Please Don't Feed the Animals
13 June 2026Dre's godbrother is released from prison, which sparks debate; the kids pressure Ruby to reveal secrets from her past.
Dre drops Zoey off at college for orientation, where she makes friends with another incoming freshman; Zoey must plead her case when she learns Dre never turned in her housing application.
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Dre's godbrother is released from prison, which sparks debate; the kids pressure Ruby to reveal secrets from her past.
Bow struggles to adjust as she returns to work after maternity leave; Ruby gives the twins a workaround plan to get out of doing homework.
When Ruby gets scammed, Dre begins to suspect that she isn't as sharp as she used to be; Diane develops a crush on Zoey's visiting friend.
Diane experiences a big life event; Dre conducts psychological warfare on Junior before challenging him to a game of basketball.
The Johnson kids try to cope when Dre and Bow try taking turns living in the house to give each other space; tensions rise when the family reunites for Junior's high school graduation.
As Pops and Ruby prepare to move away, Dre and Bow consider if they should make a big life change as well; grappling with this idea at work, Dre receives some unexpected advice from Simone Biles; the Johnsons prepare for their goodbyes.
Pops, Dre and Junior go on a trip to heal old wounds; Diane and Jack contemplate their futures as they look at their college wish lists.
Pops and Ruby announce they are moving out of the house to travel the United States in their RV; Bow realizes she is beginning perimenopause, leading Dre to enlist her mother's help.
When Dre and Bow get a note that Devante may be falling behind at his private school, they expect he is being discriminated against because he is the only Black student in class; Jack and Diane enlist Charlie to cheer Junior up.
Dre gets news that he's been nominated for an Ad World Award but may have to miss an important family function if he attends; Olivia returns from Yale to visit Junior, who has a full day of L.A. fun planned for their visit.
Charlie announces that he is marrying Vivica A. Fox and asks Dre to be his best man; Diane's ongoing feud with the groom costs her an invitation to the wedding, but she attempts to sneak in anyway.
Dre spirals after finding out his white co-worker Griffin has a better sneaker collection than him; Bow lets Diane take a day off from school against Pops' advice.
When Junior's girlfriend, Olivia, gets into Yale, he asks Bow to convince her to stay and attend USC instead; Diane and Jack discover Dre's inspiration for his ads are hitting a little too close to home.
Dre overreacts to Devante leaving the house ashy and Bow intervenes, making the situation worse; Jack makes a bold outfit choice for picture day.
Jack gets a job as the locker room attendant for the Los Angeles Lakers; Dre and Bow feel like they need to step in before his job goes to his head; Pops and Ruby realize their daily routine has gotten boring and heed advice from Junior and Olivia.
Dre calls into a radio show and gets humiliated in front of Diane and tries to redeem himself; Bow tries to bond with a group of young female doctors and learns a hard truth.
Dre can't seem to land a good pitch now that he's moved up to general marketing at his firm and begins to doubt himself; Bow and Ruby question the new boy Diane is dating who doesn't necessarily meet her standards.
Bow convinces Dre to attend a fundraising event to make some new friends, but Dre is convinced there will be nothing but dud husbands there to befriend; their expectations are far exceeded when the special guest for the evening is Michelle Obama.
Dre feels pigeonholed to the urban marketing team at Stevens & Lido and realizes he needs to make some big career changes; Boyz II Men stop by the office to help out the team with a campaign pitch; Junior has to deal with the twins.
After one of Dre's secrets with Pops is spilled to Ruby, he realizes that his relationships with each of his parents have changed since they got married; Bow surprises Jack and Diane with a brand-new car and tries to teach the twins how to drive.
After having a conversation about dealbreakers in relationships with Bow, Dre realizes that he gave up on some of his goals in life and begins tackling them; Junior worries Olivia might leave him after she mentions her dealbreakers.
Junior and Olivia invite an excited Bow and Dre over for dinner in their new apartment, but upon arrival, they immediately become concerned with the young couple's living conditions; Diane bonds with Pops as she asks for his advice on dating.
Against the warnings of Dre and his co-workers, Junior is resolute about his decision to move in with Olivia; Bow challenges Dre to get comfortable being alone.
Bow and Dre let their competitive streaks out during their family game night; Junior and Olivia are at a turning point in their relationship when one person says ``I love you.``
When Jack decides to go vegan, Dre is unsupportive because he is worried about messing up their bonding nights where they both eat barbecue and watch MMA fights together; Diane wants to buy a limited-edition Beyoncé doll with her allowance.
After trying to prove to Diane that hip-hop isn't dead, Dre realizes he may be out of touch with current trends; Jack thinks that he has become Bow's best friend.
Bow and Junior take Olivia and her mother to brunch to celebrate Junior's birthday; Jack is jealous that his new crush wants to hang out with Diane instead of him.
Dre is hesitant about recreational use after catching Junior and Olivia smoking weed together; Diane asks Jack to help her with her senior prank, and he is happy to be included.
Bow makes history as the first Black female partner at her hospital; Bow struggles with the burden of being a trailblazer at her hospital and tries to mentor others.
Going against Bow's warning, Dre tries to educate her white cousin Gary about how to be an ally; Olivia tries to impress Junior's family by attempting to psychoanalyze everyone and their relationships with one another.
When the power goes out in the neighborhood, Dre's instinct is to go into survival mode and stockpile essentials; Junior desperately searches for a place to charge his phone to get in touch with Olivia.
Dre realizes he's out of touch with his roots after Junior claims he's turned into a ``valley dad,`` so he takes the family to his hometown of Compton; Bow tries to teach Jack and Diane about the spirit of giving by having them volunteer in Compton.
Dre and Bow find out that Diane has a secret social media account; Junior and Ruby confess to their romantic partners about little lies they've told since their relationships began.
Dre's intimate wedding plans for Pops and Ruby go awry when Pops' brother, Uncle Norman, shows up unexpectedly for the festivities; Ruby refuses Bow's offer to help with preparations.
Dre and Junior butt heads over the most effective way to protest in the age of social media; Jack grows jealous as Diane starts to hang out with the older kids at school.
Dre underestimates how hard operating during a pandemic will be for the Johnsons; Junior's attempts to bring his girlfriend closer to the family are stymied by the new realities of social distancing.
Junior is excited about his first time voting but discovers he has been purged from the voter rolls; Dre's colleague Stevens makes an ill-advised decision to run for Congress.
Dre's colleague Stevens makes an ill-advised decision to run for Congress, so Dre enlists his family's help and campaigns against him.
