
Mrs. Estelle[16] Dabney (Patricia Belcher) is the Duncans' stern and irritable neighbor. In "The Curious Case of Mr. Dabney", she was mistakenly accused of killing her husband. In "Kit And Kaboodle", it is mentioned that Mrs. Dabney and her four sisters were born in Sheboygan, Wisconsin, in 1958. She wanted the Duncans' tree, which housed PJ and Teddy's tree house, cut down; but the family fought back. It is revealed that Estelle is one of quintuplets; her four sisters are played by Belcher via split screen. Mrs. Dabney is often suspicious of Gabe, because his pranks and troublemaking are often directed at her. She is often antagonistic towards the Duncans—Bob, PJ, and Gabe especially. She was also a big fan of the fictional "Higgins and Zork" television show when she was younger. She loves her son and her cat more than her husband, and some wonder why she married Mr. Dabney if she hated him so much. In "It's A Charlie Duncan Thanksgiving", it is revealed that she and Mr. Dabney had recently divorced. In the same episode, she flirted with the Duncan kids' grandfather but broke up with him not much later. It is revealed in "Make Room for Baby" that she does not know the Internet.
  • Jo
Jo Keener[17] (G. Hannelius) is Gabe's tomboyish bully-turned-friend. She was introduced in "Boys Meets Girls", bullying Gabe before revealing she has a crush on him. Since that episode, she appears friendly with Gabe, assisting him with certain situations with an occasional wise-crack and insult at his expense. It is demonstrated that she is good with babies after taking care of Charlie. It is also revealed that Gabe also has a small crush on her but doesn't show it. In "Duncan's Got Talent", Jo played a trick on Gabe that almost ruined his chance of being class president. Earlier in that episode, Gabe revealed that he'd had a dream about Jo, but he stopped himself before he could say what she did in it. In season 2, Gabe and Jo settle their differences in "Duncan vs. Duncan". According to Jo, she and Gabe have a complicated relationship.
  • Mary Lou Wentz
Mary Lou Wentz (Ellia English) is Ivy Wentz's mother and Amy Duncan's friend. She first appears to be rather bland; but, as the series progresses, she becomes more entertaining and vibrant. She is a skilled knitter; and, in "Gabe's 12-1/2 Birthday," she is shown to be a talented singer, performing the national anthem at a game. She has appeared in six episodes. In Season 1, she appeared in "The Curious Case of Mr. Dabney" and "Butt Dialing Duncans"; and, in Season 2, she has appeared in "Appy Days", "Gabe's 12-1/2 Birthday", "Amazing Gracie", and "Teddy on Ice" She is married to Harry Wentz (William Allen Young), and their highly conservative and traditional ways annoy Ivy and Teddy. In one episode, Teddy visits their home; and they invite her to participate in a family sing-a-long of Row, Row, Row Your Boat and eat liver and onions, leading Teddy to leave the house in the middle of a snowstorm. In "Amy Needs A Shower", she hosts Amy's baby shower. Amy Duncan describes her as too perky.
  • Skyler
Skyler (Samantha Boscarino) is Teddy's friend and Spencer's ex-girlfriend. She first appears and was introduced in the episode "Girl Bites Dog" as a complete stranger to Teddy. Later Teddy finds out that she is Spencer's other girlfriend and they break up with him. She then appeared in "Teddy's Broken Heart Club Band" where she and Teddy record a mean song about Spencer to get back at him. Teddy and Skyler become good friends. She and PJ become a couple when she and Teddy enter a battle of the bands contest to compete against PJ and Emmett and also Spencer. She and PJ broke up in "PJ in the City" when Skyler moved to New York due to her fathers' new job. Skyler is a gifted guitarist and pianist, a talented singer, and can write incredible poems and songs. Throughout the series, she is considered to be Teddy's ditsy, air-headed tag-a-long who hangs out with Teddy when she and Ivy aren't together.
  • Jake
Jake (Tucker Albrizzi) is Gabe's friend. He first appeared in "Pushing Buttons", where he bought Gabe's bike from him for $10. He then appeared in "Baby's New Shoes" where he went to a movie theater with Gabe and Teddy to help her expose an employee selling children age-inappropriate movie tickets in exchange for money. He also appeared faking a broadcast with Gabe at the end of the episode. He made another appearance in "Termite Queen", where he helps Gabe shoot monster movie.

