
How Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne become TV's favourite parents
Many of the producers who worked on The Osbournes had come from the sitcom world, and transferred that experience to portraying this real-life family."When you watch the intro credit sequence, it feels very like The Partridge Family or Father Knows Best," said Dr Brandy Monk-Payton, an assistant communication and media professor and television researcher at Fordham University.Ozzy played the part of the "loveable buffoon", Dr Monk-Payton said, with The Osbournes segment producer Henriette Mantel describing the middle-age rocker as "Ward Cleaver from Leave It To Beaver on acid".The approximately 20-minute episodes captured silly antics, like the time Sharon threw a baked ham over the fence to retaliate against a loud neighbour; their rock-and-roll lifestyle, like Ozzy rehearsing for a world tour; as well as slapstick family frustrations, like Ozzy's repeated struggles with tripping over the dog bowl."It was a normal family, but it was wild and it was just crazy," Ms Mantel told the BBC. And what came through on screen is that "they truly loved each other".In that sitcom set-up, Kelly and Jack fulfilled the roles of a squabbling brother and sister, executive producer Jeff Stilson told the BBC, while Sharon was "the mom trying to hold it all together".In many ways a typical dad, Ms Mantel recalled that "Ozzy just wanted to... lay on the sofa and watch the History Channel".That tension between the familiar and the unfamiliar is exactly what draws in reality TV viewers, according to Dr Danielle Lindemann, a professor of sociology at Lehigh University and the author of True Story: What Reality TV Says About Us."We want to see the outrageous, the zany, but at the same time, we don't want it to be so removed from our lives that we can't relate at all," she said.According to MTV, The Osbournes was its highest-rated show when it aired. The second season's premier in late 2002 drew 6.6 million viewers – up 84% from the first season, Billboard reported at the time, citing the network. The success of this new format paved the way for shows like Newlyweds: Nick and Jessica, which premiered in 2003, Keeping Up With the Kardashians in 2007 and Bravo's many Real Housewives properties.
The real in reality
In today's TV landscape, "reality" is often presented with a wink.But on the set of The Osbournes, the idea of capturing regular life was so new, it didn't yet occur to producers how far they could push the narrative. Producers say the stories they captured were real, at least in the beginning, and usually based on about three weeks of footage per episode. These days, reality TV usually takes just four days to shoot a single episode.According to Mr Johnston and Mr Stilson, filming went on constantly each day until the family went to sleep. "They forgot the cameras were there," Mr Stilson said.TV critic Mr Dehnart cautioned: "There's still obviously layers of production and construction there that we're not seeing."That hands-off approach changed, as more viewers tuned in. For example, Kelly and Jack later revealed that one plot line involving a dog therapist was set up for the show.According to editor and producer Charles Kramer, working on The Osbournes meant creating a new reality TV genre in real time. Tropes such as the editing of raw footage to create a narrative and the use of the "Frankenquote" - editing a character's lines from one scene into another - were all honed on The Osbournes, he told the BBC."Now everybody uses those terms," he said.Mr Kramer took what he learned on The Osbournes to go on to work on another celebrity-driven programme, The Girls Next Door, though other creators such as Mr Stilson said they no longer wanted to be a part of what the reality-TV universe was becoming.As Dr Lindemann points out, it can feel normal for fans to access celebrities' personal worlds today, often through social media. But in the early 2000s, the inner machinations of celebrity life portrayed in The Osbournes, such as appearances on the Tonight Show and Sharon's management of the business-side of Ozzy's music, were much more mysterious to the average person.
"Being able to see someone who's a superstar... in this somewhat relatable context was new and refreshing, because it's not like people were following Ozzy on Twitter," Dr Lindemann said.That kind of real-life access took its toll, as Ozzy told Metal Hammer in 2022 that he felt like a "laboratory rat" after spending three years with cameras following him around, though he said he was "not ashamed" of the programme."It got to the point where I was falling apart emotionally," he told the magazine, "because you can't... relax".Spending their teenage years in the spotlight also wasn't without difficulty for Jack and Kelly, who wrote about her struggles with drug use in books released in 2009 and 2017."I don't think either one of us was really prepared for" the fame, Kelly told ABC's Good Morning America in 2017."That's a difficult situation to put teenagers in. But they handled it as well as anybody could," Mr Stilson said.