Dre can't come to terms with his new reality when he discovers something shocking about Pops and Ruby; Junior feels the pressure to find love and tries to rekindle a past romance with a grand gesture.
Dre underestimates Rhonda's ability to be a mom, and he struggles to support her decision to adopt a baby; Ruby gets in the way of Bow's plans for the perfect baby shower; Junior, Jack and Diane want to give the best gift of the party.
Dre realizes he needs to intervene when Pops starts gambling and partying to mask his heartbreak; Bow pawns school drop-off onto Junior so that she can avoid an annoying parent.
Dre knows when to choose his battles with Bow, but they disagree on where to send Devante to preschool; Junior helps Jack and Diane pull an eighth grade prank.
Dre is guilted into volunteering at Jack and Diane's school carnival; Rainbow makes an appointment for Junior to get his flu shot, but Ruby has strong opinions against modern medicine.
Dre spirals when Rainbow is elected to the prestigious California Board of Medicine, and the invitation for the annual fundraising gala is addressed to Dr. Rainbow Johnson and guest; Diane redecorates her room to impress Mason.
Jack joins the robotics club to Dre's dismay; Ruby helps Diane with her school project.
Bow is heartbroken to learn that Diane is no longer friends with Sophie; Dre discovers a hole in the wall that Junior and Jack were hiding and forces them to fix their own expensive mistake.
Dre tries to get Bow a meaningful gift for Valentine's Day; Ruby teaches Jack how to get a girl after she hears about his love troubles, but her antiquated ways don't help.
Dre worries Diane and Jack don't know how to fend for themselves and sends them out on an adventure; Junior gets into a tricky situation at work when he befriends Josh in hopes of scoring a positive peer review.
The Johnsons go on vacation at an all-inclusive beach resort in paradise; Dre and Bow meet a couple without kids and live a kidless fantasy for a while; Junior catches the eye of a cute girl and vies for her attention; Jack gets the flu.
Dre's torn at the office between looking out for Junior and letting him make his own mistakes; Jack loses a friendship after trying to look cool in front of the basketball team.
Bow takes Diane to a salon and wants to spend this time together as a bonding opportunity; Diane is conflicted about relaxing her hair again and embarks on a hair journey; Dre and Junior compete to have the best barbecue.
Dre is thrown off when Pops shows up to the house full of holiday cheer; the whole family gets into the holiday spirit until someone from Lynette's past shows up.
Dre and Bow are worried about Junior's future working odd jobs, especially after he tells them he wants to produce comedy shows for unknown comics; Rainbow encourages Diane to have a slumber party at their house.
When Dre discovers that Lynette is an art aficionado like himself, the two quickly bond and become close; Junior introduces Bow to virtual reality.
When Dre realizes that his relationship with Diane has been distant, he plans some daddy-daughter bonding sessions; Bow covers for Junior at his ChoreBoar gig.
Halloween is around the corner and the Johnsons don't agree with the family costume; the Johnsons agree that Jack's new friend Raymond has got to go; Junior wants Devante's first trick-or-treating experience to be perfect.
When Dre is invited to join a private social club for the black upper class, Bow and the family jump at the opportunity to mingle with this new community; Junior helps Pops pick a wedding date.
Jack gets cut from the basketball team, and it leads to a family discussion about him being short for his age; Dre is worried for Jack's future, but Bow feels strongly that he will overcome his adversity and be stronger for it.
When Bow learns that Diane and Ruby don't believe in feminism, she brings Diane to her feminist group; Junior and Jack help Dre after he realizes he is out of touch with modern-day feminism.
When Rainbow and Dre realize Junior's been taking them for granted, they decide it's time to band together and cut him off for good; Jack discovers he has a very lucrative talent, but Ruby wants to use it for all the wrong reasons.
The twins are headed into eighth grade; Junior is out on his own managing social media for Migos; Pops reveals that he is getting married.
Junior gets an offer for his dream job working with Migos, but Dre and Bow are determined to convince him to return to college and get his degree.
Dre has concerns about Jack and Diane spending the weekend with their friends' family in the desert; Pops is forced to come to terms with how he treats women after he helps set Junior up.
Dre is excited when Jack makes the football team, but Bow is against the idea; Diane wants Junior to drive her to her first real date with Jalen, but Junior overstays.
Dre's sister Rhonda takes Jack and Diane to her part of town in a black neighborhood and claims the twins are scared of their own community; Bow becomes the ``office mom`` at work, and Junior tries to help her break the label.
Jack keeps getting himself into trouble, so Dre chaperones the twins' school dance to keep an eye on him; Junior fights with his girlfriend after she thinks he spends too much time taking care of Devante.
As they are planning Devante's birthday, Bow wants to be more mindful with all the new child-rearing rules these days, but Dre isn't having it; Jack and Diane try to change Ruby's bad habits.
When Junior tells Dre that Josh is his mentor, Dre flips out; Jack and Diane show their friends a video of Bow dancing, and she becomes the hot mom.
When Junior tells Dre that Josh is his mentor, Dre flips out; Jack and Diane show their friends a video of Bow dancing, and she becomes the hot mom.
After Kyra's estranged father shows up and wants to bring Kyra home to Houston, Dre and Bow work to show him the amazing life they can provide for her; the kids go on a mission to get Kyra one last chili dog from Larry's.
Dre and Bow want to send Kyra to Valley Glen Prep, but after the school treats them like a charity case, they are infuriated; Junior wants to get a job as Josh's assistant at Stevens & Lido.
Dre is upset that Jack and Diane are getting the same surface-level education about Black History Month that he got when he was growing up; he is asked to make a presentation at the school assembly and wants to bring black history to life.
Junior shakes things up at Stevens & Lido as an intern; Bow has a meeting with one of Kyra's teachers and learns that she has an aptitude for chemistry, but Kyra doesn't want to transfer to a magnet school.
Dre and Bow struggle with identity politics involving the kids; Diane's crush starts spending time with another girl; Junior's Valentine's Day date goes awry after Dre and Pops have a talk with him about chivalry.
When Dre's teenage cousin Kyra needs a place to stay, the Johnsons decide to take her in, but they have different approaches to helping her adjust to suburban life; Jack and Diane try to get Kyra on social media to get information about her.
Dre and Bow are furious after Diane isn't lit properly in her class photo; Junior claims there is unspoken colorism within the family.
Dre takes Jack and Diane on a camping trip for school and hatches a plan for them to escape to a fancy hotel for some pampering; Bow gets an award at work, but feels undermined after a colleague is surprised to learn where she went to school.