Episodes

SeasonEpisodesOriginally aired
First airedLast aired
126April 4, 2010 (2010-04-04)January 30, 2011 (2011-01-30)
230February 20, 2011 (2011-02-20)November 27, 2011 (2011-11-27)
FilmDecember 2, 2011 (2011-12-02)
321May 6, 2012 (2012-05-06)January 20, 2013 (2013-01-20)
420April 28, 2013 (2013-04-28)February 16, 2014 (2014-02-16)

Development and production

"A lot of the high-concept shows have kids in an extraordinary situation where the parent or adult takes a backseat, and sometimes the adult isn't as smart as the kid, or it's all about the kids putting one over on the adults. But we have a new show called "Good Luck Charlie" that has a very different kind of concept. It is very grounded, very relatable, and it's not about the parents being dumber than the kids. We try and mine as much comedy out of the parents as possible, but it doesn't mean the kids can't learn from the parents and get guidance from the parents."

Adam Bonnett, senior Vice President of original programming for Disney.[18]

The Good Luck Charlie pilot, entitled "Study Date", was shot in February 2009,[19] at Sunset Bronson Studios (where Hannah Montana was taped) and the series was picked up later that year.[20] The show's production occurs at Sunset Bronson Studios in Los Angeles even though the show is set in Denver, Colorado. Starting with the 2nd season, the series is taped at Los Angeles Center Studios, where Shake It Up is also taped. The show operates on a weekly schedule.[21] Scripts for a new episode are issued on Monday before a read-through, Wednesdays are rehearsal and network run-through day, final scripts are issued on Thursday, and the episode is shot in front of a live studio audience on Friday night. According to Mendler, occasionally "episodes are too big to handle with a live audience [and are] taped without an audience, but mostly they're live."[22]

Good Luck Charlie was created by Phil Baker and Drew Vaupen, who have been writing together since 1993 on shows ranging from Suddenly Susan to Sonny with a Chance.[23] The pair aspired to create a program that would appeal to entire families rather than simply kids. Inspired by the success of reruns of shows such as Full House and George Lopez with young audiences, Vaupen and Baker turned to family sitcoms. "We wanted to do a show about a family, to bring back a family sitcom and make it about a real family, not wizards, nobody's a pop star, nobody has a TV show," said Vaupen,[23] referring to Wizards of Waverly Place, Hannah Montana, and Sonny with a Chance.

Veteran writer-producer Dan Staley (Cheers) later joined the show as executive producer. Disney’s Gary Marsh said “because most network television abandoned the traditional sitcom, Disney has been able to snatch up a lot of experienced talent for behind the camera, including executive producer Dan Staley…”[24]

Good Luck Charlie's central family, the Duncans from Denver, Colorado, was carefully crafted for broad appeal. While the series is still told primarily through the view point of the Duncan children, the children's parents, Amy and Bob, are less on the periphery and writers attempt to add scenes that adult viewers can relate to. For example, in one scene in the pilot episode Amy confesses to Bob that she is overwhelmed with becoming a working new mother again. "She's not sure she can pull this off," says Bonnet. "And just playing that scene the way we did, a very real scene between husband and wife, kind of makes this show different."[4] The writers also try to include jokes for adult viewers while remaining chaste enough for their young target audience.[4] Unlike most previous Disney Channel series such as Sonny with a Chance, Hannah Montana, or Cory in the House, both parents are seen in the Duncan family. "It felt like the right time to have a show with two parents, to debunk the myth that Disney never has the mom in the picture," says Adam Bonnett, Senior Vice President of original programming for Disney Channel. "Because it is a myth."[25]

Because a series about the rich and famous might alienate viewers in a troubled economy, the Duncans were made middle-class. According to Gary Marsh, Entertainment President of Disney Channel Worldwide, "We want[ed] to do is acknowledge the reality of the times in which we live, where two parents work, where kids are expected to help out around the house in meaningful ways. Real-life issues happen. Everyone isn't living The Life of Riley all the time."[4]

Naming

Broadening Disney Channel's appeal was also a concern when choosing the names of the characters names and the title of the program. "You want a title that says, a) this is a sitcom and, b) this is something that will interest the main demographic but also we're trying to expand the Disney brand beyond just girls," Vaupen commented.[23] The series' title was originally "Love, Teddy", the phrase Teddy had used to end her video diary entries during development. However, "Love, Teddy" immediately felt feminized and almost excludes boys," Vaupen said. "We also didn't want to have the word 'Baby' in the title because that would exclude certain people."[23] The Duncan baby was originally named "Daisy" during development, but producers thought that "Charlie", which is usually a boy's name, would attract more boys.[25]

