
'The Conners' series finale ending was John Goodman's idea
'Roseanne' spinoff show 'The Conners' aired its series finale Wednesday night on ABC (8 p.m. and streaming on Hulu).
The show ended with the family – including Dan Conner (John Goodman), Jackie (Laurie Metcalf), Darlene (Sara Gilbert), and Becky (Lecy Goranson) – tearfully saying 'goodnight' to each other, before Dan was left alone in the family living room.
Goodman then looked right at the camera, smiling with tears in his eyes, and said 'Goodnight' directly to the audience.
8 John Goodman in 'The Conners.'
Disney via Getty Images
8 Sara Gilbert, John Goodman, Lecy Goranson, and Laurie Metcalf in 'The Conners.'
Disney via Getty Images
Executive producer Bruce Rasmussen told The Post that the tearful 'goodbyes' weren't scripted.
'I don't think I've ever seen it before on TV, where the characters actually break the fourth wall, and you see the actual emotion of what [the actors are] going through,' he said.
He added that they felt it fit 'this particular show, 37 years on the air, this family being together. That was them saying goodbye to each other, for real.'
8 Emma Kenney as Harris Conner, Laurie Metcalf as Jackie Harris, Lecy Goranson as Becky Conner, Ames McNamara as Mark Conner, Sara Gilbert as Darlene Conner, Jay R. Ferguson as Ben, and John Goodman as Dan Conner.
ABC via Getty Images
8 Roseanne Barr and John Goodman on 'Roseanne.'
Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images
Executive producer and showrunner Bruce Helford knew that Goodman would look into the camera and address the audience, 'because he had pitched that; it was his idea.'
When other cast members such as Metcalf, Gilbert, and Goranson teared up as they said goodnight, he explained: 'The whole thing just felt so real emotionally, that it would have been too hard to cut it out.'
Executive producer Dave Caplan chimed in, 'They earned that moment…we've always tried to be really honest with our audience. It was just such an honest moment that it was irresistible to put it on.'
Starring Goodman, Metcalf, Gilbert, and Goranson, 'The Conners' aired for seven seasons from 2018 to 2025 – succeeding the original show 'Roseanne,' which aired from 1988 to 1997. It briefly returned for a revival in 2018, until Roseanne Barr's controversial tweets got it axed, she got fired, and her fictional counterpart got killed off.
8 John Goodman in 'The Conners.'
Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images
8 Sara Gilbert, Laurie Metcalf, John Goodman, Emma Kenney, and Lecy Goranson in 'The Conners.'
ABC via Getty Images
In the original 'The Conners' ending, Dan was supposed to say goodnight only to his family. But, that changed into him addressing the audience.
'I think [Goodman] just felt that was the right way to say goodbye, and acknowledge the bond, because the audience is part of that show,' Caplan told the Post.
'We are so much connected to the audience; we're not just an entertainment. It's been a family for 37 years.'
Helford added: 'He felt the bond of all those years with the audience. And I think just as a decent guy, his instinct was to say 'thank you.' How do you argue with that?'
8 Laurie Metcalf and John Goodman in 'The Conners.'
ABC via Getty Images
8 Sara Gilbert, Jane Lynch, Laurie Metcalf, Emma Kenney, and John Goodman in 'The Conners.'
Disney via Getty Images
For now, another spinoff isn't on the table.
'There's no discussion of it,' Rasmussen revealed. 'We really want this moment to be a genuine celebration of the scope of 37 years of keeping this family alive, and just honoring that legacy right now.'
But, he added, they 'never' say the show is dead. 'We literally brought people back from the dead to do the show,' referring to how Dan was killed off on 'Roseanne' Season 9. 'Right now, it is just about this end, and this moment.'
Caplan said they wanted the series finale to feel like the ending of the series, 'but that the lives of these characters go on.'
'There wasn't some artificial stop where the Conners disappear from the universe,' he explained. 'They're out there somewhere, living their lives, doing relatively well, for them.'
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