The Johnsons can't agree on what movie to see on their traditional Christmas trip to the theater; Junior feels embarrassed about taking a gap year after he runs into his ex-girlfriend.
Bow makes a new friend at work, and Dre thinks she has broken bird syndrome; when Junior transforms his shared room with Jack into a frat house, Ruby and Diane gang up against them.
Dre decides to put Junior to work as an intern at Stevens & Lido; Bow lets Ruby watch Devante after the nanny quits.
Bow's mom visits the family for the first time since the loss of Bow's dad; Bow decides to throw a big party for what would have been her dad's next birthday; Mason invites Diane to an MMA fight on the same night as the party.
The family learn that Jack and Diane are not familiar with the music of Prince; each member of the family works to explain Prince's impact on their lives through his music.
The twins opt out of the family Halloween costume for fear it will hurt their social status in school; Dre and Bow try to help by putting together a haunted house and inviting the whole seventh grade; Junior spends time with a girl from Ruby's choir.
Dre develops a newfound joy of calling the cops over petty neighborhood issues but begins to question the example he is setting for Jack; Diane develops her first crush, and Bow wants to help but lets Zoey take the lead.
After Dre and Bow drop Junior off at college, he returns home, deciding he wants to take a gap year; Jack and Diane begin to question whether they should still be sharing a room.
Dre and Bow start to realize how much they relied on each other and how hard it is being on their own; Bow doesn't think Dre's new house is suitable for the kids.
The Johnson kids try to cope when Dre and Bow try taking turns living in the house to give each other space; tensions rise when the family reunites for Junior's high school graduation.
Dre and Bow decide to go back to their therapist, who suggests they make time for a date night; when the bouncy house gets left behind after Devante's birthday party, Jack and Diane take advantage of it in different ways.
The family is divided over the idea of getting a dog; Bow's brother Johan is in town, and he doesn't get the warm welcome he expects from Ruby.
When Junior is accepted to Howard and Stanford, Dre tries to convince him to attend his alma mater; Ruby decides she's going to manage Jack's comedy career, forcing Diane to compete for her attention.
When both Dre and Bow's families show up for Easter, they have to learn to love each other's different cuisines; Junior tries to organize an Easter egg hunt; Jack and Diane pretend not to be interested to impress their cousins.
When Dre helps Junior plan a birthday party for Pops, he sees his father's past in a new light; when Bow decides to say ``yes`` to everything for a year, Jack and Diane take advantage.
Dre and Bow confront gender biases of their own after finding out that Junior and Zoey have become sexually active; Ruby is hurt when she finds out that Jack and Diane have been hanging out with a friend's grandmother after school.
When Jack and Diane get in trouble at school, Dre and Bow have to figure out the right balance of discipline and support; Ruby thinks Junior's Spanish teacher is flirting with him.
Dre and Bow's morning routine with the kids changes; Junior bonds with Diane now that he is in charge of driving his siblings to school.
Dre runs point on a campaign focusing on the talk that black parents have with their children about racial bias; Bow finds an online support group.
Ruby has a talk with Dre and Rhonda about her inheritance; Bow's sister hires Junior to become her assistant.
Bow struggles to adjust as she returns to work after maternity leave; Ruby gives the twins a workaround plan to get out of doing homework.
Dre is diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes and resolves to cure himself; Jack is convinced that baby Devante hates him and enlists Junior and Diane for help.
Dre is chosen to lead Stevens & Lido's new charity campaign that helps people give back to their community; Junior fails his driving test, so Ruby offers to chaperone a trip with him and the twins.
Dre's godbrother is released from prison, which sparks debate; the kids pressure Ruby to reveal secrets from her past.
Diane experiences a big life event; Dre conducts psychological warfare on Junior before challenging him to a game of basketball.
An incident at school threatens Junior's future at his beloved Valley Glen Prep.
Dre organizes a family game night, and the competition is fierce; Bow makes it clear how she feels about Junior's girlfriend.
When Ruby gets scammed, Dre begins to suspect that she isn't as sharp as she used to be; Diane develops a crush on Zoey's visiting friend.
Bow feels overwhelmed after the birth of DeVante and learns she is suffering from postpartum depression; the kids babyproof the house in an effort to help their parents.
Dismayed by the twins' Columbus Day school play, Dre works on a catchy song to raise awareness about a black holiday that is worth celebrating.
When Bow gets a headache and stops by the OB/GYN, she discovers she is having complications, which puts a damper on Dre's baby shower plans.
Dre drops Zoey off at college for orientation, where she makes friends with another incoming freshman; Zoey must plead her case when she learns Dre never turned in her housing application.
Dre and Bow become sentimental as Zoey gets accepted into several colleges around the country; Pop gets the twins to persuade Zoey to go to college in a city they want to visit.
Fresh off filming a stint on a reality show, Bow's sister comes to visit; Zoey suggests Dre spend more time with Junior.
Dre is jealous of his sister Rhonda's close relationship with Pops; Zoey is urged to take Junior to a high school party; the twins decide to live life to the fullest.
Dre feels conflicted about doing a campaign with a rap star after Bow and Ruby suggest it plays on stereotypes; Bow tries to get the family to eat less takeout food.
Dre considers taking paternity leave; Bow tries to conceal her pregnancy at work to get a promotion; Ruby convinces the kids that their nanny is stealing from them.
When Bow tries to get a black doll for Diane, she's dismayed by the limited options; Dre is forced to face his own prejudices; Ruby gets Junior to be her Spades partner.
Dre unexpectedly becomes engaged in jury duty after learning the defendant in the case is a young black man; Bow gives the kids permission to swear in the house but soon regrets the decision.
Dre reunites with his old crew when he returns to Compton for a funeral; Ruby criticizes Bow's parenting.
When is his turn to choose a name, Dre picks something culturally significant; Junior spoils Zoey's anti-Valentine's Day plans by asking her friend on a date.
Bow gets Dre to try therapy, where he learns to deal with his anger; Johan acts as a life coach to the kids.
Tensions are still running high for Dre at work due to the outcome of the presidential election; as class president, Junior deals with a disenfranchised student body.
Dre and Bow take action when Diane stumbles across some inappropriate websites, making their home an internet-free zone.
With Zoey heading to college soon, Dre tries to plan the best Christmas ever and invites Johan and Gigi to the celebration; Gigi's baby reminds Bow how difficult it is to mother a newborn.
Bow asks Dre to pull some strings and secure Zoey a fellowship, but he doesn't want Zoey relying on nepotism; Junior loses his job at the arcade pizza place after reporting unclean practices to corporate.