Casting

As Good Luck Charlie is low concept and character-driven, "the actors not only had to carry the show, they also had to have "pitch-perfect" chemistry with each other to make the family dynamic believable."[24] Bonnet says Disney Channel executives "just fell in love with" Bridgit Mendler, who stars as the series' protagonist, teenager Teddy Duncan.[25] "She has all the attributes of a Disney star," said Bonnet.[25] Mendler first heard about Good Luck Charlie in late November 2008. After several rounds of auditions and cast reads, she finally secured the part in January 2009.[19] Both Mendler and Jason Dolley, who plays Teddy's older brother PJ, have previously starred in other Disney Channel series and movies; Mendler had a recurring role on Wizards of Waverly Place while Dolley starred in Cory in the House and several Disney Channel television movies. Variety magazine's Brian Lowry says their careers "[reflect] the Disney Channel's knack for identifying young performers and rolling them from one project to the next, in a fashion reminiscent of the old studio system."[5] Both Eric Allan Kramer, who plays Bob Duncan, and Leigh-Allyn Baker, who plays Amy Duncan, have also guest starred on other Disney Channel shows. Baker says Disney had been "courting [her] for awhile to play a mom", but she had always felt too young. "I kind of feel like hey, you know what? When I'm done with this stint, I'll actually be the age everyone thinks I am to be able to play the part."[26] Baker, a new mother herself, was nine months pregnant when she auditioned for the role.[27]

Mia Talerico – Like most series featuring baby actors, producers of Good Luck Charlie had originally planned on having twins play Charlie Duncan, the title character and the Duncans' new baby.[23] Hiring two babies would allow for longer work days without violating child labor laws as well as the ability to substitute one child for the other if one was unavailable. However, the show makers were unsuccessful in finding an appropriate set of twins and decided to cast Mia Talerico instead.[23] Marsh says hiring Talerico, who was ten months old when she was cast, was their biggest risk while creating the show: "It's like flying without a net. She may have a bad day and we can't shoot and it'll cost us tens of thousands of dollars. But so far, so good. She's the most obedient actor I've ever worked with."[24]

Reception

Critical reception

The series's premiere earned positive reviews. It also currently holds a 7.9 making "Good" rating on TV.com,[28] and 6.7 rating from 2,957 users on IMDb.com.[29] Robert Lloyd of The Los Angeles Times described it as a "professional sitcom from sitcom professionals" with efficient jokes and typical sitcom characters, and situations which are "willfully arranged".[4] However, Lloyd praised the series for offering a "contextually novel picture of a teenage girl taking care of her baby sister with a persuasive nonchalance and practical ease that transcends the strenuous comedy that surrounds it."[4] Neal Justin of the Star Tribune said the "slapstick heavy, laugh-track fueled sitcom" had no redeeming qualities other than "keeping your 11-year-old sedated for a half hour".[30] Rob Owen of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette said Good Luck Charlie would appeal to kids, but not adults. "Parents have seen the same sort of show done before and better in ABC's 1980s-era TGIF lineup," wrote Owen.[31] Contrarily, Brian Lowry of Variety magazine said Good Luck Charlie was "a surprisingly refreshing throwback to ABC's "TGIF"-style sitcoms".[5] He commented that while the series did not "push sitcom boundaries", it was "sprightly" and "pleasantly handled".[5]

Viewership

The series premiered to 4.6 million viewers, making it the highest-rated series premiere for a Disney Channel Original Series since The Suite Life on Deck in 2008, and the week's highest-rated cable program.[32] Maclean's reported that overall, the first season "has been doing about as well as Disney’s more successful shows – The Suite Life and so on."[22]

On January 16, 2011, the episode "Snow Show (Part 1)" became the most-watched episode ever of Good Luck Charlie, earning 6.7 million viewers exceeding the 5 million average of the episode "Kit and Kaboodle", as well 4.6 million average for the show's premiere. These high ratings came with the The Suite Life on Deck episode "Twister: Part III" serving the show's lead-in.[33]