After 52 episodes across four seasons, The Osbournes finally ended in 2005. But Mr Stilson wonders if they should have ended production after the first season. It became a "darker show" after that, he said, as Sharon was diagnosed with cancer and Ozzy "fell off the wagon" with drugs and alcohol.For Mr Kramer, part of the appeal for audiences was Ozzy's "regular folk" working-class background - and for Americans, a fascination with Ozzy's "heavy" Birmingham accent.Ozzy seemed to embrace that hard-scrabble British persona who appeared on US screens."You know, when they show it in England, there are no bleeps (over the swears). It isn't as much fun," he told Rolling Stone in 2002.Mr Stilson doesn't believe that hard edge is what made the show successful."The success of the show was the sweetness of the family and the ridiculous dynamic," he said. "It was about a functional family - that cursed a lot."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
19 minutes ago
- The Sun
Wife insists ‘3-hour night' is perfect for saving your marriage – you don't even need to spend full time with husband
A WIFE is sharing her secret '3-hour rule' that keeps her marriage alive, and other married couples can't get enough of it. TikToker Rachel Higgins posted a video sharing the simple way she and her husband manage to reconnect after long days. 2 Higgins and her husband began following a three-hour night back in 2024, and the mother said it has been a 'game changer' in their relationship. What is the three-hour night? Higgins explains it as dividing up three hours into three different sections, which allows them to accomplish chores and connect. Higgins and her husband would previously spend the entire night taking care of their young daughter, lounging on the couch while scrolling through their phones, and then going to bed. However, after prioritizing their relationship, their nights take on a slightly different look. 'What we do is after my daughter goes to bed…we take an hour of productive time,' Higgins explained. 'Anything that's productive for the household.' During the productive hour, they do chores that they couldn't accomplish throughout the day, such as cleaning the kitchen or laundry. 'The second hour we're dedicating to our marriage. 'During this time, we put our phones away and we're solely dedicated to each other and to our marriage.' Higgins said that this hour can look a little different every night. How can I bring up kinks with my partner? Some nights it may mean taking a shower together, while others it may just be as simple as playing a game together. The purpose of this hour is to debrief, discuss, and connect. 'The last hour is about taking time to yourself,' she said. In the final hour, both of them can do whatever they want without judgment. Carson Daly's relationship rule In 2024, Carson Daly revealed his secret relationship rule to People: Daly told People that he and his wife, Siri Pinter, sleep in separate rules. 'It's been good for us,' said the Today host before revealing that he and Siri 'secretly love it.' Daly isn't the only celebrity to participate in the "sleep divorce" trend. Cameron Diaz said in 2023 that she and her husband Benji Madden also sleep in different rooms. 'We should normalize separate bedrooms,' she said. "To me, I would literally, I have my house, you have yours." This may be lying on the couch, on your phone, or any other self-care activities you need to do. 'Main point is to inspire you to be intentional with your time if you feel stuck doing the same thing every night like we did,' Higgins wrote in the comments. 'No hard rules.' Higgins said that they don't necessarily accomplish their three-hour night goal every night, but they try to do it three to four times a week. The mother said that even just succeeding one night a week can be enough. Higgins' three-hour night drew the attention of over 300,000 TikTok users, with many people rushing to the comments to support the idea or question how she manages to make it work.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Brad Pitt's mother dead as family pay tribute
Brad Pitt 's mother has died aged 84. The death of Jane Etta Pitt, a retired school counselor, was confirmed by her granddaughter and Pitt's niece Sydney in a heartbreaking post on Wednesday. Sydney , the daughter of Pitt's younger brother Doug, lauded her 'sweet Grammy ', writing: 'We were not ready for you to go yet but knowing you are finally free to sing, dance, and paint again makes it a tad easier. 'If you knew Grammy, you knew she had the biggest heart. She cared deeply for everyone and everything, no questions asked. 'She taught me how to paint, how to be strong, how to lead with kindness, to love Jesus through everything, and to find joy in the smallest things. 'She made up the silliest games just to make us laugh, and she believed in fairness, in putting others first, and doing good simply because it was the right thing to do. She added Jane 'could keep up with all 14 of us grandkids without missing a beat. 'There was no limit to the love she gave, and everyone who met her felt it.' 'I don't know how we move forward without her. But I know she's still here in every brushstroke, every kind gesture, every hummingbird. She was love in its purest form. 'We were truly blessed to have her to love on growing up and I know she lives on through each of us.' Jane is survived by husband William Alvin Pitt, three children and 14 grandchildren. Son Doug has Sydney, Landon and Regan with his wife Lisa, while daughter Julie is mom to Caleb, twin daughters Josie and Rylie, as well as adopted sons Caden and Cruz, whom she shares with her husband Scott Neal. Pitt is father to Shiloh, 19, twins Vivienne and Knox, 17, and three adopted children Maddox, 24, Pax, 21 and Zahara, 20 - who he welcomed with ex-wife Angelina Jolie. He has been estranged from his children since an explosive fight on their private jet in 2016 resulted in Angelina, 49, filing for divorce - and last year insiders told the Daily Mail his parents were 'heartbroken' at not seeing their grandchildren for eight years. Brad Pitt's representatives declined to comment when contacted by the Daily Mail. Jane wed Brad's father William - the former owner of a trucking company - in 1962 and the future Oscar winner, now 61, was born the following year. After the birth of Brad in 1963, William and Jane welcomed son Doug in 1966 and sister Julie in 1969. They raised their family in Springfield, Missouri. While Jane and William kept mostly out of the spotlight, they did occasionally join Pitt on the red carpet. They memorably supported their son and then-partner Jolie at the 2012 Academy Awards. In 2014 they walked the red carpet with Pitt and three of their grandchildren at the premiere of Jolie's film Unbroken - after the actress was unable to attend due to chickenpox. Jane said of 'We're so very proud of Angie. This means so much to our family, especially our grandchildren. We love her dearly.'


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Meghan celebrates new As Ever venture with behind-the-scenes clip
The Duchess of Sussex took to Instagram to showcase her new As Ever venture in a behind-the-scenes video of her lifestyle brand's 2024 Napa Valley Rosé launch. Footage showed Meghan popping a cork, emblazoned with the brand logo, on one of the bottles. The wine's product description describes it as evoking "soft notes of stone fruit, a gentle minerality, and a lasting finish" and "reminiscent of the finest Provençal styles." While the first wine launch sold out within hours, Tuesday's (5 August) product was still available to buy as of 8pm BST on Wednesday.