Bow deals with feelings about her own biracial identity when Junior brings home a white girlfriend; Dre counts on Charlie to teach him how to relate to a white, female point-person for a project at work; Zoey wants to remodel Jack and Diane's room.
Pops' older sister shows up unexpectedly for Thanksgiving, delighting everyone but Ruby; Bow and Dre take a trip.
The results of Jack's career test reveal that he may be looking at a blue-collar future; Ruby is led to believe Diane is possessed.
Dre plans a prank on Junior after Junior embarrasses him at a basketball game; the neighborhood takes part in mischief night, but Ruby takes it too far with the kids.
In an effort to be more open-minded about being a part of his community, Dre joins the Homeowners' Association; Bow gets advice from Pops on how to make the kids want to spend time with her.
When Junior decides to run for class president, Dre steps in to be his campaign manager; Pops, Johan and Jack discuss the presidential election; Bow worries Zoey's college essay isn't good enough.
When Zoey questions her belief in God, Dre has a crisis of faith and looks to family and co-workers for input; Bow's brother comes to stay with the Johnsons and aggravates Dre.
Dre decides to take the family on a first-class vacation to Walt Disney World; while Dre and the kids get VIP treatment, Bow, Pops and Ruby set off on their own Disney adventure.
Exhausted from a stressful day at work, Dre falls asleep watching a ``Good Times`` marathon and dreams of himself and his family as being characters in the series.
When the flu breaks out in the Johnson household, Dre desperately tries to avoid catching it, while taking care of the whole family.
Dre is excited about Junior's cool friends; Bow deals with a lack of honesty from Ruby, Zoey, Jack and Diane when things get broken around the house.
Dre is fearful of losing his job and tarnishing his family's reputation when Stevens & Lido announces company layoffs; Bow wants to show she can do it all on her own when she's put in charge of a school auction.
Dre's sister's upcoming wedding leads to a conversation on tradition; Jack and Diane are afraid they are too old to be ring bearer and flower girl; Junior and Zoey prep Ruby to embrace her daughter's relationship.
Dre and Bow look for legal guardians for their kids; Zoey and Junior tell Jack some family secrets, which he naively accepts.
Dre decides to hire a nanny to help with the kids and chores; when Diane runs for class president, Zoey helps her create a smear campaign against her competition.
As a biography project, Diane makes a documentary about Jack's burgeoning basketball career; Dre and Bow get Jack into a more serious league; Junior becomes a referee; Zoey finds a new love interest.
Dre and Bow aren't sure how to respond when the kids ask tough questions about a controversial court case involving alleged police brutality.
Tired of being twins, Jack and Diane explore their lives as individuals; after buying Zoey a car, Dre wonders if it was a good idea.
When Dre realizes that his neighbor Janine hasn't invited any members of his family to her pool parties, he thinks she assumes they can't swim; Diane and Jack envy each other's activities in the Girls' and Boys' Rovers Organization.
After a period of heavy spending, Dre and Bow wonder if they need to be more financially responsible; Junior wants to start day trading.
Dre is upset when Ruby wants him and Bow to meet the new man in her life; when Junior meets a girl on a website, Zoey, Jack and Diane think he is being scammed.
When Dre's childhood best friend, an international pop star visits, Bow feels left out; the kids film a music video in hopes of becoming YouTube stars.
Dre worries that Christmas is too commercialized, and Pops and Ruby think the kids have forgotten the true meaning of Christmas.
Bow thinks Dre's visiting childhood friend is taking advantage of his generosity; the ex-wife of Stevens & Lido's founding partner gains control of half the company and puts Dre in a difficult position.
Before the family Christmas card shoot, Dre takes Junior and Jack to get a haircut from his lifelong barber, T., but Junior chooses another barber.
Dre relies on pharmaceutical assistance to help him conquer his fear of flying when he and Bow take Zoey to visit Brown University -- Bow's alma mater; Charlie reveals details about a former flame (Amber Rose).
Dre's nieces and nephews come to the neighborhood to trick-or-treat, to the disappointment of his own kids; Dre faces his cousin June Bug, who used to bully him.
When Dre accepts an invitation from the neighbors to attend church one Sunday, the family members have a great day and decide they should say ``yes`` to things more frequently; Jack and Diane discover they were never baptized.
Dre and his colleagues create a holiday initiative called Daddy's Day -- everything that Father's Day is not; Junior tries to help Bow around the house.
Dre and Bow are shocked and concerned when Pops admits that he has not been to a doctor in several years.
Jack nearly gets expelled when he performs a song with lyrics containing an offensive word at a school talent show.
Bow's mom visits the family for the first time since the loss of Bow's dad; Bow decides to throw a big party for what would have been her dad's next birthday; Mason invites Diane to an MMA fight on the same night as the party.
When Jack and Diane start digging into Johnson family history for an assignment, Pops regales them with the story about how their great-great-grandfather bet the family's future against a gangster.
When Junior joins the Young Republican Club to impress a girl, Dre and Bow arrange to meet the girl's parents; Zoey finds out she needs glasses.
Bow thinks Dre should tell his mother that his sister is a lesbian; Zoey tries to help Junior develop his gaydar; Diane and Jack compete to pick the best Mother's Day gift.
When Zoey starts acting out and pushes boundaries, Dre and Bow disagree on how to handle her bad behavior.
Dre suffers from self-doubt when an executive questions his street cred; Pops fears the worst when he receives a letter from the IRS.
Bow invites her friends from college to an elaborate dinner party in hope of impressing them; Dre learns a lot about Bow's past; the kids decide to create their own reality show by documenting the party.
After a colleague tells Bow that Dre never had the vasectomy he had scheduled a few years ago, Bow wants to learn the truth.
Dre worries about getting older when he injures himself playing basketball before his 40th birthday; Ruby and Bow compete to see who can get Dre the best gift.
Dre tries to arrange an amazing vow renewal for his and Bow's 15th anniversary, but unannounced visitors cause complications.
Dre teaches Andre Jr. how to trash-talk a school bully; Diane's fear of the dark leaves Bow struggling with sleep deprivation.
Dre takes an instant dislike to Zoey's first serious boyfriend, a worldly teen from France -- who is also named Andre.
Dre is determined to keep the peace on Valentine's Day; Diane's siblings try to teach Diane how to give a compliment.
While on the way to the family's annual Martin Luther King Day ski trip, Dre decides to teach his children about the significance of the man who inspired the holiday.
Dre endeavors to take over the role of office Santa from the head of human resources; Bow gets sick of competing with Ruby over who cooks Christmas Eve dinner.