Awards

Awards
Year Award Category Nominee Result
2010 Hollywood Teen TV Awards Teen Show Pick: Comedy Good Luck Charlie Nominated
Teen Pick Actor: Comedy Jason Dolley Nominated
Teen Choice Awards TV Breakout Star Female Bridgit Mendler Nominated
Popstar! Magazine Female Newcomer Won
J-14 Teen Icon Awards Icon of Tomorrow Nominated
2011 Young Artist Award Best Performance in a TV Series (Comedy or Drama) and Supporting Young Actor[34] Bradley Steven Perry Nominated
Best Performance in a TV Series (Comedy or Drama) and Guest Starring Young Actress 11–15[34] Ryan Newman Nominated
Best Performance in a TV Series and Guest Starring Young Actor Ten and Under[34] Tucker Albrizzi Won
J-14 Teen Icon Awards Iconic TV Actress Bridgit Mendler Won
British Academy Children's Awards BAFTA Kid's Vote: TV Good Luck Charlie Won
2012 Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards Favorite TV Show Nominated
Favorite TV Actress Bridgit Mendler Nominated
Young Artist Award Best Performance in a TV Series – Supporting Young Actor Bradley Steven Perry Nominated
Best Performance in a TV Series – Guest Starring Young Actor 18–21 Booboo Stewart Nominated

Music

The series theme song is "Hang in There Baby". "I'm Gonna Run to You", which was co-written by Bridgit Mendler, was featured in the telemovie, Good Luck Charlie, It's Christmas!. It was released on iTunes on November 12, 2011,[citation needed] and peaked at number 15 on Radio Disney's Top 30 Countdown on January 23, 2012.[citation needed] "You're Something Beautiful" was featured in the 1-hour special episode, "Special Delivery". All three songs are sung by Bridgit Mendler.

Film

Good Luck Charlie, It's Christmas! also known as "Good Luck Charlie: The Road Trip Movie" is a 2011 Christmas film based on the series. The film premiered December 2, 2011 on the Disney Channel. The film was directed by Arlene Sanford and written by Geoff Rodkey. The Disney Channel Original Movie follows the Duncan family on their road trip to Amy Duncan's parents' house for Christmas.

Indian adaptation

An Indian adaptation of the show, titled Best of Luck Nikki, premiered on Disney Channel India on April 3, 2011. Sheena Bajaj plays Dolly Singh, a character similar to that of Teddy Duncan.[35]

International broadcasting

Country / Region Channel Series premiere Title in country
Preview Premiere date
 United States Disney Channel[1] NONE April 4, 2010 Good Luck Charlie
 Arab League Disney Channel Middle East NONE 2010 Good Luck Charlie
 Canada Family Channel[36] April 5, 2010 May 14, 2010 Good Luck Charlie
 Australia Disney Channel Australia May 14, 2010 July 23, 2010 (Premiere)[37]
 New Zealand
 United Kingdom Disney Channel UK and Ireland May 14, 2010 June 12, 2010
 Ireland
 Germany Disney Channel Germany[38] May 7, 2010 November 7, 2010 Meine Schwester Charlie (My Sister Charlie)
Super RTL[39] NONE
 Austria Disney Channel Germany[38] May 7, 2010
 Poland Disney Channel Poland[40] NONE June 5, 2010 Powodzenia Charlie!
 Greece Disney Channel Greece[41] NONE Καλή Τύχη Τσάρλι
 Czech Republic Disney Channel CEE NONE Hodně štěstí, Charlie
 Slovakia NONE Veľa šťastia, Charlie
 Bulgaria NONE Късмет, Чарли
 Hungary NONE Sok sikert, Charlie!
 Romania NONE Baftă,Charlie!
 France Disney Channel France June 9, 2012 September 1, 2010 Bonne Chance Charlie
 Quebec VRAK.TV NONE December 28, 2010 Bonne Chance Charlie
 Argentina Disney Channel Latin America July 10, 2012 July 12, 2010 ¡Buena Suerte, Charlie!
 Mexico
 Venezuela
 Ecuador
 Colombia
 Brazil Disney Channel Brazil NONE July 10, 2012 Boa Sorte, Charlie!
 Chile Disney Channel Latin America NONE ¡Buena Suerte, Charlie!
Canal 13 (Chile) NONE January 7, 2012
 Spain Disney Channel Spain September 19, 2012 October 8, 2010 ¡Buena Suerte, Charlie!
 Portugal Disney Channel Portugal Boa Sorte, Charlie!
 Italy Disney Channel Italy July 12, 2010 October 1, 2010 Buona fortuna, Charlie!
Italia 1 NONE
 Turkey Disney Channel Turkey NONE June 19, 2010 İyi Şanslar Charlie
 Israel Disney Channel Israel NONE October 17, 2010 גוד לאק צ'ארלי
 Japan Disney Channel Japan July 19, 2010 September 10, 2010 グッドラック・チャーリー
Taiwan Taiwan Disney Channel Taiwan NONE June 24, 2010 我愛夏莉 (I Love Charlie)
 Hong Kong Disney Channel Asia NONE June 24, 2010 我愛夏莉 (I Love Charlie)
 Cambodia August 9, 2010 August 14, 2010 (Season 1)
November 6, 2011 (Season 2)
Good Luck Charlie
 Brunei
 Indonesia
 Malaysia
 Philippines
 Singapore
 Thailand
 Vietnam
 South Korea 찰리야 부탁해 (I'm Counting on You, Charlie)
 Belgium Disney Channel The Netherlands & Belgium NONE January 7, 2011 Good Luck Charlie
 Netherlands
 Russia Disney Channel Russia January 2, 2011 January 29, 2011 Держись, Чарли!
 Denmark Disney Channel Scandinavia NONE UNKNOWN Held og lykke Charlie!
 Norway NONE UNKNOWN Lykke til Charlie!
 Sweden NONE UNKNOWN Lycka till Charlie!
 Finland Disney Channel NONE UNKNOWN Onnea matkaan, Charlie!

