Every sitcom has no other choice but to water down certain episodes in order to make room for gags and get everything wrapped up in time. This happens in "The Big Three-O" but only the subplot. The rest was actually well done.
Danny turns 30 in this episode. DJ is 11, so that means Danny had her when he was 19. For the 1970s, that was a pretty young age to be a parent. And people complain these days. I've always found that to be odd.
So it is Danny's birthday, and Jesse and Joey plan a fun day for him. Jesse plans on getting new seat covers for Danny's Thunderbird he calls Bullitt. Jesse is coming out of the store where somebody hits the back of the car, it rolls down a hill, flips, then sinks in the Bay. If that was realistic, there would be so many police reports and damages and compensations that could not be ignored. None of these are addressed! Very unrealistic. Danny sees what happened and becomes depressed. Jesse and Joey use Danny's insurance to buy a replica where a funny bid starts.
Danny turns 30 in this episode. DJ is 11, so that means Danny had her when he was 19. For the 1970s, that was a pretty young age to be a parent. And people complain these days. I've always found that to be odd.
So it is Danny's birthday, and Jesse and Joey plan a fun day for him. Jesse plans on getting new seat covers for Danny's Thunderbird he calls Bullitt. Jesse is coming out of the store where somebody hits the back of the car, it rolls down a hill, flips, then sinks in the Bay. If that was realistic, there would be so many police reports and damages and compensations that could not be ignored. None of these are addressed! Very unrealistic. Danny sees what happened and becomes depressed. Jesse and Joey use Danny's insurance to buy a replica where a funny bid starts.