Dre encourages the family to have each other's backs in the hope that everyone will feel more connected; Zoey and Andre Jr. must baby-sit the twins.
When Dre's visiting mother butts heads with Bow, Dre searches for a way to get the women in his life to get along.
When the kids disapprove of Dre's favorite cheap restaurant, he decides they all need to get jobs; the neighbors suspect the Johnsons have fallen on hard times.
Dre is disappointed when the older kids balk at a family tradition of seeing who can pull the most outlandish pranks.
Rainbow and Dre agree they will no longer spank their children, but when Jack disobeys, the kids wonder if their parents will go back on their word.
When Dre takes over ``mom`` duties for a week, the praise he gets from everyone at the kids' school inspires him to try to outdo everyone..
Dre tries to help Andre Jr. expand his social circle; Rainbow takes Diane to the hospital in hope of inspiring her, but things don't go as planned.
When Dre decides to give Andre Jr. the sex talk, he instantly regrets it when his son won't stop asking questions.
Advertising executive Dre happily anticipates a promotion; Andre Jr. wants to convert to Judaism and have a bar mitzvah like his friends.
Dismayed by the twins' Columbus Day school play, Dre works on a catchy song to raise awareness about a black holiday that is worth celebrating.
Dre drops Zoey off at college for orientation, where she makes friends with another incoming freshman; Zoey must plead her case when she learns Dre never turned in her housing application.
Bow feels overwhelmed after the birth of DeVante and learns she is suffering from postpartum depression; the kids babyproof the house in an effort to help their parents.
An incident at school threatens Junior's future at his beloved Valley Glen Prep.
Fresh off filming a stint on a reality show, Bow's sister comes to visit; Zoey suggests Dre spend more time with Junior.
Dre organizes a family game night, and the competition is fierce; Bow makes it clear how she feels about Junior's girlfriend.
Dre runs point on a campaign focusing on the talk that black parents have with their children about racial bias; Bow finds an online support group.
Dre is chosen to lead Stevens & Lido's new charity campaign that helps people give back to their community; Junior fails his driving test, so Ruby offers to chaperone a trip with him and the twins.
Dre and Bow start to realize how much they relied on each other and how hard it is being on their own; Bow doesn't think Dre's new house is suitable for the kids.
Ruby has a talk with Dre and Rhonda about her inheritance; Bow's sister hires Junior to become her assistant.
When both Dre and Bow's families show up for Easter, they have to learn to love each other's different cuisines; Junior tries to organize an Easter egg hunt; Jack and Diane pretend not to be interested to impress their cousins.
Dre and Bow confront gender biases of their own after finding out that Junior and Zoey have become sexually active; Ruby is hurt when she finds out that Jack and Diane have been hanging out with a friend's grandmother after school.
Dre is diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes and resolves to cure himself; Jack is convinced that baby Devante hates him and enlists Junior and Diane for help.
When Dre helps Junior plan a birthday party for Pops, he sees his father's past in a new light; when Bow decides to say ``yes`` to everything for a year, Jack and Diane take advantage.
Dre and Bow's morning routine with the kids changes; Junior bonds with Diane now that he is in charge of driving his siblings to school.
When Jack and Diane get in trouble at school, Dre and Bow have to figure out the right balance of discipline and support; Ruby thinks Junior's Spanish teacher is flirting with him.
When Junior decides to run for class president, Dre steps in to be his campaign manager; Pops, Johan and Jack discuss the presidential election; Bow worries Zoey's college essay isn't good enough.
As they are planning Devante's birthday, Bow wants to be more mindful with all the new child-rearing rules these days, but Dre isn't having it; Jack and Diane try to change Ruby's bad habits.
Dre is upset that Jack and Diane are getting the same surface-level education about Black History Month that he got when he was growing up; he is asked to make a presentation at the school assembly and wants to bring black history to life.
Dre and Bow are furious after Diane isn't lit properly in her class photo; Junior claims there is unspoken colorism within the family.
When Junior is accepted to Howard and Stanford, Dre tries to convince him to attend his alma mater; Ruby decides she's going to manage Jack's comedy career, forcing Diane to compete for her attention.
The Johnsons can't agree on what movie to see on their traditional Christmas trip to the theater; Junior feels embarrassed about taking a gap year after he runs into his ex-girlfriend.
The family is divided over the idea of getting a dog; Bow's brother Johan is in town, and he doesn't get the warm welcome he expects from Ruby.
Dre develops a newfound joy of calling the cops over petty neighborhood issues but begins to question the example he is setting for Jack; Diane develops her first crush, and Bow wants to help but lets Zoey take the lead.
Dre and Bow struggle with identity politics involving the kids; Diane's crush starts spending time with another girl; Junior's Valentine's Day date goes awry after Dre and Pops have a talk with him about chivalry.
After Kyra's estranged father shows up and wants to bring Kyra home to Houston, Dre and Bow work to show him the amazing life they can provide for her; the kids go on a mission to get Kyra one last chili dog from Larry's.
Dre and Bow decide to go back to their therapist, who suggests they make time for a date night; when the bouncy house gets left behind after Devante's birthday party, Jack and Diane take advantage of it in different ways.
Bow makes a new friend at work, and Dre thinks she has broken bird syndrome; when Junior transforms his shared room with Jack into a frat house, Ruby and Diane gang up against them.
After Dre and Bow drop Junior off at college, he returns home, deciding he wants to take a gap year; Jack and Diane begin to question whether they should still be sharing a room.
Dre and Bow want to send Kyra to Valley Glen Prep, but after the school treats them like a charity case, they are infuriated; Junior wants to get a job as Josh's assistant at Stevens & Lido.
The family learn that Jack and Diane are not familiar with the music of Prince; each member of the family works to explain Prince's impact on their lives through his music.
The twins opt out of the family Halloween costume for fear it will hurt their social status in school; Dre and Bow try to help by putting together a haunted house and inviting the whole seventh grade; Junior spends time with a girl from Ruby's choir.
Junior shakes things up at Stevens & Lido as an intern; Bow has a meeting with one of Kyra's teachers and learns that she has an aptitude for chemistry, but Kyra doesn't want to transfer to a magnet school.
Dre decides to put Junior to work as an intern at Stevens & Lido; Bow lets Ruby watch Devante after the nanny quits.
Jack keeps getting himself into trouble, so Dre chaperones the twins' school dance to keep an eye on him; Junior fights with his girlfriend after she thinks he spends too much time taking care of Devante.