References

  1. ^ a b "Disney Channel, Disney XD Present Programming Plans for 2010–11". Disney Channels Worldwide. March 3, 2010. Retrieved April 7, 2010.
  2. ^ ‘Good Luck Charlie’ Season 2 Posted on January 26, 2011 by Disney Channel Media Net
  3. ^ a b "Disney Channel Orders Third Season of Hit Comedy Series Good Luck Charlie" (Press release). Disney Channel Medianet. August 31, 2011. Archived from the original on November 13, 2011.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Chmielewski, Dawn C. (December 31, 2009). "A new Disney Channel niche: adults". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 7, 2010.
  5. ^ a b c d Lowry, Brian (April 4, 2010). "Good Luck Charlie". Variety. Retrieved April 7, 2010.
  6. ^ "Good Luck Charlie – Disney Channel". Tv.disney.go.com. Retrieved June 5, 2010.
  7. ^ "Special Delivery". Good Luck Charlie. Season 3. Episode 7. June 24, 2012. Disney Channel. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help)
  8. ^ "Teddy Rebounds". Good Luck Charlie. Season 1. Episode 22. November 28, 2010. 09:02 minutes in. Disney Channel. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help)
  9. ^ a b "Can You Keep a Secret?". Good Luck Charlie. Season 2. Episode 27. November 6, 2011. 11:40 & 17:45 minutes in. Disney Channel. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help)In the episode it is revealed that PJ was supposed to be named after his great-grandfather Patrick "Paddy" John but, because of a mistake in PJ's birth certificate, he was named Potty John Duncan instead. Later in the episode the birth certificate is changed, but because of another mistake, it was changed to PP Duncan instead of the intended PJ Duncan.
  10. ^ "Special Delivery". Good Luck Charlie. Season 3. Episode 7. June 24, 2012. Event occurs at 48:20. Disney Channel. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help) Amy calls him PJ Darth Duncan.
  11. ^ "Charlie Did It!". Good Luck Charlie. Season 1. Episode 6. May 9, 2010. 06:38 minutes in. Disney Channel. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help)
  12. ^ "A L.A.R.P. in the Park". Good Luck Charlie. Season 2. Episode 6. March 27, 2011. 14:00 minutes in. Disney Channel. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help)
  13. ^ "Snow Show: Part 2". Good Luck Charlie. Season 1. Episode 25. January 23, 2011. 05:00 minutes in. Disney Channel. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help)
  14. ^ "Amy Needs a Shower". Good Luck Charlie. Season 3. Episode 3. May 13, 2012. 15:30 minutes in. Disney Channel. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help)
  15. ^ "Teddy's Broken Heart Club Band". Good Luck Charlie. Season 1. Episode 21. November 21, 2010. 14:12 minutes in. Disney Channel. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help)
  16. ^ "Kit and Kaboodle". Good Luck Charlie. Season 1. Episode 12. July 11, 2010. 11:28 minutes in. Disney Channel. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help)
  17. ^ "Duncan's Got Talent". Good Luck Charlie. Season 1. Episode 16. September 12, 2010. 9:27 minutes in. Disney Channel. I'm Jo Keener {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help)
