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{{Infobox Television
{{Cleanup|date=April 2007}}
| show_name = The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air
| image = [[Image:Freshprincelogo.jpg|250px]]
|caption= The ''Fresh Prince'' mid-program [[Commercial bumper|bumper]]
| format = [[Situation comedy|Sitcom]]
| runtime = approx. 23 mins (per episode)
| creator = [[Andy Borowitz]]
|starring=[[Will Smith]] <br>[[James L. Avery, Sr.|James Avery]]<br>[[Janet Hubert-Whitten]] (1990-1993)<br>[[Daphne Maxwell Reid]] (1993-1996)<br>[[Ross Bagley]] (1994-1996)<br>[[Tatyana Ali]]<br>[[Karyn Parsons]]<br>[[Alfonso Ribeiro]]<br>[[Joseph Marcell]]<br>[[Tyra Banks]] (1993)<br>[[Nia Long]] (1994-1995)<br>[[Vernée Watson Johnson]] (1990-1995)<br>[[Jenifer Lewis]] (1991-1996)<br>Charlayne Woodard (1991-1993)
| country = {{USA}}
| network = [[NBC]]
| first_aired = [[September 10]], [[1990]]
| last_aired = [[May 20]], [[1996]]
| num_episodes = 148
| list_episodes = List of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air episodes
| imdb_id = 0098800
| tv_com_id = 475
}}


'''''The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air''''' is an [[Emmy]], [[BAFTA]], and [[RTS]]-award winning popular [[United States|American]] television [[situation comedy|sitcom]] that aired on [[NBC]] from [[September 10]], [[1990]], to [[May 20]], [[1996]]. The show starred [[Will Smith]] in a fish-out-of-water scenario. He is a streetwise teenager from [[West Philadelphia]] who is sent to live with his wealthy relatives in a [[Bel-Air, Los Angeles, California|Bel-Air]] mansion. His lifestyle does not fit well with that of his relatives living in Bel-Air. 148 episodes were produced over six seasons. The show is currently broadcast as a [[broadcast syndication|syndicated]] program and is seen on many networks such as [[The N]], [[Nick @ Nite]] and [[TBS (TV network)|TBS]]. The syndicated show is shown on local channels in many countries.
'''Date rape drug''' refers to any drug which can be used to assist in the commission of a [[sexual assault]]. These drugs commonly have [[sedative]], [[hypnotic]], [[dissociative]] and/or [[Anterograde amnesia|amnesiac]] affects, and when used to facilitate [[rape]] are often added to a food or drink without the victim's knowledge.


==Theme song and opening sequence==
==Types of drugs==
The opening credits and theme song explain the context of the show. Will Smith is revealed as a street-smart teenager, born and raised on the mean streets of [[West Philadelphia]]. The plot of the story is shown and rapped in the theme song.
Some often mentioned date rape drugs are [[GHB]], [[ketamine]] and benzodiazepines (such as [[flunitrazepam]], also known as ''Rohypnol'' or "roofies"). However, [[alcohol]] remains the drug most frequently implicated in substance-assisted sexual assault.<ref>http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/medical_notes/270247.stm </ref>


The theme song was written and performed by The Fresh Prince (Will Smith). Contrary to popular belief, [[DJ Jazzy Jeff]] did not compose the music for the opening credits. The music was composed by [[Quincy Jones III]], who is credited at the end of each episode. An additional credit at the end of episodes also reads "Theme song written and performed by Will Smith", in regard to the lyrics, with no reference to DJ Jazzy Jeff. The music often used to bridge scenes together during the show is also based on a similar chord structure as the theme song. This too is the work of Quincy Jones III. The full version of the theme song, telling how he went on a plane to Bel-Air, was only used on the first three episodes of the show (The Fresh Prince Project, Bang The Drum Ashley, and Clubba Hubba), although Will Smith did record it as an unreleased [[B-side]].<ref>[http://www.jazzyjefffreshprince.com/Lyrics/lyrics-willsmith-bsides.htm DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince: B-Side Lyrics]</ref> The full-length version, which is 2:52", was included on Will Smith's [[Greatest Hits (Will Smith album)|Greatest Hits]] album and attributed to himself only. A 3:23" version was released in the Netherlands in 1992, and reached #3 on the charts.


For the first few episodes of the show stanzas one to three and stanzas six and seven were used. Beginning with Episode #9 (titled "Someday Your Prince Will Be in Effect (2)"), only the first two and the last two stanzas of the song were used. The change to the theme song allowed for longer episodes to be created.


Seasons 1, 2, 5, and 6 featured an instrumental version of the theme and still photographs from the episode for the closing credits. In Season 2, the music and stills were dropped and closing credits would almost always appear over bloopers and outtakes from the episode. This continued until the end of Season 4. The closing theme over episode clips returned for Season 5 reruns, due to NBC's change from traditional credits to the split screen credits that are currently employed by the network.
=== Benzodiazepines ===


==Trivia==
Benzodiazepines (including [[Flunitrazepam]]/[[Rohypnol]]) are sedatives/hypnotics which also cause amnesia to different extents.
At the end of the episode "PSAT Pstory", Will says, "Carlton, I beat you by 1 stinkin' point." But he beat Carlton 116-114, which is a difference of 2 points. He probably meant 1 percent, due to the fact he outscored Carlton 91% to 90%


==Ratings==
According to the [[National Institute on Drug Abuse]]:
at the show's second season and third, it entered the [[Nielsen Ratings]], here's a list:
:"[[Rohypnol]] can incapacitate victims and prevent them from resisting sexual assault. It can produce "[[anterograde amnesia]]," which means that individuals may not remember events they experienced while under the effects of the drug."<ref>http://www.nida.nih.gov/infofax/RohypnolGHB.html </ref>
The [[sedation|sedative]] effects of Rohypnol begin to appear approximately 15–20 minutes after the [[Psychoactive drug|drug]] is ingested. The effects typically last from four to six hours after administration of the drug, but some cases have been reported in which the effects were experienced 12 or more hours after administration. In recent news it has been discovered that scientists can now detect flunitrazepam and related compounds in urine at least up to 5 days after administration of a single dose of Rohypnol and up to a month in hair.<ref>http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/201894.pdf </ref>


* [[1991]]-[[1992]]: #18
[[Gamma-hydroxybutyrate]] (GHB) has effects that are very similar to alcohol. According to the [[Drug Enforcement Administration]]:
* [[1992]]-[[1993]]: #14
:"Victims may not be aware that they ingested a drug at all. GHB and its [[analog (chemistry)|analogue]]s are invisible when dissolved in water, and are odorless. They are somewhat [[salt]]ish in taste, but are indiscernible when dissolved in [[drink|beverages]] such as [[soft drink]]s, [[distilled beverage|liquor]], or [[beer]]." This is also known as a famous club and party drug.<ref>http://www.usdoj.gov/dea/ongoing/daterapep.html </ref>


==Cast and characters==
Many recreational users of [[Gamma-hydroxybutyrate|GHB]] would disagree with the above:
{{main article|List of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air characters}}
:"GHB is, in fact, quite salty. When mixed in a drink, it ruins the drink (like dumping [[Sodium bicarbonate|bicarb]] in a drink)."<ref>http://www.antiaging-systems.com/extract/ghbdemonize.htm </ref>
<!-- Unsourced image removed: [[Image:Freshprincecast.jpg|right|thumb|210px|The cast of ''The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air'' from 1993 to 1996. Left to right: [[Daphne Maxwell Reid]] (Vivian Banks), [[James L. Avery, Sr.|James Avery]] (Phillip Banks), [[Will Smith]] (Will Smith), [[Karyn Parsons]] (Hillary Banks), [[Tatyana Ali]] (Ashley Banks), and [[Alfonso Ribeiro]] (Carlton Banks). Photograph by Carl Van Vechten.]] -->


*'''Will Smith''' ([[Will Smith]])
Common recreational doses of GHB are in the range of 1.8 to 2.7 grams, a large amount compared with most other sedative drugs, which can be active in amounts measured in milligrams. This makes detection of a drink tainted with GHB more likely and makes use of GHB to spike drinks considerably more difficult, 3 grams of pure GHB powder will more than two-thirds fill a standard-sized matchbox.
*'''Philip Banks''' ([[James L. Avery, Sr.|James Avery]])
*'''Vivian Banks''' ([[Janet Hubert-Whitten]]/[[Daphne Maxwell Reid]])
*'''Carlton Banks''' ([[Alfonso Ribeiro]])
*'''Hilary Violet Banks''' ([[Karyn Parsons]])
*'''Ashley Banks''' ([[Tatyana Ali]])
*'''Nicolas "Nicky" Andrew Banks''' ([[Ross Bagley]])
*'''Geoffrey Butler''' ([[Joseph Marcell]])
*'''Jazz''' ([[DJ Jazzy Jeff]])
'''Other Characters'''
*'''Beulah "Lisa" Wilkes''' ([[Nia Long]])
*'''Jackie Ames''' ([[Tyra Banks]])
*'''Viola "Vy" Smith-Wilkes''' ([[Vernee Watson-Johnson]])
*'''Aunt Helen''' ([[Jenifer Lewis]])


[[Janet Hubert-Whitten]] portrayed the original Vivian Banks from [[1990]]-[[1993]]. In 1993 Hubert-Whitten had caused problems for the entire cast because of her pregnancy with her son, Elijah. After she gave birth to her son her character was written out of some episodes and was eventually fired after the third season. In the [[1993-94 American network television schedule|1993-94 season]], [[Daphne Maxwell Reid]] was Hubert-Witten's replacement until the series ended in 1996.
=== Other drugs ===
* [[Ketamine]], a dissociative anaesthetic, and [[MDMA]] (Ecstasy), an empathogenic phenylethylamine. {{Fact|date=February 2007}}
* [[Chloral hydrate]] has a sedative/hypnotic effect similar to that of benzodiazepines.
<!-- Any drug that causes unconsciousness can be used as a "date rape drug". The list is endless, and includes the barbiturates, which are notably absent (due to decreased use, as of the 90's and 00's - when the internet came about).-->


Cast members from another [[National Broadcasting Company|NBC]] [[television program|sitcom]], ''[[A Different World (TV series)|A Different World]]'', have appeared on this show: [[Kadeem Hardison]] (Dwayne) appears as a special guest star in the first season episode "Someday Your Prince Will Be in Effect Pts. 1 & 2", [[Jasmine Guy]] (Whitley) appeared as Will's hard-working college student in the episode "Love at First Sight", then [[Cree Summer]] (Freddie) appeared as Will's Girlfriend in one episode, [[Karen Malina White]] (Charelene) appeared as a convict who [[Jeffrey A. Towens|Jazz]] married, and [[Ajai Sanders]] appeared as a secretary in the final season.
==Dangers==
These drugs can be extremely dangerous when administered to a party that is not aware of the drugging, and may kill or render the victim [[coma]]tose, especially in large doses or in combination with other drugs or alcohol. Drug allergies and interactions are also a possibility. Drug effects can be amplified in a certain percentage of the population that lack enzymes normally found to break down the drugs.


[[Sherman Hemsley]] played two different characters. Appearing multiple times as Judge Robertson, Philip's mentor and political opponent who died of a heart attack shortly after beating Philip in a [[Landslide victory|landslide]], and another reprising his old ''[[The Jeffersons]]'' character [[George Jefferson]] with [[Isabel Sanford]] and [[Marla Gibbs]] also reprising their old roles ([[Louise Jefferson|Louise Jefferson a.k.a. "Weezy"]] and maid [[Florence Johnston|Florence]], respectively) from the same show. It was the Jeffersons who bought the Banks mansion in the series finale.
It is imperative that any investigation into the suspected use of date rape drugs involve the immediate carrying out of a blood test, as waiting too long to test for the presence of drugs may cause [[false negative]]s, because these drugs are quickly metabolized and eliminated by the body. Trying to deduce whether date rape drugs have been used from the symptoms is an approach that can cause [[false positive]]s.


