A Fuller House finale plot hole shows how the spin-off betrays Full House's core theme. Reviving one of the most iconic family sitcoms, Netflix brought back almost all of the core cast members for its offshoot that focused on Danny Tanner's (Bob Saget) daughters, DJ (Candace Cameron-Bure) and Stephanie (Jodie Sweeting). Given Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen's non-involvement, Fuller House didn't feature Michelle and was essentially replaced by Kimmy Gibbler (Andrea Barber) instead.
Netflix's Full House reboot leaned on nostalgia. It simply repeated the late '80s/early '90s sitcom's premise by subjecting DJ to the same situation that her father was once in — accidentally widowed and left to raise three young kids. That being said, some of its plotlines over its five-season run were updated to appeal to a contemporary audience, including Stephanie's surrogacy. While they both started the same way, Fuller House delivered a much better finale than its parent series when it saw all three female lead stars getting married to their respective love interests.
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The Fuller House finale was emotionally satisfying as it also doubled as a reunion for the Full House core cast, albeit in the absence of Michelle and Becky (Lori Loughlin). Despite this, there was one problem: while the brides' family and friends were all in attendance to celebrate their big day, the grooms didn't have a party at their own wedding. Granted that Jimmy Gibbler's (Adam Hagenbuch) sister, Kimmy was also there, Steve Hale (Scott Weinger) and Fernando Hernandez-Guerrero-Fernandez-Guerrero's (Juan Pablo Di Pace) respective families were nowhere to be found. What makes this worse is the
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