When Dre's teenage cousin Kyra needs a place to stay, the Johnsons decide to take her in, but they have different approaches to helping her adjust to suburban life; Jack and Diane try to get Kyra on social media to get information about her.
Dre takes Jack and Diane on a camping trip for school and hatches a plan for them to escape to a fancy hotel for some pampering; Bow gets an award at work, but feels undermined after a colleague is surprised to learn where she went to school.
Dre is excited when Jack makes the football team, but Bow is against the idea; Diane wants Junior to drive her to her first real date with Jalen, but Junior overstays.
Dre's sister Rhonda takes Jack and Diane to her part of town in a black neighborhood and claims the twins are scared of their own community; Bow becomes the ``office mom`` at work, and Junior tries to help her break the label.
Dre has concerns about Jack and Diane spending the weekend with their friends' family in the desert; Pops is forced to come to terms with how he treats women after he helps set Junior up.
Junior gets an offer for his dream job working with Migos, but Dre and Bow are determined to convince him to return to college and get his degree.
When Rainbow and Dre realize Junior's been taking them for granted, they decide it's time to band together and cut him off for good; Jack discovers he has a very lucrative talent, but Ruby wants to use it for all the wrong reasons.
Halloween is around the corner and the Johnsons don't agree with the family costume; the Johnsons agree that Jack's new friend Raymond has got to go; Junior wants Devante's first trick-or-treating experience to be perfect.
When Bow learns that Diane and Ruby don't believe in feminism, she brings Diane to her feminist group; Junior and Jack help Dre after he realizes he is out of touch with modern-day feminism.
The twins are headed into eighth grade; Junior is out on his own managing social media for Migos; Pops reveals that he is getting married.
When Dre realizes that his relationship with Diane has been distant, he plans some daddy-daughter bonding sessions; Bow covers for Junior at his ChoreBoar gig.
When Dre is invited to join a private social club for the black upper class, Bow and the family jump at the opportunity to mingle with this new community; Junior helps Pops pick a wedding date.
When Dre discovers that Lynette is an art aficionado like himself, the two quickly bond and become close; Junior introduces Bow to virtual reality.
Jack gets cut from the basketball team, and it leads to a family discussion about him being short for his age; Dre is worried about Jack's future, but Bow feels strongly that he will overcome his adversity and be stronger for it.
Dre's torn at the office between looking out for Junior and letting him make his own mistakes; Jack loses a friendship after trying to look cool in front of the basketball team.
Dre is thrown off when Pops shows up to the house full of holiday cheer; the whole family gets into the holiday spirit until someone from Lynette's past shows up.
Bow takes Diane to a salon and wants to spend this time together as a bonding opportunity; Diane is conflicted about relaxing her hair again and embarks on a hair journey; Dre and Junior compete to have the best barbecue.
Dre and Bow are worried about Junior's future working odd jobs, especially after he tells them he wants to produce comedy shows for unknown comics; Rainbow encourages Diane to have a slumber party at their house.
Dre worries Diane and Jack don't know how to fend for themselves and sends them out on an adventure; Junior gets into a tricky situation at work when he befriends Josh in hopes of scoring a positive peer review.
Dre realizes he needs to intervene when Pops starts gambling and partying to mask his heartbreak; Bow pawns school drop-off onto Junior so that she can avoid an annoying parent.
The Johnsons go on vacation at an all-inclusive beach resort in paradise; Dre and Bow meet a couple without kids and live a kidless fantasy for a while; Junior catches the eye of a cute girl and vies for her attention; Jack gets the flu.
Dre tries to get Bow a meaningful gift for Valentine's Day; Ruby teaches Jack how to get a girl after she hears about his love troubles, but her antiquated ways don't help.
Dre spirals when Rainbow is elected to the prestigious California Board of Medicine, and the invitation for the annual fundraising gala is addressed to Dr. Rainbow Johnson and guest; Diane redecorates her room to impress Mason.
Dre is guilted into volunteering at Jack and Diane's school carnival; Rainbow makes an appointment for Junior to get his flu shot, but Ruby has strong opinions against modern medicine.
Bow is heartbroken to learn that Diane is no longer friends with Sophie; Dre discovers a hole in the wall that Junior and Jack were hiding and forces them to fix their own expensive mistake.
Jack joins the robotics club to Dre's dismay; Ruby helps Diane with her school project.
Dre underestimates Rhonda's ability to be a mom, and he struggles to support her decision to adopt a baby; Ruby gets in the way of Bow's plans for the perfect baby shower; Junior, Jack and Diane want to give the best gift of the party.
Dre knows when to choose his battles with Bow, but they disagree on where to send Devante to preschool; Junior helps Jack and Diane pull an eighth grade prank.
Dre can't come to terms with his new reality when he discovers something shocking about Pops and Ruby; Junior feels the pressure to find love and tries to rekindle a past romance with a grand gesture.
Dre underestimates how hard operating during a pandemic will be for the Johnsons; Junior's attempts to bring his girlfriend closer to the family are stymied by the new realities of social distancing.
Junior is excited about his first time voting but discovers he has been purged from the voter rolls; Dre's colleague Stevens makes an ill-advised decision to run for Congress.
Dre's colleague Stevens makes an ill-advised decision to run for Congress, so Dre enlists his family's help and campaigns against him.
Dre's intimate wedding plans for Pops and Ruby go awry when Pops' brother, Uncle Norman, shows up unexpectedly for the festivities; Ruby refuses Bow's offer to help with preparations.
Dre and Junior butt heads over the most effective way to protest in the age of social media; Jack grows jealous as Diane starts to hang out with the older kids at school.
Dre and Bow find out that Diane has a secret social media account; Junior and Ruby confess to their romantic partners about little lies they've told since their relationships began.
When the power goes out in the neighborhood, Dre's instinct is to go into survival mode and stockpile essentials; Junior desperately searches for a place to charge his phone to get in touch with Olivia.
Dre realizes he's out of touch with his roots after Junior claims he's turned into a "valley dad," so he takes the family to his hometown of Compton; Bow tries to teach Jack and Diane about the spirit of giving by having them volunteer in Compton.
Bow makes history as the first Black female partner at her hospital; Bow struggles with the burden of being a trailblazer at her hospital and tries to mentor others.
Dre is hesitant about recreational use after catching Junior and Olivia smoking weed together; Diane asks Jack to help her with her senior prank, and he is happy to be included.
After trying to prove to Diane that hip-hop isn't dead, Dre realizes he may be out of touch with current trends; Jack thinks that he has become Bow's best friend.