* [[Richard Roundtree]] had an appearance on an early season 1 episode, [[Cubba Hubba]] as a doctor and father of a girl who Will liked but had to impress him. Richard Roundtree is the actor who played Shaft in Will's favorite movie [[Shaft in Africa]] (which he had brought up many times in the series as his all time favorite movie).
Testing kits that claim to detect GHB, [[Ketamine]], and [[benzodiazepine]]s such as Rohypnol in seconds are commercially available under names such as "The Drink Detective". Companies around the world are making or trying to make paper coasters or drink stirrers that change color when dabbed with a drink doctored with a date rape drug.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}


*Nia Long also plays two characters. She is mainly known for playing Lisa, Will's fiance-turned-step-sister, but she also made an appearance in the episode "She Ain't Heavy" as she plays Claudia, Will's self-centered date for a dance.
In most countries, whether a drug was used or not is irrelevant to the issue of whether a particular incident is rape or not. The legal definition of rape in countries such as the [[United States]], also covers a lack of consent when the victim is unable to say "no" to intercourse, whether the effect is due to drugging, or simply alcohol consumption.<ref>http://criminal.findlaw.com/crimes/a-z/rape.html </ref>


==Episodes==
==[[Mass hysteria]]==
{{main|List of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air episodes}}


==DVD Releases==
In [[2003]], when the media were reporting a drink-spiking [[epidemic]] in [[Perth, Western Australia|Perth]], [[Western Australia]], 44 women had their blood tested because they believed they had been the victims of drink-spiking. The West Australian Chemistry Centre tested the blood samples and in these 44 cases, the only substance found in the victim's system was excessive alcohol. Police said that the blood-alcohol level of most of the subjects was significantly higher than what the women had themselves expected. In large amounts, alcohol has the same effects as date rape drugs, and causes unconsciousness and [[memory loss]].
[[Warner Home Video]] is releasing ''The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air'' on DVD in Region 1, 2 and 4 for the very first time. Thus far, they have released the first four seasons. Seasons 5 and 6 are expected to be released soon.


{| class="wikitable"
Sometimes victims end up drinking too much and insist that they were drugged when in fact they overestimated their tolerance for alcohol. A study in the UK found that only 2 percent of a pool of 1014 rape victims had their drinks spiked with sedatives.<ref>http://www.newscientist.com/channel/health/mg18925334.400 </ref>
|-
!rowspan="2"|DVD Name!!rowspan="2"|Ep #!!colspan="3"|Release dates!!rowspan="2"|DVD Extras
|-
![[DVD region code|Region 2]]!![[DVD region code|Region 4]]
|-
|The Complete 1st</sup> Season || align="center" | 25|| [[February 8]], [[2005]] || [[February 21]], [[2005]] || [[April 13]], [[2005]] || "Back-to-Bel-Air: A Fresh Look" featurette.
|-
|The Complete 2nd</sup> Season || align="center" |24 || [[October 11]], [[2005]] || [[November 21]], [[2005]] || [[March 1]], [[2006]] || Best Bits of Bel Air, and Bloopers from Season 2
|-
|The Complete 3rd</sup> Season || align="center" |24 || [[February 14]], [[2006]] || [[June 26]], [[2006]] || [[August 9]], [[2006]] || Best of the Upper Bel-Air Crust (Season 3 highlights), and Bloopers from Season 3
|-
|The Complete 4th</sup> Season || align="center" |26 || [[August 8]], [[2006]] ||[[January 22]], [[2007]] || [[December 6]], [[2006]] || No extras are available in the boxed set of season 4.
|-
|The Complete 5th</sup> Season||align="center" |25|| || N/A || N/A
|-
|The Complete 6th</sup> Season||align="center" |24||TBA|| N/A || N/A || N/A
|}


==See also==
==Settings==
*[[Mickey Finn (drugs)]]
*[[Rape]]
*[[Date rape]]


{{inc-video}}
==References==
{{reflist}}


*'''The Banks Mansion - full series''':
==External links==
The mansion is where the Banks family, as well as Will, live. Most of the show's scenes occur in the mansion. The upper floor hallway was shown in Season 1, but did not appear in fed later seasons. The living room has been seen in all seasons. The kitchen appeared infrequently in Season 1, but became the most prominent set on the show in Seasons 2-6. Both the living room and the kitchen looked quite different after season 1 (different wallpaper, furniture, etc). Will's room was seen in Seasons 1-3, and the back of the house with a patio was seen in Season 2 onward. The exterior of the Banks house is often used in still-shots, although the doorway is used for a running gag that occurs whenever Uncle Phil is displeased with Jazz: Phil glares at him, and the picture is replaced by a shot of Jazz screaming and literally being thrown out of the house (''see [[#running gags|running gags]]''). The actual house can be seen in Bel-Air, California. In the final episode, the house is seen fully empty, as everyone has moved on to a new life. In Series 4 episode "for sale by owner" the Banks family reveal they live at 805 Saint Cloud Road, as Donald Trump tries to buy the house.
*[http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=436592&in_page_id=1770 "Drug rape myth exposed as study reveals binge drinking is to blame"], ''Daily Mail'' (UK) article on binge drinking and claims of "spiked" drinks
[[de:K.-o.-Tropfen]]
[[no:Voldtektsdop]]


*'''Bel-Air Prep - Seasons 1-3''':
[[Category:Rape]]
Bel-Air Prep is the high school that Will and Carlton attend in Seasons 1-3.The 3 main settings in Bel-Air Prep is The Classroom, The Hallway, and The auditorium, the Auditorium was only shown in two episodes, Courting Disaster and Just Say Yo.
*'''ULA Student Store, "The Peacock Stop" - Seasons 4 and 5''':
The ULA Student Store, known as "The Peacock Stop" because the school mascot is a peacock, is where Will, Carlton, and Will's friend Jackie Ames work. In Season 4, Jackie is the manager, Carlton is the assistant manager, and Will is the cashier. When Jackie leaves ULA in the middle of Season 4, Carlton takes over as manager and Will becomes assistant manager and cashier until Season 5.


*'''Will and Carlton's ''temporary apartment'' - Season 4'''
[for more information please go to http://www.roofie.com The website of Britains only agency dealing with issues around drug rape and drink spiking and providers of a victim help-line]
The apartment was shown in the first two episodes of Season four. It was eventually vacated after Jazz (Will's best friend) got them kicked out for behavior.

*'''ULA Upper Floor Hallway - Season 4''':
The ULA Hallway was shown once in Season 4; it was where Will's classes were located.

*'''The Pool House - Seasons 3-6''':
The pool house is shown in one episode of Season 3, because Hilary decides to give it to Will and Carlton for a night; and it is a main setting for Seasons 4-6. When Hilary wants her boyfriend Trevor to make a wedding proposal, Trevor decides to bungee-jump off a bridge and lands on the ground, hitting his head. He dies from the injury. Hilary wants to move out of the pool house because Will tricks her into thinking that she'll be miserable because of the memories they had. Will and Carlton move into the pool house in Season 4 and stay there until the end of the series. When they move in, it has a different interior than in Season 3.

*'''Hospital - Seasons 2-6''':
A hospital in Los Angeles is seen in certain episodes which deal with the Banks family's medical problems, including the episode in which Will spends the night at the hospital waiting for a tonsil operation, as well when Carlton overdoses on the drug [[Amphetamine|speed]] (mistaken for Vitamin E). It is also seen in the next episode, "The Baby Comes Out", when Vivian gives birth to Nicky. The hospital appears in the Season 4 episode "Home is Where the Heart Attack Is" because Phil has a heart attack, is treated, and fortunately survives. It is seen in twice in Season 5 as well, including "Bullets Over Bel-Air" when Will is shot, and it is seen in the first five minutes of the next episode, "A Decent Proposal", when Will proposes to Lisa after being shot. In "I, Ooh, Ooh, Baby", the hospital is seen when an acquaintance of Hilary gets pregnant in the studio of Hilary's show and spends a few days there. The Actual hospital is the [[Veterans Administration|VA]] Hospital in nearby [[Westwood, Los Angeles, California|Westwood]]

*'''Jazz's apartment in Compton - Seasons 1,3-5''':
Jazz lives with a few friends in a run-down apartment in Compton. It is featured in an episode when Will bets Carlton that he can't last a weekend in the ghetto. It is also seen in "How I Spent My Summer Vacation" although this time it is only the hallway, and it looked a lot nicer than in Season 1. Will also plans to sleep there after he and Philip get into an argument and he runs away from home. It is also seen in Season 4 in episode "Where There's a Will There's a Way (Part 2) when Will is going to beat Jazz up for getting him and Carlton evicted from their apartment. It is seen in the season 5 episode "Slum Like It... Not!" where Will convinces Phillip to buy the whole building as an easy money scheme, this setting was seen in every season except Seasons 2 and 6.

*'''[[UCLA]] - Season 1''':
[[UCLA]] only appears in one episode, episode 1.13, "Knowledge Is Power". Will goes to the UCLA campus to find out what Hilary was really up to instead of studying; he finds out Hilary has dropped out of UCLA. This Setting was eventually adapted for the season 4 episode "All Guts, No Glory".
*'''KFPB Channel 8 News station - Seasons 3,4,6''':
This setting was seen throughout Season 3 because Hilary got a Job as a [[weather girl]] and fell in love with Trevor Collins, who seemingly died in a bungee accident in Season 4. Due to his death, the setting was written off towards the end of the 4th Season. The setting returned in Season 6 because Hilary's own show was produced there, until moving production to [[New York]] at the end of the series.
*'''The Classroom - Seasons 1-4''':
The Classroom was shown in the first 4 seasons because it was where Will and Carlton's classes were taught. The Classroom appeared infrequently in Seasons 1-2, because of Bel-Air Prep appearing infrequently, it was shown more often in Season 3, as well as Bel-Air Prep, After the Season 3 Finale, the setting was adapted for one Season 4 episode "All Guts, No Glory", after that episode, it was never seen again.
*'''Newsworthiness Predatory Institute Hallway - Season 2''':
Newsworthiest Prep was only seen in one episode, "The Mother of all Battles", and was mentioned in "The Big Four-Oh", Ashley's school wasn't mentioned or seen in Season 1, but it was mentioned in Season 2 as Hollingsworth Preparatory Institute, and was seen too. It was seen in "The Mother of All Battles" because Will and Carlton came to see Ashley's fight with a bully, which apparently didn't happen because of Will and Carlton interrupting Ashley, and its name was mentioned in "The Big Four-Oh". Eventually, Ashley starts attending Bel-Air Prep (as it becomes co-ed) in Season 3. In another season Ashley realized she didn't want to attend a private school, and began attending public school without her family's knowledge. She attended the public school until the end of the series. Then Uncle Phill found out. Watch the rest to find out what happened.

==Running gags==

*'''Will's ears:''' There have been a few jokes about the size of Will's ears. In one episode, Will goes to a barber shop, and the barber remarks, "Now you know I'm gonna have to charge you extra for cuttin' around these ears?" Lisa makes a joke about them being "cute" in another episode. In another episode a group of girls (Blue Birds) call Will "Big ears". In the episode where Geoffery quits, Uncle Phil calls Will a "big-eared free loader." In the episode where Will and Lisa attend marriage counseling, Judge Robertson's wife makes fun of Will's ears by saying "he looks like a car coming down the road with both doors open!" Jackie even called Will "Lobe" in one episode, to which Will replied, "Hey, don't be callin' me Lobe. I left that in Philly where I thought I left you."

