Stories by @voicecasterdub40
68 stories
![Go Diego Go! [Live Action Cast]](https://assets.mycast.io/posters/go-diego-go-live-action-cast-fan-casting-poster-282660-large.jpg)
Go Diego Go! [Live Action Cast]
Go Diego Go! was a preschool program that follows Dora's cousin Diego, who frequently goes on animal rescuing adventures while also protecting the habitat they live in. It premiered from September 6th 2005 - September 16th 2011 on Nickelodeon. Here's what that live action cast would look like!

FRIENDS (Disney Channel Adaptation)
Three young men and three young women live in the same apartment complex and face life and love together in Manhattan, New York City. As they're constantly sticking their noses into each another's businesses, as well as sometimes swapping romantic partners, the group always get into the kind of comic situations that most other people never experience, especially during breakups.
![El Chavo [The American Adaptation]](https://assets.mycast.io/posters/el-chavo-english-adaptation-fan-casting-poster-279968-large.jpg)
El Chavo [The American Adaptation]
What if El Chavo branched into the United States market, hired some a tors and actresses to make a westernized version of El Chavo? It will take place in the same Mexican ghetto, which will last from1975 - 1989.

Seinfeld (Disney Channel Adaptation)
What if Disney Channel made their version of Seinfeld, a 9 season series with an awful finale starring Jerry, George, Elaine and Kramer as they go through their daily lives in New York. The pilot and NBC won't be referenced, but the Yankees will be renamed to something else to avoid copyright infringement. Jerry's other girlfriends will appear infrequently as he really can't keep a date, Susan will not die and she will remain in part of the series and minor characters from it's predecessor will appear on the show but I'm not going to cast them here. After all, this show is about nothing..... Not that there's anything wrong with that! Note that in this version, George cheats on Susan with someone else (which she then breaks up with him) unlike how she died to cheap, toxic glue on an envelope.
![WordGirl [Live Action Cast]](https://assets.mycast.io/posters/wordgirl-live-action-cast-fan-casting-poster-277050-large.jpg)
WordGirl [Live Action Cast]
WordGirl is a cleverly written edutainment show on PBS Kids that ran from 2007 - 2015 about a 5th grader named Becky Botsford and her pet monkey Bob as they both live their double lives as superheroes, all the while defeating super villains and protecting their secret from their family and friends. Here's what I think a fully fleshed live action cast for WordGirl will look like.

Live in Front of a Studio Audience: The Honeymooners
Ralph Kramden is a perpetually flustered but eternally optimistic New York City bus driver living with his wife, Alice, in a small Brooklyn apartment. Ralph's best friend is sanitation worker Ed Norton, who lives in the same building with his wife Trixie.

Live in Front of a Studio Audience: TAXI
This Emmy-winning sitcom follows the lives of a group of cabbies in New York. The employees of the Sunshine Cab Company are a motley crew, including frustrated actor Bobby, struggling boxer Tony, art gallery receptionist Elaine, and tyranical dispatcher Louie. For almost everyone, the cab company is just a temporary job that can be left behind when they make it in their chosen professions. The core of the company is disillusioned Alex, who's sure he will be driving a cab for the rest of his life. Burned-out ex-hippie minister Reverend Jim and mechanic Latka Gravas round out the group.

Live in Front of a Studio Audience: WKRP in Cincinnati
When a Cincinnati radio station switches from sedate music to top-40 rock 'n' roll, its staff of oddball characters has to switch gears quickly. New program director Andy Travis brings in a DJ named Venus Flytrap to work with the station's burned-out veteran, Dr. Johnny Fever. Neurotic newsman Les Nessman, eager beaver Bailey Quarters, sleazy salesman Herb Tarlek, blond bombshell Jennifer Marlowe -- who serves as the station's ultracapable receptionist -- and station manager Arthur Carlson, whose domineering mother owns WKRP, round out the eccentric bunch.

Live in Front of a Studio Audience: Mork and Mindy
Knowing that nobody can replace Robin Williams, I'm going to try my best to keep this faithful. Here's the synopsis for Mork and Mindy. Mork, an alien from the planet Ork on a mission to Earth to study human behavior, travels to 1970s Boulder, Colo., where he meets up with Mindy, a young journalism graduate, after his egg-shaped spacecraft lands there. The bumbling alien is trying to get a handle on Earth culture, and his frequent dispatches back to his home planet give him the opportunity to sound off on human foibles. This spinoff of "Happy Days" features Robin Williams as Mork in an early starring role for the comic actor. As Mork would say, "Na-nu, na-nu!"

Live in Front of a Studio Audience: Family Ties
Steven and Elyse Keaton, once 1960s radicals, now find themselves in Reagan-era American trying to raise a traditional suburban family. Son Alex P. Keaton is an ambitious young Republican, and his sister Mallory is a shallow victim of the corporate culture, obsessed with music, clothes and boys. Their only normal kid is young Jennifer, a bit of a tomboy. In later seasons, the Keatons add a fourth child, Andrew. Most of the comedy arose from the conflict between the liberal parents and the conservative children.