Going against Bow's warning, Dre tries to educate her white cousin Gary about how to be an ally; Olivia tries to impress Junior's family by attempting to psychoanalyze everyone and their relationships with one another.
Bow and Dre let their competitive streaks out during their family game night; Junior and Olivia are at a turning point in their relationship when one person says "I love you."
When Jack decides to go vegan, Dre is unsupportive because he is worried about messing up their bonding nights where they both eat barbecue and watch MMA fights together; Diane wants to buy a limited-edition Beyoncé doll with her allowance.
Against the warnings of Dre and his co-workers, Junior is resolute about his decision to move in with Olivia; Bow challenges Dre to get comfortable being alone.
Bow and Junior take Olivia and her mother to brunch to celebrate Junior's birthday; Jack is jealous that his new crush wants to hang out with Diane instead of him.
After having a conversation about dealbreakers in relationships with Bow, Dre realizes that he gave up on some of his goals in life and begins tackling them; Junior worries Olivia might leave him after she mentions her dealbreakers.
Junior and Olivia invite an excited Bow and Dre over for dinner in their new apartment, but upon arrival, they immediately become concerned with the young couple's living conditions; Diane bonds with Pops as she asks for his advice on dating.
After one of Dre's secrets with Pops is spilled to Ruby, he realizes that his relationships with each of his parents have changed since they got married; Bow surprises Jack and Diane with a brand-new car and tries to teach the twins how to drive.
Dre feels pigeonholed to the urban marketing team at Stevens & Lido and realizes he needs to make some big career changes; Boyz II Men stop by the office to help out the team with a campaign pitch; Junior has to deal with the twins.
Dre overreacts to Devante leaving the house ashy and Bow intervenes, making the situation worse; Jack makes a bold outfit choice for picture day.
Dre calls into a radio show and gets humiliated in front of Diane and tries to redeem himself; Bow tries to bond with a group of young female doctors and learns a hard truth.
When Junior's girlfriend, Olivia, gets into Yale, he asks Bow to convince her to stay and attend USC instead; Diane and Jack discover Dre's inspiration for his ads are hitting a little too close to home.
When Dre and Bow get a note that Devante may be falling behind at his private school, they expect he is being discriminated against because he is the only Black student in class; Jack and Diane enlist Charlie to cheer Junior up.
Dre gets news that he's been nominated for an Ad World Award but may have to miss an important family function if he attends; Olivia returns from Yale to visit Junior, who has a full day of L.A. fun planned for their visit.
Dre spirals after finding out his white co-worker Griffin has a better sneaker collection than him; Bow lets Diane take a day off from school against Pops' advice.
Pops and Ruby announce they are moving out of the house to travel the United States in their RV; Bow realizes she is beginning perimenopause, leading Dre to enlist her mother's help.
Dre can't seem to land a good pitch now that he's moved up to general marketing at his firm and begins to doubt himself; Bow and Ruby question the new boy Diane is dating who doesn't necessarily meet her standards.
Jack gets a job as the locker room attendant for the Los Angeles Lakers; Dre and Bow feel like they need to step in before his job goes to his head; Pops and Ruby realize their daily routine has gotten boring and heed advice from Junior and Olivia.
Pops, Dre and Junior go on a trip to heal old wounds; Diane and Jack contemplate their futures as they look at their college wish lists.
Charlie announces that he is marrying Vivica A. Fox and asks Dre to be his best man; Diane's ongoing feud with the groom costs her an invitation to the wedding, but she attempts to sneak in anyway.
Bow convinces Dre to attend a fundraising event to make some new friends, but Dre is convinced there will be nothing but dud husbands there to befriend; their expectations are far exceeded when the special guest for the evening is Michelle Obama.
As Pops and Ruby prepare to move away, Dre and Bow consider if they should make a big life change as well; grappling with this idea at work, Dre receives some unexpected advice from Simone Biles; the Johnsons prepare for their goodbyes.
Advertising executive Dre happily anticipates a promotion; Andre Jr. wants to convert to Judaism and have a bar mitzvah like his friends.
Dre tries to help Andre Jr. expand his social circle; Rainbow takes Diane to the hospital in hope of inspiring her, but things don't go as planned.
When Dre decides to give Andre Jr. the sex talk, he instantly regrets it when his son won't stop asking questions.
When Dre takes over "mom" duties for a week, the praise he gets from everyone at the kids' school inspires him to try to outdo everyone.
Rainbow and Dre agree they will no longer spank their children, but when Jack disobeys, the kids wonder if their parents will go back on their word.
When the kids disapprove of Dre's favorite cheap restaurant, he decides they all need to get jobs; the neighbors suspect the Johnsons have fallen on hard times.
Dre is disappointed when the older kids balk at a family tradition of seeing who can pull the most outlandish pranks.
Dre encourages the family to have each other's backs in the hope that everyone will feel more connected; Zoey and Andre Jr. must baby-sit the twins.
When Dre's visiting mother butts heads with Bow, Dre searches for a way to get the women in his life to get along.
Dre endeavors to take over the role of office Santa from the head of human resources; Bow gets sick of competing with Ruby over who cooks Christmas Eve dinner.
Dre is determined to keep the peace on Valentine's Day; Diane's siblings try to teach Diane how to give a compliment.
While on the way to the family's annual Martin Luther King Day ski trip, Dre decides to teach his children about the significance of the man who inspired the holiday.
Dre takes an instant dislike to Zoey's first serious boyfriend, a worldly teen from France -- who is also named Andre.
Dre teaches Andre Jr. how to trash-talk a school bully; Diane's fear of the dark leaves Bow struggling with sleep deprivation.
Dre worries about getting older when he injures himself playing basketball before his 40th birthday; Ruby and Bow compete to see who can get Dre the best gift.
Dre tries to arrange an amazing vow renewal for his and Bow's 15th anniversary, but unannounced visitors cause complications.
After a colleague tells Bow that Dre never had the vasectomy he had scheduled a few years ago, Bow wants to learn the truth.
Bow invites her friends from college to an elaborate dinner party in hope of impressing them; Dre learns a lot about Bow's past; the kids decide to create their own reality show by documenting the party.
When Junior joins the Young Republican Club to impress a girl, Dre and Bow arrange to meet the girl's parents; Zoey finds out she needs glasses.
Bow thinks Dre should tell his mother that his sister is a lesbian; Zoey tries to help Junior develop his gaydar; Diane and Jack compete to pick the best Mother's Day gift.
Dre suffers from self-doubt when an executive questions his street cred; Pops fears the worst when he receives a letter from the IRS.
When Zoey starts acting out and pushes boundaries, Dre and Bow disagree on how to handle her bad behavior.