*'''Carlton's stature:''' Will frequently makes jabs at Carlton's slight stature, square head, and virginity. In one episode, Will says "Come see the amazing runt Dwarfski, the world's shortest square-headed Negro". In another episode, Will and Carlton trick Geoffrey into thinking he won the lottery. Humiliated and resentful, Geoffrey quits as the Banks' butler and takes a job as a waiter. At Geoffrey's new restaurant, Will and Carlton pretend to be his sons to get him fired. Will announces to the people eating at the restaurant that Carlton is short because they can't afford more clothes, so he simply refuses to grow. Rather than getting angry, like he usually does, Carlton stays in character and cries "I want to grow!" Earlier in the episode Uncle Phil refers to Carlton as "Will's square headed cousin".

*'''Carlton's love for Tom Jones:''' A running gag throughout the series was Carlton's enthusiastic love of singer [[Tom Jones (singer)|Tom Jones]] and a gyrating dance he would perform to Jones' song "[[It's Not Unusual]]". (Alfonso Ribeiro has recently admitted that, true to popular belief, his dance was taken from the moves [[Courteney Cox]] does in the [[Bruce Springsteen]] music video for "[[Dancing in the Dark (Bruce Springsteen song)|Dancing in the Dark]].") Eventually, Tom Jones guest-starred as himself as Carlton's guardian angel, showing Carlton what the Banks family would be like if he had never been born, a la ''[[It's a Wonderful Life]]''. In the final episode, Will and Carlton sing along together to the song, as the [[penultimate]] scene.

*'''Uncle Phil's fake happiness:''' Uncle Phil pretends to be happy while allowing Will and Carlton to explain their mess, only to suddenly explode in extreme anger. In one episode when Will and Carlton caused Geoffrey to quit, he ordered them to get him back, "OR THEY'LL NEVER FIND YOUR BODIES. AND I'M A JUDGE, I CAN MAKE IT HAPPEN!". Another episode featured Will and Carlton telling Uncle Phil he can reward them for their honesty (something they saw on [[Leave it to Beaver]]). After a short laugh, he said "DO I LOOK LIKE A WHITE GUY NAMED WARD?!".
*'''Jazz's being thrown out:''' A favorite gag involves Will or his friend Jazz flying out the front door after saying something offensive to a member of the Banks family (usually Philip) and being physically ejected from the house. The shot of Jazz flying through the front door was only filmed once (for Season 1, Episode 2, "Bang the Drum, Ashley"), when Phil told him to turn up a classical music record, and Jazz scratched it like a DJ. The same footage was re-used each time; He is always wearing the same shirt. In the Season 2 episode "Cased Up", there was a small twist on this gag: when Jazz offends Phillip outside on the Banks' driveway, then boasts, "You can't throw me out because I'm already outside!", Phillip proceeds to pick him up and throw him into the house via the kitchen door. Another twist is in the [[Halloween]] episode in a dream of Will's, where Hilary and Jazz fall in love (due to a family hex). Philip tries to throw him out, but ends up being thrown out himself. Will was once thrown out of the house in the same manner as Jazz for making changes to Uncle Phil's political campaign tape. In the Season 2 episode "Community Action", Jazz is thrown out the kitchen door,and after he is thrown out,his life-size cardboard stand-in of [[Bill Cosby]] is thrown out. Also in the episode involving Geoffrey's birthday, Will gets thrown out of Jazz's club after dancing with Geoffrey's date. In the season 3 premiere "How I Spent My Summer Vacation", Will is thrown out of the back door of Jazz's apartment in Compton.

*'''The Will and Carlton Dance:''' In order to win money in a contest, Will and Carlton do a dance to Sir Mix-a-Lot's "Jump on It". The dance starts with by thrusting the hips to the front, then to the left, then to the back, and lastly to the side, and then dancing around in a circle while lassoing your arms.

*'''Uncle Phil's weight:''' The family, most often Will and Geoffrey, constantly makes quick jokes about Uncle Phil's size and weight. For example, Vivian, while upset at Phillip, says to Geoffrey "Geoffrey, that man is skating on thin ice." Geoffrey quips "I'll alert the fish!" Another is when Philip and Geoffrey are hunting a cricket in the house. Philip says, "Now I know how Ahab felt when he tried to capture Moby Dick". Geoffrey responds "I'm confused, between the two of you, the cricket is the whale?" In "Burnin' Down The House", after Will burns down the kitchen while trying to cook [[flambe]], Geoffrey laughs hysterically and says, "Of all the rooms to burn down in your Uncle's house, the kitchen!ARE YOU MAD?!" An example of Will's trademark fat jokes involves calling Phil "an eclipse" (as apposed to a shadow), yelling "EARTHQUAAAKE!" when Phil dances, and pretending that the act of hugging Phil is a difficult task. Examples of the show itself ridiculing Phil's weight are present in almost every episode in which he is on a diet or exercises, or at other random moments, such as an instance where he sits on a bed under which Will, Carlton, and Hilary are hiding, after which they scream and writhe under the bed until he gets up. Another incidence, is when Will disguises at a restaurant as a waiter, and serves their own family dinner. He recommends Phil to drink [[Slim Fast]]. In another episode, Phil explains "I weigh the same as I did in high school" to which Will quickly replies "Yea, if you add up all four years". A final example is when Vivian says "I'm tired of serving that fat, disgusting, cholesterol-ridden mess" (talking about the food). Then Geoffrey, who pretends that he thought she was talking about Phil, responds "say what you will, but he is a good provider" in a shocked tone. In another episode,Phil orders Geoffrey to fetch his tools, to which he replies,"you mean your knife and fork?"

*'''Cheap cologne and fried chicken:''' Another running joke is that of Jazz smelling like cheap [[cologne]] and fried chicken. In the episode where Will and Carlton go on a tour of the university, Jazz tags along inside the trunk. After he jumps out, Will says, "Do I smell fried chicken?". In another episode, Will and Jazz are watching TV, and hear Uncle Phil coming downstairs. Will tells Jazz to get out of sight, and while Jazz in hiding, Uncle Phil detects the smell of "cheap cologne and fried chicken".

*'''Carlton being black:''' Will jokes about Carlton being less "black" than Will and Jazz. One example is when Will joins a poetry club and says to Carlton: "Roses are red / Violets are blue / Jazz and I are black / but Carlton, what are you?" Another example is when Carlton comes into the kitchen after a workout and begins to show off his muscles and Will calls him "Arnold Swartzenegro". And another episode, Carlton asks where he was conceived and Will say's, "White Fest". For the most part it is played for comedy, but in one or two episodes the racial issues are addressed more seriously (see '''[[The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air#Issues Adressed|Issues Addressed]]''').

*'''Annoying civil service worker:''' An occasional gag is the appearance of a character played by [[Darryl Sivad]] in several different situations acting as a civil service worker of some sort. He is shown to be fairly incompetent at his job, and is tactless, lacking deference when speaking to other distressed characters, seeming as if he doesn't even care about the situation and only making those worried even more frustrated. He appeared in "Burnin' Down The House" as a fireman, calling Will stupid for trying to cook flambe because he is a black person. He appeared in "Home Is Where The Heart Attack Is" as part of an EMT, telling Will, "If I tell you he's gonna be all right and he croaks, you gonna be mad, right?". He also made an appearance in "The Harder They Fall" as a park ranger. In that episode, Will's girlfriend tells him that her father and boyfriend are lost out in the wilderness, to which he replies, "So you're gonna be twice as upset if they're dead, right?". He appeared as a member of the L.A. "Crisis Intervention Unit" in the episode "Not, I Barbecue" when Will and Carlton were trapped in two girls' apartment by their huge boyfriend, and while trying to escape through a window several feet above the ground, attempted to come to their rescue. Thinking that they wanted to commit suicide, he awkwardly read off a card that they "have everything to live for," and then nonsensically says "Now hand me the baby!" In the same episode, Will remarks on how easy those civil service exams must be.

*'''Aunt Viv squeezing the family's hand:''' In one episode when Aunt Viv is having the baby, she seems to hurt one character's hand. People will say, " My hand!!" One example of this is when Geoffrey helps Aunt Viv on calling Uncle Phil she squeezes Geoffrey's hand to the point where he tries to heal with ice. This happened to Carlton and Hilary in the same episode.

===Breaking of the fourth wall===
The breaking of the [[fourth wall]] was a common gag on the show; some examples include:

* When Will fails his music class, he states that he would never have a career in music;

*Will disregards Geoffrey's advice about being honest with his fiancée, turning to the camera and saying, "Right, like I'm gonna listen to Geoffrey. When's the last time you seen ''him'' with a woman?"

* The cast often makes references to Will Smith's real life career as a recording artist such as Phil telling Vivian she "would believe him if he said he was a big rap star whose album just went platinum." They also tend to quote lines from Will's songs, such as "[[Parents Just Don't Understand|Parents just don't understand]]." Another one was how Phillip scoffed at Will being a soap opera star, "Like you'll become a main character of a hit network TV series!". And Will answered, looking at the camera, "It could happen".

*After Geoffrey gives Will a phone number of Helen, a blind date set up for Geoffrey, Will addresses the audience that he has a new found appreciation for Geoffrey as a person. He then immediately shoves Geoffrey out of the way to pick up the phone to call Helen.

*Will voicing his confusion over how Nicky could have aged several years over a period of about three months in the Season 5 premiere "What's Will Got to Do With It?" In that scene, upon seeing the older Nicky, Jazz says, "man, I'm going back to the streets where things make sense." Before that Jazz also asks Will "Who's playing the mother this year?" (Another reference to Janet Hubert Whitten replacing Daphne Maxwell Reid).

*Also in "What's Will Got to Do With It?", when Will gets kicked out of his office and the landlord says "I have the worst luck with tenants", the landlord is [[Norman Fell]], who played landlord Stanley Roper on [[Three's Company]] from 1976-1981.

*Will fakes playing the saxophone while [[Branford Marsalis]] plays in the background, causing Will to quip how great it is to be working for [[NBC]].

*While being berated by Uncle Phil, Will takes a television remote and "clicks off" Philip, then asks the studio audience, "This is fly, right? Don't you wish you lived on TV?" where such things are possible.

*Both Will and Carlton break the [[fourth wall]] in a later episode: Will meets his eventual girlfriend at ULA, where she poses as a psychopath obsessed with Will. As a practical joke, Will later tells Carlton that Lisa really was insane and that he had to kill her in self-defense. Carlton goes into a frenzied grief, running through all of the show's various, unrelated sets, and eventually running off the set altogether into the studio audience.

*In "A Philadelphia Story", Will and some of his friends are talking about the fight Will got into that caused him to go to Bel-Air. When they mention Omar, Carlton asks "Who's that?" Will responds with "The dude that be spinnin' me over his head in the openin' credits". After Will's decision to stay with his mother in Philadelphia at the end of the episode, some NBC executives come into his workplace and grab Will with the intention of bringing him back to Bel-Air in the Season 5 premiere, explaining that they cast him as the ''[[Fresh Prince of Bel-Air]]'', not ''The Fresh Prince of Philadelphia'' (In real life, Will Smith had planned to end the series after season 5, which explains the unexpected ending, when Smith agreed to continue the series for an additional season, the fifth season opened with The NBC executive humorously quoting the theme song: "Yo, holmes, to Bel-Air" as they throw Will into a van with the NBC logo and the words "Star Retrieval Unit".)

*Will addresses a judge with his opening statement "I'm from West Philadelphia, born and raised". He then says "On the playground is where I spent most of my days".

