How rude! Many of the original cast members of Full House took to Twitter to show their disdain over the disappointingly inaccurate Lifetime Original Movie about life on set of the 1980s sitcom. Just ahead of a new reboot series with highly anticipated Netflix streaming episodes, the actors react to the special.
Candace Cameron Bure, who played DJ, was the first to make a comment. "[She] will reprise her role in the Netflix sequel...[and] made her feelings very clear. Though she didn't mention the program by name, she tweeted a simple note of, 'So bad. Just so bad,' while it was airing," Variety reports. Andrea Barber, who played DJ's best friend Kimmy Gibbler and will play her again in the sequel alongside Bure, also went to Twitter. People says, "'Basically I'm going to be making this face all night,' ...sharing a photo of herself as Gibbler, making a skeptical expression."
Seeing as the two are actually quite close in real life, especially after filming comenced for Fuller House earlier this summer, Yahoo! News reports, "Bure also retweeted a picture that Andrea Barber posted of her character Kimmy Gibbler's signature unimpressed face. Barber tweeted she would be making the face all night and asked her followers if 'anything good' was airing on TV Saturday night."
John Stamos, on the other hand, took a very different approach to the TV movie and wished the actor playing Uncle Jesse for Lifetime a hopeful and supportive message. "'Good luck tonight @JMichaelGaston - Hope you have as much fun being me as I do,' he wrote to actor (and Miley Cyrus's onetime boyfriend) Justin Gaston, who even donned Stamos's signature '80s mop top," People says.
Stamos also went on to admit that the movie did get one thing straight, that he did indeed attempt to get Mary Kate and Ashley Olsen fired from the show. "He tried to get [them] booted from the series. 'It's sort of true that the Olsen twins cried a lot,' Stamos told critics at the Television Critics Association's press tour in Beverly Hills earlier this month. 'It was very difficult to get the shot. So I [said], 'Get them out ... !' That is actually 100 percent accurate. They brought in a couple of unattractive redheaded kids. We tried that for a while and that didn't work. [Producers] were like, all right, get the Olsen twins back. And that's the story,'" People reports. It seems as though Lifetime is known for their very dramatic versions of real-life situations. There was controversy over the The Brittany Murphy Story as well when it was released.
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