it is an ancient, undisputed law of television that the exact moment a long-running show introduces a positive pregnancy test, the writers have officially run out of ideas and the series is circling the drain. it usually signals the absolute death of casual hanging out, the sudden disappearance of main characters into background daycare voids, and an influx of incredibly grating, precocious child actors who look like they have never interacted with a real human being in their lives
but does the “baby bump” always have to be a complete narrative death sentence??
a recent collective breakdown over on r/television proves that while the trope is usually a TOTAL disaster, a few rare shows actually managed to mutate the formula into comedy gold. if you’re forced to bring a diaper bag into the writers’ room, here is how you actually pull it off without ruining everything
1. don’t add an actual baby (the “uncle baby billy” strategy)
if you want a baby character that completely revitalizes a show, the smartest move is to ensure they are actually a slender, silver-haired man in his late 60s. the righteous gemstones gave us uncle baby billy, a man permanently misbehaving, running around the house with a pickle in his mouth, and trying to get someone to fund “baby billy’s bible bonkers” with nothing but an 8-ball and two million dollars. he brings all the chaotic, exhausting energy of a toddler without any of the boring diaper subplots and honestly it is peak television
2. use them as cosmic karma
when a character has spent years being an absolute menace to everyone around them, a baby is the ultimate narrative punishment. look at dr. cox on scrubs. introducing his son, jack, didn’t soften his character; it just trapped a legendary cynic in a room with a tiny, relentless mirror of his own worst traits. watching a three-year-old staple his own clothes to the wall and draw a head on it while his parents look away for thirty seconds is just beautiful karma for cox being a massive pain in the ass to everyone for a decade
3. lean into the literal monster mythos
if you absolutely must introduce an infant, make it a horrific supernatural rebirth. what we do in the shadows took a massive risk by killing off colin robinson only to have a creepy, adult-headed baby crawl out of his dead friend’s abdomen. it completely refreshed the character because it makes total sense that infants and toddlers are the most effective, highly evolved energy vampires on the planet without even trying to be
4. skip the boring parts entirely
nobody actually wants to watch a multi-season arc about sleep training, colic, and pureed peas. the smartest sitcoms treat infants like background furniture or jump straight to the funny toddler years
- parks and recreation: ron swanson’s kid existed mostly to give us the iconic line that his son was already accustomed to the sound of power tools. meanwhile, leslie and ben’s triplets were basically invisible until they were used as props for kathryn hahn to completely lose her mind over how sticky everything in the house was
- new girl: the writers wisely deployed a major time jump to skip the infant phase entirely, delivering ruth—a tiny, chaotic toddler who perfectly justified the shift in cece and schmidt’s dynamic by treating nick miller like an absolute peasant
ultimately, adding a kid is usually a desperate cry for help from an exhausted writers’ room. but if you treat the child as a terrifying agent of chaos, a piece of cosmic karma, or just a vehicle for kathryn hahn to scream about sticky furniture, you might just survive the curse

