*Will overhears his aunt's husband on the phone thinking he has a secret girlfriend. Will reacts as he confronts him and asks why he is cheating on his aunt. The husband says it's his shrink. Will sarcastically replies "Oh yeah, and I just won a [[Grammy]]", which Will Smith had actually won.

*In "Cased Up", guest star [[Malcolm-Jamal Warner]] remarks that he thought the whole family gathering around the table for dinner "only happened on ''[[The Cosby Show]]''", referencing the show on which he was a main character.

*In "Sleepless in Bel-Air", when Will spends an entire evening not studying, he confronts Carlton and exclaims he got 85%. Carlton then scolds Will and says that he wouldn't want the audience to think he cheated. Will agrees, and they then restart the scene. They re-enact all of which they said, except that now Will says he failed the test. Carlton encourages him to study harder and retake the test. Will gives a grin to the camera before walking off the set.

*In yet another episode, Hilary, Carlton, and Ashley walk through the living room set exclaiming the comforts of being rich. Will, sitting on the couch, says to the audience, "If we so rich, why we can't afford no ceiling?". The camera then pans up to show the open rafters and lights of the studio.

* In an episode about poetry, Vivian reads a poem to the family in the living room. She pauses, and Will says to the audience in a sincere way, "If you would like to learn more about poetry, you can contact us at ...... PSYCH!!! Haha I'm just playin' good night y'all," as the episode ends.

*In an episode where Will and Carlton fight over a job opportunity for Hilary's show, Carlton brags about a possibility of his own show. When Will exclaims, "Your own show?" Carlton responds by saying, "It's about time!"

*In one episode, Jazz, Will, and Vivian are in the kitchen where Jazz mentions to Vivian how "something about her has changed" since she had baby Nicky, referring to her character's cast change (Daphne Maxwell Reid replacing Janet Hubert-Whitten). Will gives the camera a knowing look. In the Season 5 premiere, Jazz asks who would be playing the mother that season.

*When Will was secretly dating Carlton's ex-girlfriend Paula, and was standing in front of an open refrigerator when Carlton accused him of doing something he shouldn't have, and Will accidentally confessed to dating Paula. Carlton, surprised at hearing his ex-girlfriend's name, said he was talking about an item of food. Will then tried to wiggle out of it by claiming that back in Philadelphia they "named their food". Will turned his back to Carlton, took a few steps, looked sheepishly into the camera and said, "You can see him, I can't. Is he buying it?".

*In the episode, "Asses to Ashes", [[Sherman Hemsley]]'s character of Judge Robertson proceeds to kick Phillip out of the house after an argument. While storming up the stairs, he refers to Will as "Lionel", his son on the television show, "[[The Jeffersons]]".

*In another episode, Will and Carlton were arguing: Will:"Can-not!" Carlton:"Can too!" repeatedly until Will turns to the camera and says plainly with a smile, "Who says the art of conversation is dead?"

*In another episode, where Will is talking to Lisa about being a bad actor on a soap opera (a show within the Fresh Prince), Lisa says "Well, you're doing a pretty good job right now!" Referring to him acting for the Fresh Prince. Possibly, another possibility is she meant he was acting like he really did not want to kiss another female in the show, since Lisa gave him her support before he found out his character in the soap opera was gay. This would not be breaking the fourth wall.

*In an episode, Will has gotten an amazing job with one of Uncle Phil's best friends and Carlton, being jealous after seeing all the attributes of having a rich boss, walks into the garden. Will then turns to the camera and explains what Carlton is doing in the garden: "he's walking, he's walking, he's outside now, he picks up a flower, he walks a little further and sees..." and Carlton gives a loud scream outside and Will explains that it's "...the company Porsche".

*In an episode, Nicky claims he will run away because he is unable to watch [[Bad Boys]], which Will Smith starred in.

==Issues addressed==
While largely a comedy, this show commonly addressed African-American issues and [[Very special episode|various topics]] all people could relate to.
*In the first episode, for instance, Will accused his uncle of having forgotten "where he came from", or having forgotten that he came from the streets. His uncle was furious, and pointed out Will's frequently-mentioned belief in the philosophy of Malcolm X. "I heard the brother speak", Philip angrily informed his nephew.

*In the episode, "Mistaken Identity," where the Banks head to Palm Springs along with Henry Furth, Philip's legal partner, Carlton and Will were pulled over in Mr. Furth's lent car, a Mercedes, because the police suspected them of car theft. Carlton futilely says that he lives in Bel-Air, has a butler, a 3.95 GPA in Bel-Air Academy, and other acclaimed "credentials" that are not seen in the African-American stereotype. They are later detained, and Will's clever plan of a bogus confession via a [[television|T.V.]] [[news]] bulletin brought Philip and Furth to the biased police station to explain everything Carlton said earlier, with Philip blasting the cops with the threat of a lawsuit. This addresses the issue of "[[driving while black]]," i.e., that African-Americans are often pulled over by the police not for any real offense, but because the police think they committed a crime, such as having stolen an expensive car, because the police could not believe that a black person would be able to afford such a car, and thus must have stolen it.

*In a later episode titled "Homeboy, Sweet Homeboy", Will and one of his old school friends, Ice Tray, reminisce about how Ice Tray frequently had to save Will from bullies who attacked him because he tried to be a good student. When Vivian confronts Will about Ice Tray's lack of drive in himself and challenges the assumption by Will that he and Ice Tray are alike, Will mentions that Ice Tray never had anyone to stick up for him, and by having Will's back kept him from spiraling down the wrong path.
*In another episode titled "Blood is Thicker Than Mud", Will and Carlton try to join a fraternity, but Carlton is singled out for being a "sell-out", because his family is wealthy and "acts" stuck-up, which enrages Will causing him to attempt to hide this from Carlton. When he finds out, Carlton then makes a speech about how he's jumping the same hurdles and facing the same struggles as those who accused him of being a sell-out, and that those who refuse to consider others due to their different standing are the real sell-outs. Upon hearing the situation, Phil laments about how black people continue to separate themselves in such a way, and asks "when are we going to stop doing this to each other?

*In another episode titled "Guess Who's Coming to Marry?", Will's aunt (his mother's youngest sister) brings her fiance to meet the family and they are all shocked to find out he is white. While Will and the kids seem generally OK with this, the older characters tend to be disapproving and, in Will's Mother's case, outright hostile. Will's mother insists she will not go to the wedding (which is being held in Uncle Phil's back yard) and forbids Will to go either. Will eventually confronts his mother and tells her he's going to the wedding with or without her approval. Just as the ceremony is about to finish, Will's Mother relents and gets there in time for the "I-Dos."

*The issue of alcohol abuse is explored as well in the episode "You've Got To Be a Football Hero". While at a party, Will and a rival drink shots to see who can drink the most. When Will passes out from drinking so much, some bullies drop him off at a graveyard and Will meets the other dead spirits who are stuck playing an eternal game of poker. While the poker sequence is shown humorously, the mood gets somber when a ghost child tells Will that he wanted to be a shortstop for the Brooklyn Dodgers but no longer can because a car, being driven by a drunk driver, hit him and he was killed. Upon hearing this, Will remembers the car keys he still has with him, and he looks at them sadly.

*The issue of absent fathers was touched upon when Will finally meets his father Lou in one of the series' more emotional episodes titled "Papa's Got a Bran-New Excuse". When Will was four years old, his jobless father had one day walked out to "get a pack of smokes" and just never came home. Years later he returned now employed as a trucker but by then Will was going to college. Vivian and Philip gave him the cold shoulder for abandoning Will and his mother, Philip going so far as to say to him accusingly, "How dare you set foot in my house." Will tried to remain conciliatory towards his father since this was his chance of meeting him, but the episode concluded with Will having to confront his grief when his father abandons him a second time. Lou left Will once more and ended off saying "Good-bye son." In which Will answered "You too Lou." instead of saying "Good-bye Dad," stating that he doesn't consider Lou his father. Symbolically, Will accepts the fact that his Uncle Phil has become his father figure.

*Drug use is addressed in an episode titled "Just Say Yo" where Will, busy with finals, basketball, and his girlfriend, is having trouble staying awake. When one of Will's classmates gives him some amphetamines to help him stay up, Carlton takes the pills, which he presumes to be vitamin E pills, and had to be taken to the hospital following a near-fatal overdose. In a final emotional scene, Will, upon being offered [[Los Angeles Clippers|Clippers]] basketball tickets, confessed to Philip that the drugs were his and not Carlton's. An angry Philip called the whole family into the living room, insisting that Will owed them all an apology. Will explained, eventually breaking down into tears, with a now sympathetic Philip consoling him.

*In an episode titled "Bullets Over Bel-Air" where Will is shot in the back during a robbery attempt at a bank ATM and then hospitalized, Carlton found himself pondering the idea of carrying a gun for self-defense. Later that episode, Carlton appears at Will's hospital bed and Will discovers a [[revolver]] tucked in his jacket. An emotional moment occurs when Will orders Carlton to hand over the gun, and he does. After Carlton leaves, Will opens up the gun and discovers that it was fully loaded. He lets the bullets fall onto his lap and starts to cry.

*The issue of teenage pregnancy was brought up in one episode titled "Be My Baby Tonight" in which Ashley was curious about it. Will and Carlton, determined to find a way to talk to Ashley about it, go down to the local clinic and find out about the issues.

*The issue of black people being stereotyped as rappers and gang members is addressed in the episode when Will appeared on the news trying to save the Los Angeles recreation center, and the only black person they put on the newscast is a rapper; Will goes to the news station to complain.

*In earlier episodes where Will and Carlton attend Bel-Air Prep, their fellow white classmates try to "act [stereotypically] black" such as talking "gangsta" and trying to [[rap]]. However, it is not meant in anyway of disrespect but addresses the stereotype that all black people act as such.

==Syndication==
The series was originally an [[NBC]] production in association with [[The Stuffed Dog Company]] and Quincy Jones Productions (later QDE, or Quincy Jones/David Salzman Entertainment). After the show was released to syndication, the rights reverted to [[Warner Bros. Television]], who continues to distribute the show worldwide (although NBC Universal does own the series' copyright).

{| class="wikitable"
! width=100px |Country
!Details
|-
| United States || The series currently airs seven nights a week on [[Nick at Nite]] at 11:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m./ET along with late-night episodes at 3:00 and 3:30 a.m./ET, [[The N]], ([[Noggin (TV channel)|Noggin]]'s nighttime program lineup) nightly at 7:00 and 7:30 p.m./ET and 10:00 and 10:30 pm/et broadcast with scenes that were deleted from [[television syndication|syndicated]] and original broadcasts of the series. The show also airs on [[TBS]] at 2:00 p.m./ET and 2:30 p.m./ET (''Fresh Prince'' had aired on TBS previously from 1998-2004, before [[Nick at Nite]] obtained the cable television rights to the show).

The series is also syndicated in some US markets, used by some (such as [[WTTA]] in [[St. Petersburg, Florida|St. Petersburg]]/[[Tampa, Florida]]) as [[filler programming]].
|-
|Canada || The series currently airs on [[YTV (TV channel)|YTV]] (Monday - Thursday 12:30am & 8:00pm), [[CJMT-TV|OMNI.2]] TvTropolis Weekdays @ 5:00PM and on [[CITS-TV|CTS]].
|-
|United Kingdom || [[BBC Two]] broadcast the show between [[21 January]] [[1991]] and [[7 April]] [[1998]] exclusively for British audiences. After this, the show had a weekday slot around 6:20pm during what seemed to be programming for a younger audience, including [[The Simpsons]] and on Fridays, [[Robot Wars]]. After this programming stopped, the channel occasionally broadcast episodes during late morning/early afternoon schedules. Now, the show is rarely found on BBC Two schedules, and it is believed that the channel's rights to broadcast the show have expired.

