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An Awesome Character

From my perspective, except for D.J., since she and Kimmy were best friends whose friendship became stronger despite and perhaps because of their arguments from time to time, the Tanners should have apologized to Kimmy for treating her badly and making her feel unwanted instead of choosing to be more open-minded and clear-headed about her and accepting her for all that she was (flaws and all), while seeing her as part of their family too.

Throughout the original series, the running joke is, Kimmy is not wanted in her own home — and especially not at the Tanners' either.

In the Season 5 episode Five's A Crowd, Danny tells Kimmy to "go live with a wildebeest" after she suggests for him to strap a collar with a beeper to D.J. and track her like a wildebeest when Danny noticed D.J. was five minutes late getting home.

In the Season 6 premiere Come Fly With Me, Kimmy returns from a trip, only for Jesse to ask, "Wouldn't it be great if they could lose the (plane) passengers instead of the luggage?"

In the Season 2 episode Fogged In, Jesse and Joey literally scream in horror when Kimmy simply announces she's coming over for the weekend.

Basically, it's frustrating watching the show back as an adult and seeing Kimmy not only being rejected by her own family, but also by her best friend's. It's crystal clear that her home life is less than stellar — and the Tanners could have been a safe place for her to go. But instead, she was met with audible groans and blatant disgust every time she walked in the door, which had to have been pretty damaging for young Kimmy. In fact, it takes seven seasons for Kimmy to get the courage to stand up to D.J.'s Uncle Jesse — one of her biggest detractors.

In the Season 7 episode Another Opening, Another No Show, Kimmy shows up to work at Jesse's club wearing a bedazzled uniform which she says expresses her unique personality. Jesse remarks that it looks like a "clown outfit" which makes him want to "express my lunch." Later in the episode, Kimmy, her voice full of emotion and sadness, tells Jesse, "You really hurt my feelings. I worked hard on this uniform. I just wanted to look nice for tonight." Jesse apologizes for being "a jerk."

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So, Danny, Jesse and Stephanie may have mocked her, but Kimmy did more good, on and off screen, than anyone ever gave her credit for. And, look, a lot of us were children when the show came out and we laughed when the laugh track instructed us to — which was often at Kimmy's expense. But it's been 30 years and we know better, so it's time to own up to our mistakes. Even with everyone who lived in that full house, it was the Tanners' "annoying" neighbor that we should've been looking up to all along.

Basically, I am talking to Danny, Jesse, Stephanie and Joey there; from my perspective, they should've known better. And there definitely should've been an episode of either Full House or its spin-off series Fuller House where D.J. sits them down and gives them what-for about their treatment of Kimmy, and even says, "How would you like it if I treated your friends the same rude way you treated Kimmy sometimes? She's my best friend, and you guys owe her an apology for how you treated her over time, too."

Realizing D.J.'s point, Danny would speak for himself, Stephanie, Jesse and Joey when he turns to them and says, "I think D.J.'s right; the way we treated Kimmy sure wasn't very nice at all." He then turns to D.J. and says, "D.J., you're absolutely right — we wouldn't like it if you treated our friends the same way we treated Kimmy, and she is your best friend. And you were also right about another thing — we do owe Kimmy an apology for all the things that we said and did to her over time, too."

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