  18. ^ Bond, Paul (March 30, 2010). "Q&A: Adam Bonnett". Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved April 15, 2010. [dead link]
  19. ^ a b Rosenberg, Alex (March 2010). "Former Tam student turned starlet". Tamalpais High School. Retrieved April 15, 2010.[dead link]
  20. ^ Gonzalez, Maria (July 16, 2009). "Bridgit Mendler Bites Back on 'Wizards of Waverly Place'". BuddyTV. Retrieved April 6, 2010.
  21. ^ "TV Pilot Production Listings". Backstage.com. April 1, 2010. Retrieved June 5, 2010.
  22. ^ a b Weinman, Jaime (May 21, 2010). "Disney Channel News, In Which The Name "Jonas" Is Rarely Mentioned – TV Guidance, Uncategorized". Macleans.ca. Retrieved June 5, 2010.
  23. ^ a b c d e f Owen, Rob (April 4, 2010). "Tuned In: Disney Channel hopes "Good Luck Charlie" will appeal to both kids and parents". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved April 5, 2010.
  24. ^ a b c Kinon, Cristina (April 3, 2010). "Disney Channel's 'Good Luck Charlie' harks back to traditional family sitcoms". Daily News (New York). Retrieved April 7, 2010.
  25. ^ a b c d Bond, Paul (July 14, 2009). "Disney eyes another teen star". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved April 7, 2010.(subscription required)
    Bond, Paul (July 15, 2009). "Disney eyes another teen star". dapsmagic.com. Archived from the original on November 10, 2011.(Copy of original)
  26. ^ Arbios, Traci (April 4, 2010). "Interview with TV Mom Leigh-Allyn Baker". News & Observer. Retrieved April 7, 2010. [dead link]
  27. ^ Bergstrom, Elaine (March 31, 2010). "'Good Luck Charlie': Leigh-Allyn Baker stars in a family-friendly winner". Zap2it. Retrieved April 15, 2010.
  28. ^ Good Luck Charlie at TV.com
  29. ^ Good luck Charlie at IMDb
  30. ^ By neal justin television (April 1, 2010). "TV critic's picks: Friday". StarTribune.com. Retrieved June 5, 2010.
  31. ^ "Owen-TV: Good luck finding parents to watch 'Charlie'". ScrippsNews. March 31, 2010. Retrieved June 5, 2010.
  32. ^ Kissell, Rick (April 7, 2010). "'Idol,' Fox top week in demos". Variety. Retrieved April 15, 2010.
  33. ^ Cable Top 25: BCS Championship, 'Jersey Shore,' 'The Game' Top Weekly Cable Viewing By Robert Seidman – January 19, 2011 – tvbythenumbers.com
  34. ^ a b c "32nd Annual Young Artist Awards". Young Artist Awards. Retrieved March 5, 2011.
  35. ^ "HINDI Cartoons – Best of Luck NIKKI Commercial". Videos.desishock.net. Retrieved August 20, 2011.
  36. ^ "FAMILY CHANNEL | Family Channel welcomes its newest addition: Disney Channel's Good Luck Charlie". Newswire.ca. May 28, 2010. Retrieved June 5, 2010.
  37. ^ Newsome, Brad (July 22, 2010). "Pay TV- Friday, July 23". The Age. p. 34. Retrieved October 28, 2010. {{cite news}}: |section= ignored (help)
  38. ^ a b "Meine Schwester Charlie: Infos zur TV-Serie". Fernsehserien.de. June 11, 2007. Retrieved June 5, 2010.
  39. ^ Michael Brandes (August 13, 2010). "Super RTL: Programmpräsentation 2010/11". Wunschliste.de. Retrieved August 20, 2011.
  40. ^ "Disney Channel". Disney.pl. Retrieved June 5, 2010.
  41. ^ "Nova.gr". Nova.gr. January 27, 2010. Retrieved June 5, 2010.

External links