''The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air'' now runs on [[Trouble (TV)|Trouble]], usually every day, and on [[Bravo (UK)|Bravo]]. The show is also available on [[Virgin Media]] On Demand (Series one only).
|-
|Australia || In Australia it was previously aired daily on the [[Nine Network]] (free-to-air), but now it is only shown on pay TV children's channel Nickelodeon (cable/satellite), usually during the 'Nick at Night' times.
|-
|France || In France, the series airs Monday through Sunday on the public channel [[France 4]]. From 1992 to 2002, the show was broadcasted by [[France 2]].
|-
|Hungary || In Hungary it was on air daily on [[Viasat3]] and on [[HBO]] as well, in the afternoon session. Then in the summer of 2006 they started it again on [[Viasat3]] in the early morning. The show was called ''Kaliforniába jöttem'' ("I came to California"). The first episode was dubbed in 1994. There were two different dubs of the show, by two different synchronization companies. The theme song was also translated into Hungarian.
|-
|Italy || In Italy the series is broadcast on [[Italia 1]] as ''Willy, il Principe di Bel-Air.'' The show (and even the theme song) is translated into Italian.
|-
|Mexico || In Mexico the show aired in the 1990s on prime time (right before [[The Simpsons]], which still shows at 8:00 p.m., Monday through Friday) on [[Azteca 7]] with the name ''El Príncipe Del Rap'' ("The Prince Of Rap"). The introductory theme was performed in Spanish with remarkable accuracy according to the original version although quite different from that of Spain.
|-
|The Netherlands || In the Netherlands it aired weekdays from April to early July 2007 on [[Veronica (television channel)|Veronica]] 6 p.m. Monday to Thursday (Season 1 and 2).
|-
|Brazil || In Brazil it aired mostly Monday through Friday (and, in some periods, on Saturday) on [[SBT]] by the name ''Um Maluco no Pedaço'' (loose translation: "a crazy guy in the neighborhood"), until this year.
|-
|New Zealand || In New Zealand the show screens on weekdays on [[Prime Television New Zealand|Prime]].
|-
|Norway || In [[Norway]] the show is aired on [[TVNorge]] every Saturday evening.
|-
|Middle East || The show was a big hit with [[Arabic]]-speaking viewers when it became among the first western shows to air on [[Middle East Broadcasting Center|MBC]] in the late 1990s and early 2000s and was among one of MBC's most frequently rerun shows, although it has yet to air on [[MBC 4]] since the network began launching separate channels.
|-
|Spain || In [[Spain]] the show is aired in [[Antena 3]] and some regional TV stations with the name ''El príncipe de Bel-Air''. The show's intro theme was dubbed into Spanish with reasonable accuracy to the original and the same music background.

[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PU1FBGH3eEw Spanish (Spain) Intro]

In [[Catalonia]] the show was also dubbed into the [[Catalan language]] with the name ''El príncep de Bel-Air''.
|-
|Sweden || The Series airs weekdays on the [[Kanal 5]] channel in Sweden and has done for the past 10 years.
|-
|Peru || The Series airs on Warner TV at 5:30 a.m. from Monday to Sunday. Additionally, on Saturdays, Sundays it also airs on 7:30 a.m.
|-
|Philippines || The popular TV series on GMA Network every Sunday Evenings at 6:00 pm from 1990-94, and also aired on Citynet Television on Saturdays at 5pm
|-
|South Africa || The program is broadcast on GO on Wednesdays at 18:00 South African Standard Time (GMT + 2), on the [[DStv]] network.
|-
|India || In India the show aired on [[Zee Cafe]].
|-
|Germany || The series airs on the channel "RTL 2" from Monday to Friday at 16:05. It has been aired since 1992.
|-
|Pakistan || In Pakistan the show aired on [[STN]].
|-
|Israel || In Israel the show aired on [[Kids' Channel]].
|-
|Finland || In Finland the show aired on [[MTV3]].
|-
|Portugal || In Portugal the show was aired a few times, by both public channels and cable ones, being the most recent one [[Sic Radical]].
|-
|Croatia || In Croatia the show is aired on [[RTL Televizija]].
|-
|Ireland || In Ireland the show aired on [[RTE2]].
|}

==Cultural impact==

*In "The Script Formerly Known As", Will lip-syncs [[Jennifer Holliday]]'s version of "[[And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going]]" from the musical ''[[Dreamgirls]]''.<ref>http://www.tv.com/the-fresh-prince-of-bel-air/the-script-formerly-known-as/episode/42514/summary.html</ref> [[Jennifer Hudson]] says this was where she first discovered the music from ''Dreamgirls''; she eventually sang that song in the film version of ''[[Dreamgirls (film)|Dreamgirls]]'', and won the 2007 [[Academy Award]] for [[Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress|Best Supporting Actress]] for her role in the film.<ref>http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117950892.html?categoryid=2169&cs=1</ref> (Smith was also nominated that year for [[Academy Award for Best Actor|Best Actor]] in ''[[The Pursuit of Happyness]]''.)

*On [[Relient K]]'s CD ''[[Two Lefts Don't Make a Right...but Three Do]]'', the hidden song at the end ("Silly Shoes") includes the sentence "You're moving with your Auntie and Uncle in Bel-Air."

*In ''[[Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney - Justice for All]]'', a clown named Moe breaks into a "clown-revised" version of the theme song twice during his testimony in court ("In West Clownadelphia, born and raised...", and "When a couple of clowns, who were up to no good.").

*Spawning many fan-made videos, the dance that Will and Carlton do to win money for a contest in order to head back home has become a classic done with the song "Apache" by the Sugarhill Gang, even referenced in the feature film ''[[Drumline (film)|Drumline]]'' when the ''[[Morris Brown College]]'' band performs "Apache" prompting the drum majors to imitate the Will and Carlton dance.

== References ==
<div class="references-small"><references/></div>

== External links ==
{{wikiquote}}
*[http://www.freshprincedvd.com Official US site]
*[http://www.freshprinceofbelair.co.uk Official UK site]
*[http://www.warnerbros.fr/television/freshprince/index2.html Official FR site]
*[http://epguides.com/FreshPrinceofBelAir/ Episode guides archive]

{{DEFAULTSORT:Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, The}}
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[[Category:1996 television program series endings]]
[[Category:1990s American television series]]
[[Category:Black sitcoms]]
[[Category:NBC network shows]]
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[[Category:TBS network shows]]
[[Category:Television series by Warner Bros. Television]]
[[Category:Television series by NBC Universal Television]]
[[Category:Television shows set in Los Angeles]]
[[Category:Internet memes]]
[[Category:Television shows set in California]]

[[bs:The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air (serija)]]
[[de:Der Prinz von Bel Air]]
[[es:The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air]]
[[fr:Le Prince de Bel-Air]]
[[hr:Princ iz Bel Aira]]
[[it:Willy, il principe di Bel Air]]
[[he:הנסיך המדליק מבל אייר]]
[[nl:The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air]]
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[[sv:The Fresh Prince i Bel Air]]

Revision as of 04:29, 14 September 2007

Date rape drug
File:Freshprincelogo.jpg
The Fresh Prince mid-program bumper
Created byAndy Borowitz
StarringWill Smith
James Avery
Janet Hubert-Whitten (1990-1993)
Daphne Maxwell Reid (1993-1996)
Ross Bagley (1994-1996)
Tatyana Ali
Karyn Parsons
Alfonso Ribeiro
Joseph Marcell
Tyra Banks (1993)
Nia Long (1994-1995)
Vernée Watson Johnson (1990-1995)
Jenifer Lewis (1991-1996)
Charlayne Woodard (1991-1993)
Country of origin United States
No. of episodes148 (list of episodes)
Production
Running timeapprox. 23 mins (per episode)
Original release
NetworkNBC
ReleaseSeptember 10, 1990 –
May 20, 1996

The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air is an Emmy, BAFTA, and RTS-award winning popular American television sitcom that aired on NBC from September 10, 1990, to May 20, 1996. The show starred Will Smith in a fish-out-of-water scenario. He is a streetwise teenager from West Philadelphia who is sent to live with his wealthy relatives in a Bel-Air mansion. His lifestyle does not fit well with that of his relatives living in Bel-Air. 148 episodes were produced over six seasons. The show is currently broadcast as a syndicated program and is seen on many networks such as The N, Nick @ Nite and TBS. The syndicated show is shown on local channels in many countries.

Theme song and opening sequence

The opening credits and theme song explain the context of the show. Will Smith is revealed as a street-smart teenager, born and raised on the mean streets of West Philadelphia. The plot of the story is shown and rapped in the theme song.

The theme song was written and performed by The Fresh Prince (Will Smith). Contrary to popular belief, DJ Jazzy Jeff did not compose the music for the opening credits. The music was composed by Quincy Jones III, who is credited at the end of each episode. An additional credit at the end of episodes also reads "Theme song written and performed by Will Smith", in regard to the lyrics, with no reference to DJ Jazzy Jeff. The music often used to bridge scenes together during the show is also based on a similar chord structure as the theme song. This too is the work of Quincy Jones III. The full version of the theme song, telling how he went on a plane to Bel-Air, was only used on the first three episodes of the show (The Fresh Prince Project, Bang The Drum Ashley, and Clubba Hubba), although Will Smith did record it as an unreleased B-side.[1] The full-length version, which is 2:52", was included on Will Smith's Greatest Hits album and attributed to himself only. A 3:23" version was released in the Netherlands in 1992, and reached #3 on the charts.

For the first few episodes of the show stanzas one to three and stanzas six and seven were used. Beginning with Episode #9 (titled "Someday Your Prince Will Be in Effect (2)"), only the first two and the last two stanzas of the song were used. The change to the theme song allowed for longer episodes to be created.

Seasons 1, 2, 5, and 6 featured an instrumental version of the theme and still photographs from the episode for the closing credits. In Season 2, the music and stills were dropped and closing credits would almost always appear over bloopers and outtakes from the episode. This continued until the end of Season 4. The closing theme over episode clips returned for Season 5 reruns, due to NBC's change from traditional credits to the split screen credits that are currently employed by the network.

Trivia

At the end of the episode "PSAT Pstory", Will says, "Carlton, I beat you by 1 stinkin' point." But he beat Carlton 116-114, which is a difference of 2 points. He probably meant 1 percent, due to the fact he outscored Carlton 91% to 90%

Ratings

at the show's second season and third, it entered the Nielsen Ratings, here's a list:

Cast and characters

Other Characters

Janet Hubert-Whitten portrayed the original Vivian Banks from 1990-1993. In 1993 Hubert-Whitten had caused problems for the entire cast because of her pregnancy with her son, Elijah. After she gave birth to her son her character was written out of some episodes and was eventually fired after the third season. In the 1993-94 season, Daphne Maxwell Reid was Hubert-Witten's replacement until the series ended in 1996.

Cast members from another NBC sitcom, A Different World, have appeared on this show: Kadeem Hardison (Dwayne) appears as a special guest star in the first season episode "Someday Your Prince Will Be in Effect Pts. 1 & 2", Jasmine Guy (Whitley) appeared as Will's hard-working college student in the episode "Love at First Sight", then Cree Summer (Freddie) appeared as Will's Girlfriend in one episode, Karen Malina White (Charelene) appeared as a convict who Jazz married, and Ajai Sanders appeared as a secretary in the final season.

