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Back in the late 1970s and early ’80s, sitcoms like M*A*S*H and All in the Family ruled television. They were funny, entertaining, and loved by audiences, but they also covered issues previously considered taboo for broadcast television, helping people discuss and better understand those issues. The fact that television was evolving in the ’70s directly led to Three’s Company, one of the first American sitcoms to utilize double entendres and innuendo as a direct source for comedy. Based on the British series Man About the House, Three’s Company follows three roommates: klutzy but clever Jack, level-headed and confident Janet, and ditzy blonde Chrissy (who, after her actress demanded a pay raise, was replaced by Cindy and later, Terri).
In the show’s pilot, Jack pretends to be gay so that he can move in with Chrissy and Janet without upsetting their strict landlord, Mr. Roper. He isn’t interested in his roommates particularly; he just needs a place to live. Over the series, the three roommates develop a friendly, platonic relationship, despite numerous misunderstandings and arguments between them (which usually form the basis for an episode). We’re using IMDB rankings, an out-of-10 system based on registered user reviews, to count down the top ten episodes of this beloved sitcom.
Two Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (8.2)
In this season six episode, Terri, a registered nurse who moved in with Jack and Janet (replacing Cindy, who was Chrissy’s replacement), invites her friend Dr. Tom Miller to dinner, but first takes him to the trio’s apartment to help him de-stress.
This leads to one of the show’s famous “misunderstanding” gags – because of his stressed behavior, which Jack and Janet see as concerning, they believe Tom to be an escaped mental-ward patient instead of a doctor and fear for Terri’s safety. They eventually end up following her to the restaurant to keep an eye on him.
And Now, Here’s Jack (8.3)
In this episode, also from season six, a local talk show host enjoys Angelino’s Restaurant (an Italian restaurant introduced in season 5) so much that he invites Jack, the head chef, to perform a cooking demonstration on live TV. Jack hides notecards by different props to help him recall his lines, but this goes awry when the props are rearranged, causing Jack to botch his demonstration with Terri and Janet, his assistants, helplessly watching.
Jack is fired from Angelino’s, but after his blunder goes viral and makes the restaurant a surprise hit, he is rehired and given a pay raise.
Night of the Ropers (8.3)
In this season five episode, Stanley Roper, the original trio’s first landlord, ignores his 25th wedding anniversary to attend a bowling event. This upsets his wife, Helen, who visits Jack, Janet, and Cindy for advice.
(TIE) The Love Diary (8.3)
In this season three episode, Chrissy takes a freelance job typing up a manuscript for a client known only as “Wanda X.” The manuscript, an X-rated fictional diary, quickly attracts the attention of Mr. Roper, who is there to clean the carpets – but when he reads about the “dignified landlord” Wanda lusts after, he is unnerved.
Thinking Chrissy wrote the manuscript herself and has become attracted to him, he prepares to evict her and her roommates to save his marriage, but, thankfully, the trio – with some help from a disbelieving Helen – discovers his mistake in time.
(TIE) Chrissy’s Hospitality (8.3)
In this season four episode, Chrissy is injured while trying to put up a shower curtain and has to stay overnight at the hospital, leaving Jack and Janet severely worried about her. She recovers promptly, however, and, in a good mood, begins to joke with the doctor – who finds her jokes so funny that he laughs until he cries.
Grandma Jack (8.3)
In this season eight episode, Jack’s signature cookie recipe wins a baking contest. Larry (Jack’s best friend) submitted the recipe in hopes of winning Jack the large cash prize, but bypassed a crucial detail – the contest was only open to women.
Adamant that Jack should receive his just desserts, Larry convinces him to dress up as “Grandma Tripper”, the fictional persona Larry developed to enter the contest in the first place. Unfortunately, when Jack arrives at the baking company headquarters, he learns he is just one of three finalists who have been selected to compete – live! – for the massive jackpot. Hilarity ensues.