Live in Front of a Studio Audience: Barney Miller
The series focuses on life in Greenwich Village's 12th Precinct station house. Initially, it looks at Capt. Barney Miller and his work and home life, but it gradually becomes about the officers of the precinct, including always-on-the-verge-of-retirement Detective Fish.

Live in Front of a Studio Audience: ALF
A smart-mouthed creature, ALF (aka Alien Life Form), crash-lands in a suburban garage. His spaceship is beyond repair, he's ugly, he's short, he's got a bad attitude. What's a family to do? Why, take in the furry creature, of course, and watch as he comments on humankind and tries to eat the cat -- a delicacy on his home planet of Melmac.

Live in Front of a Studio Audience: Gimme a Break!
Nell Harper is the no-nonsense housekeeper and surrogate mother for police chief Carl Kanisky's children: Samantha, Julie and Katie. The Kanisky daughters need all the help they can get after their mother dies - because Carl isn't exactly in touch with his feminine side.

Live in Front of a Studio Audience: Mr. Belvedere
Very loosely based on a 1940s movie character created by Clifton Webb, this family sitcom is set in the suburban Pittsburgh home of the Owens family, where dapper English housekeeper Lynn Belvedere draws on a history of service to such distinguished figures as Winston Churchill to keep things running smoothly. With father George Owens, a busy sports columnist, and mom Marsha trying to juggle challenging schedules as both a homemaker and law student, it falls to Mr. Belvedere to serve as adviser to their three kids: teenagers Kevin and Heather, plus 8-year-old Wesley.

Live in Front of a Studio Audience: Charles in Charge
Needing a place to live while attending college, Charles applies for a job working for Stan and Jill Pembroke, an affluent couple in search of a live-in housekeeper. An arrangement is reached where Charles would take the job with the Pembrokes while he attended Copeland, and in lieu of a salary, he would receive room and board for his duties as caretaker for their children Jason, Douglas, and Lila, all three of whom are not much younger than he is. In addition to this, as well as his escapades with his best friend Buddy, Charles has a crush on fellow Copeland student Gwendolyn Pierce and spends quite a bit of his free time trying to court her, which never seems to work.

Live in Front of a Studio Audience: Who's The Boss?
A widower and former pro baseball player, Tony Micelli takes a job as a housekeeper for a high-powered divorced businesswoman, Angela Bower, and her son. He and his daughter, Samantha, move into the Bower residence, where Tony's laid-back personality contrasts with Angela's type-A behavior. Angela's man-hungry mother, Mona, is also in the mix.

Live in Front of a Studio Audience: Welcome Back, Kotter
Gabe Kotter returns to his old high school -- this time as a teacher. He's put in charge of a class full of unruly remedial students called the Sweathogs. They're a bunch of wisecracking, underachieving and incorrigible students, and it takes all of Mr. Kotter's humor -- and experience as a former Sweathog himself -- to deal with his class.

Live in Front of a Studio Audience: Sanford and Son
Junk dealer Fred Sanford runs roughshod over his son and partner, Lamont, in a groundbreaking sitcom. Fred's moneymaking schemes routinely backfire, and he does just about anything to get out of working -- up to and including faking a heart attack. He's rude, sarcastic, outspoken, overtly prejudiced, and pretty darn nasty to his friends and family.

Live in Front of a Studio Audience: Gilligan's Island
Seven people set sail on what is scheduled to be a three-hour sightseeing tour on the charter boat The Minnow, get caught in a storm and end up stranded on an uncharted tropical island together. The comedy comes from the failed attempts at escaping the island and the interaction of the very diverse group: comprised of a rotund but happy-go-lucky skipper, Jonas Grumby (known as "The Skipper"); his bumbling but well-meaning first mate, Gilligan; a snobby well-to-do millionaire, Thurston Howell III and his wife, Lovey; a buxom sexy movie star bombshell, Ginger; a high-school science professor, Roy Hinkley (called "The Professor"); and a nice country girl, Mary Ann.

Live in Front of a Studio Audience: Too Close for Comfort
Henry and Muriel Rush are owners of a two-unit house at 171–173 Buena Vista Avenue East San Francisco, California. Henry is a conservative cartoonist who authors a comic strip called Cosmic Cow with a hand-puppet version of "Cosmic Cow." Muriel is a freelance photographer. They have two adult daughters, Jackie and Sara. Additional characters include Sara's friend, Monroe Ficus, and Henry's boss, Arthur Wainwright, who was head of Wainwright Publishing and Monroe (who was originally intended to be used for only a single episode but the producers added the character to the series.)