Sherman Hemsley played two different characters. Appearing multiple times as Judge Robertson, Philip's mentor and political opponent who died of a heart attack shortly after beating Philip in a landslide, and another reprising his old The Jeffersons character George Jefferson with Isabel Sanford and Marla Gibbs also reprising their old roles (Louise Jefferson a.k.a. "Weezy" and maid Florence, respectively) from the same show. It was the Jeffersons who bought the Banks mansion in the series finale.

  • Richard Roundtree had an appearance on an early season 1 episode, Cubba Hubba as a doctor and father of a girl who Will liked but had to impress him. Richard Roundtree is the actor who played Shaft in Will's favorite movie Shaft in Africa (which he had brought up many times in the series as his all time favorite movie).
  • Nia Long also plays two characters. She is mainly known for playing Lisa, Will's fiance-turned-step-sister, but she also made an appearance in the episode "She Ain't Heavy" as she plays Claudia, Will's self-centered date for a dance.

Episodes

DVD Releases

Warner Home Video is releasing The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air on DVD in Region 1, 2 and 4 for the very first time. Thus far, they have released the first four seasons. Seasons 5 and 6 are expected to be released soon.

DVD Name Ep # Release dates DVD Extras
Region 2 Region 4
The Complete 1st Season 25 February 8, 2005 February 21, 2005 April 13, 2005 "Back-to-Bel-Air: A Fresh Look" featurette.
The Complete 2nd Season 24 October 11, 2005 November 21, 2005 March 1, 2006 Best Bits of Bel Air, and Bloopers from Season 2
The Complete 3rd Season 24 February 14, 2006 June 26, 2006 August 9, 2006 Best of the Upper Bel-Air Crust (Season 3 highlights), and Bloopers from Season 3
The Complete 4th Season 26 August 8, 2006 January 22, 2007 December 6, 2006 No extras are available in the boxed set of season 4.
The Complete 5th Season 25 N/A N/A
The Complete 6th Season 24 TBA N/A N/A N/A

Settings

  • The Banks Mansion - full series:

The mansion is where the Banks family, as well as Will, live. Most of the show's scenes occur in the mansion. The upper floor hallway was shown in Season 1, but did not appear in fed later seasons. The living room has been seen in all seasons. The kitchen appeared infrequently in Season 1, but became the most prominent set on the show in Seasons 2-6. Both the living room and the kitchen looked quite different after season 1 (different wallpaper, furniture, etc). Will's room was seen in Seasons 1-3, and the back of the house with a patio was seen in Season 2 onward. The exterior of the Banks house is often used in still-shots, although the doorway is used for a running gag that occurs whenever Uncle Phil is displeased with Jazz: Phil glares at him, and the picture is replaced by a shot of Jazz screaming and literally being thrown out of the house (see running gags). The actual house can be seen in Bel-Air, California. In the final episode, the house is seen fully empty, as everyone has moved on to a new life. In Series 4 episode "for sale by owner" the Banks family reveal they live at 805 Saint Cloud Road, as Donald Trump tries to buy the house.

  • Bel-Air Prep - Seasons 1-3:

Bel-Air Prep is the high school that Will and Carlton attend in Seasons 1-3.The 3 main settings in Bel-Air Prep is The Classroom, The Hallway, and The auditorium, the Auditorium was only shown in two episodes, Courting Disaster and Just Say Yo.

  • ULA Student Store, "The Peacock Stop" - Seasons 4 and 5:

The ULA Student Store, known as "The Peacock Stop" because the school mascot is a peacock, is where Will, Carlton, and Will's friend Jackie Ames work. In Season 4, Jackie is the manager, Carlton is the assistant manager, and Will is the cashier. When Jackie leaves ULA in the middle of Season 4, Carlton takes over as manager and Will becomes assistant manager and cashier until Season 5.

  • Will and Carlton's temporary apartment - Season 4

The apartment was shown in the first two episodes of Season four. It was eventually vacated after Jazz (Will's best friend) got them kicked out for behavior.

  • ULA Upper Floor Hallway - Season 4:

The ULA Hallway was shown once in Season 4; it was where Will's classes were located.

  • The Pool House - Seasons 3-6:

The pool house is shown in one episode of Season 3, because Hilary decides to give it to Will and Carlton for a night; and it is a main setting for Seasons 4-6. When Hilary wants her boyfriend Trevor to make a wedding proposal, Trevor decides to bungee-jump off a bridge and lands on the ground, hitting his head. He dies from the injury. Hilary wants to move out of the pool house because Will tricks her into thinking that she'll be miserable because of the memories they had. Will and Carlton move into the pool house in Season 4 and stay there until the end of the series. When they move in, it has a different interior than in Season 3.

  • Hospital - Seasons 2-6:

A hospital in Los Angeles is seen in certain episodes which deal with the Banks family's medical problems, including the episode in which Will spends the night at the hospital waiting for a tonsil operation, as well when Carlton overdoses on the drug speed (mistaken for Vitamin E). It is also seen in the next episode, "The Baby Comes Out", when Vivian gives birth to Nicky. The hospital appears in the Season 4 episode "Home is Where the Heart Attack Is" because Phil has a heart attack, is treated, and fortunately survives. It is seen in twice in Season 5 as well, including "Bullets Over Bel-Air" when Will is shot, and it is seen in the first five minutes of the next episode, "A Decent Proposal", when Will proposes to Lisa after being shot. In "I, Ooh, Ooh, Baby", the hospital is seen when an acquaintance of Hilary gets pregnant in the studio of Hilary's show and spends a few days there. The Actual hospital is the VA Hospital in nearby Westwood

  • Jazz's apartment in Compton - Seasons 1,3-5:

Jazz lives with a few friends in a run-down apartment in Compton. It is featured in an episode when Will bets Carlton that he can't last a weekend in the ghetto. It is also seen in "How I Spent My Summer Vacation" although this time it is only the hallway, and it looked a lot nicer than in Season 1. Will also plans to sleep there after he and Philip get into an argument and he runs away from home. It is also seen in Season 4 in episode "Where There's a Will There's a Way (Part 2) when Will is going to beat Jazz up for getting him and Carlton evicted from their apartment. It is seen in the season 5 episode "Slum Like It... Not!" where Will convinces Phillip to buy the whole building as an easy money scheme, this setting was seen in every season except Seasons 2 and 6.

UCLA only appears in one episode, episode 1.13, "Knowledge Is Power". Will goes to the UCLA campus to find out what Hilary was really up to instead of studying; he finds out Hilary has dropped out of UCLA. This Setting was eventually adapted for the season 4 episode "All Guts, No Glory".

  • KFPB Channel 8 News station - Seasons 3,4,6:

This setting was seen throughout Season 3 because Hilary got a Job as a weather girl and fell in love with Trevor Collins, who seemingly died in a bungee accident in Season 4. Due to his death, the setting was written off towards the end of the 4th Season. The setting returned in Season 6 because Hilary's own show was produced there, until moving production to New York at the end of the series.

  • The Classroom - Seasons 1-4:

The Classroom was shown in the first 4 seasons because it was where Will and Carlton's classes were taught. The Classroom appeared infrequently in Seasons 1-2, because of Bel-Air Prep appearing infrequently, it was shown more often in Season 3, as well as Bel-Air Prep, After the Season 3 Finale, the setting was adapted for one Season 4 episode "All Guts, No Glory", after that episode, it was never seen again.

  • Newsworthiness Predatory Institute Hallway - Season 2:

Newsworthiest Prep was only seen in one episode, "The Mother of all Battles", and was mentioned in "The Big Four-Oh", Ashley's school wasn't mentioned or seen in Season 1, but it was mentioned in Season 2 as Hollingsworth Preparatory Institute, and was seen too. It was seen in "The Mother of All Battles" because Will and Carlton came to see Ashley's fight with a bully, which apparently didn't happen because of Will and Carlton interrupting Ashley, and its name was mentioned in "The Big Four-Oh". Eventually, Ashley starts attending Bel-Air Prep (as it becomes co-ed) in Season 3. In another season Ashley realized she didn't want to attend a private school, and began attending public school without her family's knowledge. She attended the public school until the end of the series. Then Uncle Phill found out. Watch the rest to find out what happened.