When the flu breaks out in the Johnson household, Dre desperately tries to avoid catching it, while taking care of the whole family.
Dre and Bow are shocked and concerned when Pops admits that he has not been to a doctor in several years.
When Jack and Diane start digging into Johnson family history for an assignment, Pops regales them with the story about how their great-great-grandfather bet the family's future against a gangster.
Jack nearly gets expelled when he performs a song with lyrics containing an offensive word at a school talent show.
Dre relies on pharmaceutical assistance to help him conquer his fear of flying when he and Bow take Zoey to visit Brown University -- Bow's alma mater; Charlie reveals details about a former flame (Amber Rose).
When Dre accepts an invitation from the neighbors to attend church one Sunday, the family members have a great day and decide they should say "yes" to things more frequently; Jack and Diane discover they were never baptized.
Dre and his colleagues create a holiday initiative called Daddy's Day -- everything that Father's Day is not; Junior tries to help Bow around the house.
Dre's nieces and nephews come to the neighborhood to trick-or-treat, to the disappointment of his own kids; Dre faces his cousin June Bug, who used to bully him.
Before the family Christmas card shoot, Dre takes Junior and Jack to get a haircut from his lifelong barber, T., but Junior chooses another barber.
Bow thinks Dre's visiting childhood friend is taking advantage of his generosity; the ex-wife of Stevens & Lido's founding partner gains control of half the company and puts Dre in a difficult position.
When Dre's childhood best friend, an international pop star visits, Bow feels left out; the kids film a music video in hopes of becoming YouTube stars.
Dre worries that Christmas is too commercialized, and Pops and Ruby think the kids have forgotten the true meaning of Christmas.
After a period of heavy spending, Dre and Bow wonder if they need to be more financially responsible; Junior wants to start day trading.
Dre is upset when Ruby wants him and Bow to meet the new man in her life; when Junior meets a girl on a website, Zoey, Jack and Diane think he is being scammed.
When Dre realizes that his neighbor Janine hasn't invited any members of his family to her pool parties, he thinks she assumes they can't swim; Diane and Jack envy each other's activities in the Girls' and Boys' Rovers Organization.
Tired of being twins, Jack and Diane explore their lives as individuals; after buying Zoey a car, Dre wonders if it was a good idea.
As a biography project, Diane makes a documentary about Jack's burgeoning basketball career; Dre and Bow get Jack into a more serious league; Junior becomes a referee; Zoey finds a new love interest.
Dre decides to hire a nanny to help with the kids and chores; when Diane runs for class president, Zoey helps her create a smear campaign against her competition.
Dre and Bow aren't sure how to respond when the kids ask tough questions about a controversial court case involving alleged police brutality.
Dre and Bow look for legal guardians for their kids; Zoey and Junior tell Jack some family secrets, which he naively accepts.
Dre's sister's upcoming wedding leads to a conversation on tradition; Jack and Diane are afraid they are too old to be ring bearer and flower girl; Junior and Zoey prep Ruby to embrace her daughter's relationship.
Dre is excited about Junior's cool friends; Bow deals with a lack of honesty from Ruby, Zoey, Jack and Diane when things get broken around the house.
Dre is fearful of losing his job and tarnishing his family's reputation when Stevens & Lido announces company layoffs; Bow wants to show she can do it all on her own when she's put in charge of a school auction.
When Zoey questions her belief in God, Dre has a crisis of faith and looks to family and co-workers for input; Bow's brother comes to stay with the Johnsons and aggravates Dre.
Exhausted from a stressful day at work, Dre falls asleep watching a "Good Times" marathon and dreams of himself and his family as characters in the series.
In an effort to be more open-minded about being a part of his community, Dre joins the Homeowners' Association; Bow gets advice from Pops on how to make the kids want to spend time with her.
Pops' older sister shows up unexpectedly for Thanksgiving, delighting everyone but Ruby; Bow and Dre take a trip.
The results of Jack's career test reveal that he may be looking at a blue-collar future; Ruby is led to believe Diane is possessed.
Dre plans a prank on Junior after Junior embarrasses him at a basketball game; the neighborhood takes part in mischief night, but Ruby takes it too far with the kids.
Dre decides to take the family on a first-class vacation to Walt Disney World; while Dre and the kids get VIP treatment, Bow, Pops and Ruby set off on their own Disney adventure.
Bow deals with feelings about her own biracial identity when Junior brings home a white girlfriend; Dre counts on Charlie to teach him how to relate to a white, female point-person for a project at work; Zoey wants to remodel Jack and Diane's room.
Bow gets Dre to try therapy, where he learns to deal with his anger; Johan acts as a life coach to the kids.
With Zoey heading to college soon, Dre tries to plan the best Christmas ever and invites Johan and Gigi to the celebration; Gigi's baby reminds Bow how difficult it is to mother a newborn.
Bow asks Dre to pull some strings and secure Zoey a fellowship, but he doesn't want Zoey relying on nepotism; Junior loses his job at the arcade pizza place after reporting unclean practices to corporate.
Dre reunites with his old crew when he returns to Compton for a funeral; Ruby criticizes Bow's parenting.
Tensions are still running high for Dre at work due to the outcome of the presidential election; as class president, Junior deals with a disenfranchised student body.
When is his turn to choose a name, Dre picks something culturally significant; Junior spoils Zoey's anti-Valentine's Day plans by asking her friend on a date.
Dre and Bow take action when Diane stumbles across some inappropriate websites, making their home an internet-free zone.
Dre considers taking paternity leave; Bow tries to conceal her pregnancy at work to get a promotion; Ruby convinces the kids that their nanny is stealing from them.
Dre unexpectedly becomes engaged in jury duty after learning the defendant in the case is a young black man; Bow gives the kids permission to swear in the house but soon regrets the decision.
Dre feels conflicted about doing a campaign with a rap star after Bow and Ruby suggest it plays on stereotypes; Bow tries to get the family to eat less takeout food.
When Bow tries to get a black doll for Diane, she's dismayed by the limited options; Dre is forced to face his own prejudices; Ruby gets Junior to be her Spades partner.
When Bow gets a headache and stops by the OB/GYN, she discovers she is having complications, which puts a damper on Dre's baby shower plans.
Dre is jealous of his sister Rhonda's close relationship with Pops; Zoey is urged to take Junior to a high school party; the twins decide to live life to the fullest.
Dre and Bow become sentimental as Zoey gets accepted into several colleges around the country; Pop gets the twins to persuade Zoey to go to college in a city they want to visit.