Running gags

  • Will's ears: There have been a few jokes about the size of Will's ears. In one episode, Will goes to a barber shop, and the barber remarks, "Now you know I'm gonna have to charge you extra for cuttin' around these ears?" Lisa makes a joke about them being "cute" in another episode. In another episode a group of girls (Blue Birds) call Will "Big ears". In the episode where Geoffery quits, Uncle Phil calls Will a "big-eared free loader." In the episode where Will and Lisa attend marriage counseling, Judge Robertson's wife makes fun of Will's ears by saying "he looks like a car coming down the road with both doors open!" Jackie even called Will "Lobe" in one episode, to which Will replied, "Hey, don't be callin' me Lobe. I left that in Philly where I thought I left you."
  • Carlton's stature: Will frequently makes jabs at Carlton's slight stature, square head, and virginity. In one episode, Will says "Come see the amazing runt Dwarfski, the world's shortest square-headed Negro". In another episode, Will and Carlton trick Geoffrey into thinking he won the lottery. Humiliated and resentful, Geoffrey quits as the Banks' butler and takes a job as a waiter. At Geoffrey's new restaurant, Will and Carlton pretend to be his sons to get him fired. Will announces to the people eating at the restaurant that Carlton is short because they can't afford more clothes, so he simply refuses to grow. Rather than getting angry, like he usually does, Carlton stays in character and cries "I want to grow!" Earlier in the episode Uncle Phil refers to Carlton as "Will's square headed cousin".
  • Carlton's love for Tom Jones: A running gag throughout the series was Carlton's enthusiastic love of singer Tom Jones and a gyrating dance he would perform to Jones' song "It's Not Unusual". (Alfonso Ribeiro has recently admitted that, true to popular belief, his dance was taken from the moves Courteney Cox does in the Bruce Springsteen music video for "Dancing in the Dark.") Eventually, Tom Jones guest-starred as himself as Carlton's guardian angel, showing Carlton what the Banks family would be like if he had never been born, a la It's a Wonderful Life. In the final episode, Will and Carlton sing along together to the song, as the penultimate scene.
  • Uncle Phil's fake happiness: Uncle Phil pretends to be happy while allowing Will and Carlton to explain their mess, only to suddenly explode in extreme anger. In one episode when Will and Carlton caused Geoffrey to quit, he ordered them to get him back, "OR THEY'LL NEVER FIND YOUR BODIES. AND I'M A JUDGE, I CAN MAKE IT HAPPEN!". Another episode featured Will and Carlton telling Uncle Phil he can reward them for their honesty (something they saw on Leave it to Beaver). After a short laugh, he said "DO I LOOK LIKE A WHITE GUY NAMED WARD?!".
  • Jazz's being thrown out: A favorite gag involves Will or his friend Jazz flying out the front door after saying something offensive to a member of the Banks family (usually Philip) and being physically ejected from the house. The shot of Jazz flying through the front door was only filmed once (for Season 1, Episode 2, "Bang the Drum, Ashley"), when Phil told him to turn up a classical music record, and Jazz scratched it like a DJ. The same footage was re-used each time; He is always wearing the same shirt. In the Season 2 episode "Cased Up", there was a small twist on this gag: when Jazz offends Phillip outside on the Banks' driveway, then boasts, "You can't throw me out because I'm already outside!", Phillip proceeds to pick him up and throw him into the house via the kitchen door. Another twist is in the Halloween episode in a dream of Will's, where Hilary and Jazz fall in love (due to a family hex). Philip tries to throw him out, but ends up being thrown out himself. Will was once thrown out of the house in the same manner as Jazz for making changes to Uncle Phil's political campaign tape. In the Season 2 episode "Community Action", Jazz is thrown out the kitchen door,and after he is thrown out,his life-size cardboard stand-in of Bill Cosby is thrown out. Also in the episode involving Geoffrey's birthday, Will gets thrown out of Jazz's club after dancing with Geoffrey's date. In the season 3 premiere "How I Spent My Summer Vacation", Will is thrown out of the back door of Jazz's apartment in Compton.
  • The Will and Carlton Dance: In order to win money in a contest, Will and Carlton do a dance to Sir Mix-a-Lot's "Jump on It". The dance starts with by thrusting the hips to the front, then to the left, then to the back, and lastly to the side, and then dancing around in a circle while lassoing your arms.
  • Uncle Phil's weight: The family, most often Will and Geoffrey, constantly makes quick jokes about Uncle Phil's size and weight. For example, Vivian, while upset at Phillip, says to Geoffrey "Geoffrey, that man is skating on thin ice." Geoffrey quips "I'll alert the fish!" Another is when Philip and Geoffrey are hunting a cricket in the house. Philip says, "Now I know how Ahab felt when he tried to capture Moby Dick". Geoffrey responds "I'm confused, between the two of you, the cricket is the whale?" In "Burnin' Down The House", after Will burns down the kitchen while trying to cook flambe, Geoffrey laughs hysterically and says, "Of all the rooms to burn down in your Uncle's house, the kitchen!ARE YOU MAD?!" An example of Will's trademark fat jokes involves calling Phil "an eclipse" (as apposed to a shadow), yelling "EARTHQUAAAKE!" when Phil dances, and pretending that the act of hugging Phil is a difficult task. Examples of the show itself ridiculing Phil's weight are present in almost every episode in which he is on a diet or exercises, or at other random moments, such as an instance where he sits on a bed under which Will, Carlton, and Hilary are hiding, after which they scream and writhe under the bed until he gets up. Another incidence, is when Will disguises at a restaurant as a waiter, and serves their own family dinner. He recommends Phil to drink Slim Fast. In another episode, Phil explains "I weigh the same as I did in high school" to which Will quickly replies "Yea, if you add up all four years". A final example is when Vivian says "I'm tired of serving that fat, disgusting, cholesterol-ridden mess" (talking about the food). Then Geoffrey, who pretends that he thought she was talking about Phil, responds "say what you will, but he is a good provider" in a shocked tone. In another episode,Phil orders Geoffrey to fetch his tools, to which he replies,"you mean your knife and fork?"
  • Cheap cologne and fried chicken: Another running joke is that of Jazz smelling like cheap cologne and fried chicken. In the episode where Will and Carlton go on a tour of the university, Jazz tags along inside the trunk. After he jumps out, Will says, "Do I smell fried chicken?". In another episode, Will and Jazz are watching TV, and hear Uncle Phil coming downstairs. Will tells Jazz to get out of sight, and while Jazz in hiding, Uncle Phil detects the smell of "cheap cologne and fried chicken".
  • Carlton being black: Will jokes about Carlton being less "black" than Will and Jazz. One example is when Will joins a poetry club and says to Carlton: "Roses are red / Violets are blue / Jazz and I are black / but Carlton, what are you?" Another example is when Carlton comes into the kitchen after a workout and begins to show off his muscles and Will calls him "Arnold Swartzenegro". And another episode, Carlton asks where he was conceived and Will say's, "White Fest". For the most part it is played for comedy, but in one or two episodes the racial issues are addressed more seriously (see Issues Addressed).
  • Annoying civil service worker: An occasional gag is the appearance of a character played by Darryl Sivad in several different situations acting as a civil service worker of some sort. He is shown to be fairly incompetent at his job, and is tactless, lacking deference when speaking to other distressed characters, seeming as if he doesn't even care about the situation and only making those worried even more frustrated. He appeared in "Burnin' Down The House" as a fireman, calling Will stupid for trying to cook flambe because he is a black person. He appeared in "Home Is Where The Heart Attack Is" as part of an EMT, telling Will, "If I tell you he's gonna be all right and he croaks, you gonna be mad, right?". He also made an appearance in "The Harder They Fall" as a park ranger. In that episode, Will's girlfriend tells him that her father and boyfriend are lost out in the wilderness, to which he replies, "So you're gonna be twice as upset if they're dead, right?". He appeared as a member of the L.A. "Crisis Intervention Unit" in the episode "Not, I Barbecue" when Will and Carlton were trapped in two girls' apartment by their huge boyfriend, and while trying to escape through a window several feet above the ground, attempted to come to their rescue. Thinking that they wanted to commit suicide, he awkwardly read off a card that they "have everything to live for," and then nonsensically says "Now hand me the baby!" In the same episode, Will remarks on how easy those civil service exams must be.
  • Aunt Viv squeezing the family's hand: In one episode when Aunt Viv is having the baby, she seems to hurt one character's hand. People will say, " My hand!!" One example of this is when Geoffrey helps Aunt Viv on calling Uncle Phil she squeezes Geoffrey's hand to the point where he tries to heal with ice. This happened to Carlton and Hilary in the same episode.

Breaking of the fourth wall

The breaking of the fourth wall was a common gag on the show; some examples include:

  • When Will fails his music class, he states that he would never have a career in music;
  • Will disregards Geoffrey's advice about being honest with his fiancée, turning to the camera and saying, "Right, like I'm gonna listen to Geoffrey. When's the last time you seen him with a woman?"
  • The cast often makes references to Will Smith's real life career as a recording artist such as Phil telling Vivian she "would believe him if he said he was a big rap star whose album just went platinum." They also tend to quote lines from Will's songs, such as "Parents just don't understand." Another one was how Phillip scoffed at Will being a soap opera star, "Like you'll become a main character of a hit network TV series!". And Will answered, looking at the camera, "It could happen".
  • After Geoffrey gives Will a phone number of Helen, a blind date set up for Geoffrey, Will addresses the audience that he has a new found appreciation for Geoffrey as a person. He then immediately shoves Geoffrey out of the way to pick up the phone to call Helen.
  • Will voicing his confusion over how Nicky could have aged several years over a period of about three months in the Season 5 premiere "What's Will Got to Do With It?" In that scene, upon seeing the older Nicky, Jazz says, "man, I'm going back to the streets where things make sense." Before that Jazz also asks Will "Who's playing the mother this year?" (Another reference to Janet Hubert Whitten replacing Daphne Maxwell Reid).
  • Also in "What's Will Got to Do With It?", when Will gets kicked out of his office and the landlord says "I have the worst luck with tenants", the landlord is Norman Fell, who played landlord Stanley Roper on Three's Company from 1976-1981.
  • Will fakes playing the saxophone while Branford Marsalis plays in the background, causing Will to quip how great it is to be working for NBC.
  • While being berated by Uncle Phil, Will takes a television remote and "clicks off" Philip, then asks the studio audience, "This is fly, right? Don't you wish you lived on TV?" where such things are possible.
  • Both Will and Carlton break the fourth wall in a later episode: Will meets his eventual girlfriend at ULA, where she poses as a psychopath obsessed with Will. As a practical joke, Will later tells Carlton that Lisa really was insane and that he had to kill her in self-defense. Carlton goes into a frenzied grief, running through all of the show's various, unrelated sets, and eventually running off the set altogether into the studio audience.
  • In "A Philadelphia Story", Will and some of his friends are talking about the fight Will got into that caused him to go to Bel-Air. When they mention Omar, Carlton asks "Who's that?" Will responds with "The dude that be spinnin' me over his head in the openin' credits". After Will's decision to stay with his mother in Philadelphia at the end of the episode, some NBC executives come into his workplace and grab Will with the intention of bringing him back to Bel-Air in the Season 5 premiere, explaining that they cast him as the Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, not The Fresh Prince of Philadelphia (In real life, Will Smith had planned to end the series after season 5, which explains the unexpected ending, when Smith agreed to continue the series for an additional season, the fifth season opened with The NBC executive humorously quoting the theme song: "Yo, holmes, to Bel-Air" as they throw Will into a van with the NBC logo and the words "Star Retrieval Unit".)
  • Will addresses a judge with his opening statement "I'm from West Philadelphia, born and raised". He then says "On the playground is where I spent most of my days".
  • Will overhears his aunt's husband on the phone thinking he has a secret girlfriend. Will reacts as he confronts him and asks why he is cheating on his aunt. The husband says it's his shrink. Will sarcastically replies "Oh yeah, and I just won a Grammy", which Will Smith had actually won.
  • In "Cased Up", guest star Malcolm-Jamal Warner remarks that he thought the whole family gathering around the table for dinner "only happened on The Cosby Show", referencing the show on which he was a main character.
  • In "Sleepless in Bel-Air", when Will spends an entire evening not studying, he confronts Carlton and exclaims he got 85%. Carlton then scolds Will and says that he wouldn't want the audience to think he cheated. Will agrees, and they then restart the scene. They re-enact all of which they said, except that now Will says he failed the test. Carlton encourages him to study harder and retake the test. Will gives a grin to the camera before walking off the set.
  • In yet another episode, Hilary, Carlton, and Ashley walk through the living room set exclaiming the comforts of being rich. Will, sitting on the couch, says to the audience, "If we so rich, why we can't afford no ceiling?". The camera then pans up to show the open rafters and lights of the studio.
  • In an episode about poetry, Vivian reads a poem to the family in the living room. She pauses, and Will says to the audience in a sincere way, "If you would like to learn more about poetry, you can contact us at ...... PSYCH!!! Haha I'm just playin' good night y'all," as the episode ends.
  • In an episode where Will and Carlton fight over a job opportunity for Hilary's show, Carlton brags about a possibility of his own show. When Will exclaims, "Your own show?" Carlton responds by saying, "It's about time!"
  • In one episode, Jazz, Will, and Vivian are in the kitchen where Jazz mentions to Vivian how "something about her has changed" since she had baby Nicky, referring to her character's cast change (Daphne Maxwell Reid replacing Janet Hubert-Whitten). Will gives the camera a knowing look. In the Season 5 premiere, Jazz asks who would be playing the mother that season.
  • When Will was secretly dating Carlton's ex-girlfriend Paula, and was standing in front of an open refrigerator when Carlton accused him of doing something he shouldn't have, and Will accidentally confessed to dating Paula. Carlton, surprised at hearing his ex-girlfriend's name, said he was talking about an item of food. Will then tried to wiggle out of it by claiming that back in Philadelphia they "named their food". Will turned his back to Carlton, took a few steps, looked sheepishly into the camera and said, "You can see him, I can't. Is he buying it?".
  • In the episode, "Asses to Ashes", Sherman Hemsley's character of Judge Robertson proceeds to kick Phillip out of the house after an argument. While storming up the stairs, he refers to Will as "Lionel", his son on the television show, "The Jeffersons".
  • In another episode, Will and Carlton were arguing: Will:"Can-not!" Carlton:"Can too!" repeatedly until Will turns to the camera and says plainly with a smile, "Who says the art of conversation is dead?"
  • In another episode, where Will is talking to Lisa about being a bad actor on a soap opera (a show within the Fresh Prince), Lisa says "Well, you're doing a pretty good job right now!" Referring to him acting for the Fresh Prince. Possibly, another possibility is she meant he was acting like he really did not want to kiss another female in the show, since Lisa gave him her support before he found out his character in the soap opera was gay. This would not be breaking the fourth wall.
  • In an episode, Will has gotten an amazing job with one of Uncle Phil's best friends and Carlton, being jealous after seeing all the attributes of having a rich boss, walks into the garden. Will then turns to the camera and explains what Carlton is doing in the garden: "he's walking, he's walking, he's outside now, he picks up a flower, he walks a little further and sees..." and Carlton gives a loud scream outside and Will explains that it's "...the company Porsche".
  • In an episode, Nicky claims he will run away because he is unable to watch Bad Boys, which Will Smith starred in.

Issues addressed

While largely a comedy, this show commonly addressed African-American issues and various topics all people could relate to.

  • In the first episode, for instance, Will accused his uncle of having forgotten "where he came from", or having forgotten that he came from the streets. His uncle was furious, and pointed out Will's frequently-mentioned belief in the philosophy of Malcolm X. "I heard the brother speak", Philip angrily informed his nephew.
  • In the episode, "Mistaken Identity," where the Banks head to Palm Springs along with Henry Furth, Philip's legal partner, Carlton and Will were pulled over in Mr. Furth's lent car, a Mercedes, because the police suspected them of car theft. Carlton futilely says that he lives in Bel-Air, has a butler, a 3.95 GPA in Bel-Air Academy, and other acclaimed "credentials" that are not seen in the African-American stereotype. They are later detained, and Will's clever plan of a bogus confession via a T.V. news bulletin brought Philip and Furth to the biased police station to explain everything Carlton said earlier, with Philip blasting the cops with the threat of a lawsuit. This addresses the issue of "driving while black," i.e., that African-Americans are often pulled over by the police not for any real offense, but because the police think they committed a crime, such as having stolen an expensive car, because the police could not believe that a black person would be able to afford such a car, and thus must have stolen it.
  • In a later episode titled "Homeboy, Sweet Homeboy", Will and one of his old school friends, Ice Tray, reminisce about how Ice Tray frequently had to save Will from bullies who attacked him because he tried to be a good student. When Vivian confronts Will about Ice Tray's lack of drive in himself and challenges the assumption by Will that he and Ice Tray are alike, Will mentions that Ice Tray never had anyone to stick up for him, and by having Will's back kept him from spiraling down the wrong path.
  • In another episode titled "Blood is Thicker Than Mud", Will and Carlton try to join a fraternity, but Carlton is singled out for being a "sell-out", because his family is wealthy and "acts" stuck-up, which enrages Will causing him to attempt to hide this from Carlton. When he finds out, Carlton then makes a speech about how he's jumping the same hurdles and facing the same struggles as those who accused him of being a sell-out, and that those who refuse to consider others due to their different standing are the real sell-outs. Upon hearing the situation, Phil laments about how black people continue to separate themselves in such a way, and asks "when are we going to stop doing this to each other?
  • In another episode titled "Guess Who's Coming to Marry?", Will's aunt (his mother's youngest sister) brings her fiance to meet the family and they are all shocked to find out he is white. While Will and the kids seem generally OK with this, the older characters tend to be disapproving and, in Will's Mother's case, outright hostile. Will's mother insists she will not go to the wedding (which is being held in Uncle Phil's back yard) and forbids Will to go either. Will eventually confronts his mother and tells her he's going to the wedding with or without her approval. Just as the ceremony is about to finish, Will's Mother relents and gets there in time for the "I-Dos."
  • The issue of alcohol abuse is explored as well in the episode "You've Got To Be a Football Hero". While at a party, Will and a rival drink shots to see who can drink the most. When Will passes out from drinking so much, some bullies drop him off at a graveyard and Will meets the other dead spirits who are stuck playing an eternal game of poker. While the poker sequence is shown humorously, the mood gets somber when a ghost child tells Will that he wanted to be a shortstop for the Brooklyn Dodgers but no longer can because a car, being driven by a drunk driver, hit him and he was killed. Upon hearing this, Will remembers the car keys he still has with him, and he looks at them sadly.
  • The issue of absent fathers was touched upon when Will finally meets his father Lou in one of the series' more emotional episodes titled "Papa's Got a Bran-New Excuse". When Will was four years old, his jobless father had one day walked out to "get a pack of smokes" and just never came home. Years later he returned now employed as a trucker but by then Will was going to college. Vivian and Philip gave him the cold shoulder for abandoning Will and his mother, Philip going so far as to say to him accusingly, "How dare you set foot in my house." Will tried to remain conciliatory towards his father since this was his chance of meeting him, but the episode concluded with Will having to confront his grief when his father abandons him a second time. Lou left Will once more and ended off saying "Good-bye son." In which Will answered "You too Lou." instead of saying "Good-bye Dad," stating that he doesn't consider Lou his father. Symbolically, Will accepts the fact that his Uncle Phil has become his father figure.
  • Drug use is addressed in an episode titled "Just Say Yo" where Will, busy with finals, basketball, and his girlfriend, is having trouble staying awake. When one of Will's classmates gives him some amphetamines to help him stay up, Carlton takes the pills, which he presumes to be vitamin E pills, and had to be taken to the hospital following a near-fatal overdose. In a final emotional scene, Will, upon being offered Clippers basketball tickets, confessed to Philip that the drugs were his and not Carlton's. An angry Philip called the whole family into the living room, insisting that Will owed them all an apology. Will explained, eventually breaking down into tears, with a now sympathetic Philip consoling him.
  • In an episode titled "Bullets Over Bel-Air" where Will is shot in the back during a robbery attempt at a bank ATM and then hospitalized, Carlton found himself pondering the idea of carrying a gun for self-defense. Later that episode, Carlton appears at Will's hospital bed and Will discovers a revolver tucked in his jacket. An emotional moment occurs when Will orders Carlton to hand over the gun, and he does. After Carlton leaves, Will opens up the gun and discovers that it was fully loaded. He lets the bullets fall onto his lap and starts to cry.
  • The issue of teenage pregnancy was brought up in one episode titled "Be My Baby Tonight" in which Ashley was curious about it. Will and Carlton, determined to find a way to talk to Ashley about it, go down to the local clinic and find out about the issues.
  • The issue of black people being stereotyped as rappers and gang members is addressed in the episode when Will appeared on the news trying to save the Los Angeles recreation center, and the only black person they put on the newscast is a rapper; Will goes to the news station to complain.
  • In earlier episodes where Will and Carlton attend Bel-Air Prep, their fellow white classmates try to "act [stereotypically] black" such as talking "gangsta" and trying to rap. However, it is not meant in anyway of disrespect but addresses the stereotype that all black people act as such.

Syndication

The series was originally an NBC production in association with The Stuffed Dog Company and Quincy Jones Productions (later QDE, or Quincy Jones/David Salzman Entertainment). After the show was released to syndication, the rights reverted to Warner Bros. Television, who continues to distribute the show worldwide (although NBC Universal does own the series' copyright).

Country Details
United States The series currently airs seven nights a week on Nick at Nite at 11:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m./ET along with late-night episodes at 3:00 and 3:30 a.m./ET, The N, (Noggin's nighttime program lineup) nightly at 7:00 and 7:30 p.m./ET and 10:00 and 10:30 pm/et broadcast with scenes that were deleted from syndicated and original broadcasts of the series. The show also airs on TBS at 2:00 p.m./ET and 2:30 p.m./ET (Fresh Prince had aired on TBS previously from 1998-2004, before Nick at Nite obtained the cable television rights to the show).

The series is also syndicated in some US markets, used by some (such as WTTA in St. Petersburg/Tampa, Florida) as filler programming.

Canada The series currently airs on YTV (Monday - Thursday 12:30am & 8:00pm), OMNI.2 TvTropolis Weekdays @ 5:00PM and on CTS.
United Kingdom BBC Two broadcast the show between 21 January 1991 and 7 April 1998 exclusively for British audiences. After this, the show had a weekday slot around 6:20pm during what seemed to be programming for a younger audience, including The Simpsons and on Fridays, Robot Wars. After this programming stopped, the channel occasionally broadcast episodes during late morning/early afternoon schedules. Now, the show is rarely found on BBC Two schedules, and it is believed that the channel's rights to broadcast the show have expired.

The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air now runs on Trouble, usually every day, and on Bravo. The show is also available on Virgin Media On Demand (Series one only).

Australia In Australia it was previously aired daily on the Nine Network (free-to-air), but now it is only shown on pay TV children's channel Nickelodeon (cable/satellite), usually during the 'Nick at Night' times.
France In France, the series airs Monday through Sunday on the public channel France 4. From 1992 to 2002, the show was broadcasted by France 2.
Hungary In Hungary it was on air daily on Viasat3 and on HBO as well, in the afternoon session. Then in the summer of 2006 they started it again on Viasat3 in the early morning. The show was called Kaliforniába jöttem ("I came to California"). The first episode was dubbed in 1994. There were two different dubs of the show, by two different synchronization companies. The theme song was also translated into Hungarian.
Italy In Italy the series is broadcast on Italia 1 as Willy, il Principe di Bel-Air. The show (and even the theme song) is translated into Italian.
Mexico In Mexico the show aired in the 1990s on prime time (right before The Simpsons, which still shows at 8:00 p.m., Monday through Friday) on Azteca 7 with the name El Príncipe Del Rap ("The Prince Of Rap"). The introductory theme was performed in Spanish with remarkable accuracy according to the original version although quite different from that of Spain.
The Netherlands In the Netherlands it aired weekdays from April to early July 2007 on Veronica 6 p.m. Monday to Thursday (Season 1 and 2).
Brazil In Brazil it aired mostly Monday through Friday (and, in some periods, on Saturday) on SBT by the name Um Maluco no Pedaço (loose translation: "a crazy guy in the neighborhood"), until this year.
New Zealand In New Zealand the show screens on weekdays on Prime.
Norway In Norway the show is aired on TVNorge every Saturday evening.
Middle East The show was a big hit with Arabic-speaking viewers when it became among the first western shows to air on MBC in the late 1990s and early 2000s and was among one of MBC's most frequently rerun shows, although it has yet to air on MBC 4 since the network began launching separate channels.
Spain In Spain the show is aired in Antena 3 and some regional TV stations with the name El príncipe de Bel-Air. The show's intro theme was dubbed into Spanish with reasonable accuracy to the original and the same music background.

Spanish (Spain) Intro

In Catalonia the show was also dubbed into the Catalan language with the name El príncep de Bel-Air.

Sweden The Series airs weekdays on the Kanal 5 channel in Sweden and has done for the past 10 years.
Peru The Series airs on Warner TV at 5:30 a.m. from Monday to Sunday. Additionally, on Saturdays, Sundays it also airs on 7:30 a.m.
Philippines The popular TV series on GMA Network every Sunday Evenings at 6:00 pm from 1990-94, and also aired on Citynet Television on Saturdays at 5pm
South Africa The program is broadcast on GO on Wednesdays at 18:00 South African Standard Time (GMT + 2), on the DStv network.
India In India the show aired on Zee Cafe.
Germany The series airs on the channel "RTL 2" from Monday to Friday at 16:05. It has been aired since 1992.
Pakistan In Pakistan the show aired on STN.
Israel In Israel the show aired on Kids' Channel.
Finland In Finland the show aired on MTV3.
Portugal In Portugal the show was aired a few times, by both public channels and cable ones, being the most recent one Sic Radical.
Croatia In Croatia the show is aired on RTL Televizija.
Ireland In Ireland the show aired on RTE2.

Cultural impact

  • In Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney - Justice for All, a clown named Moe breaks into a "clown-revised" version of the theme song twice during his testimony in court ("In West Clownadelphia, born and raised...", and "When a couple of clowns, who were up to no good.").
  • Spawning many fan-made videos, the dance that Will and Carlton do to win money for a contest in order to head back home has become a classic done with the song "Apache" by the Sugarhill Gang, even referenced in the feature film Drumline when the Morris Brown College band performs "Apache" prompting the drum majors to imitate the Will and Carlton dance.

References

External links