Overview: When the Sinclair baby sprouts a golden horn, he is trumpeted as the prophesied King of the Dinosaurs.
Overview: When the Sinclairs' TV is wrecked, Earl enters the family on a game show to win a new set.
Overview: When Robbie flubs his initiation into the Young Males' Carnivore Association, Earl fears his son may be a herbivore.
Overview: Charlene gets a tail, which whips up strange feelings in Earl, whose little girl is no longer so little.
Overview: Earl buys Fran two rare grapdelites for dinner, unaware that they are the last of their species.
Overview: Earl anticipates a promotion as he awaits a dinner with Richfield; Robbie brings home a "pet" human.
Overview: Lurking in the Sinclair refrigerator are delectable creatures that go bad, very bad, while Charlene watches the baby.
Overview: Robbie objects to the career--tree pusher--assigned to him by the "Job Wizard."
Overview: A liberated single female's ideas make Fran reconsider renewing her marriage license.
Overview: Robbie gets pointers on how to approach girls from a streetwise contemporary named Spike.
Overview: The Sinclairs learn that the baby might have been switched with another.
Overview: Earl's fridge is repossessed as the dinosaurs celebrate Refrigerator Day and the gift of cold storage.
Overview: Earl helps Fran's friend Monica get a job as a tree pusher, but she's no pushover when she's harrassed by a predatory male.
Overview: Fran gets a job on TV giving advice to dinosaurs, leaving Earl to learn how to cope with a wife who works.
Overview: A power struggle erupts between the Wesayso Corp. and Robbie after he invents a way to generate energy as a science project.
Overview: An archaeologist documents dinosaurs' way of life as they may have existed long ago, but clips from previous episodes tell a different story.
Overview: A wild plant has a weird effect on the dinosaurs--it makes them dopey and happy, to the exclusion of everything else.
Overview: Earl thinks Old Ethyl has died, but she returns from the great beyond with the lowdown on the afterlife.
Overview: The four-legged dinosaurs encroach on the pistachio-nut supply of the "normal" dinosaurs...and that means war.
Overview: Earl, Roy and Charlene pose as entertainers and rush to the front to retrieve Robbie.
Overview: Earl throws his hat into the ring as a candidate for Chief Elder, but he's likely to have his head handed to him by his opponent, B.P. Richfield.
Overview: Charlene wants to make a fashion statement with an expensive coat, but the coat leads her into a vain attempt to achieve status.
Overview: When Robbie can't beat a gang of hoods (who keep beating him), he joins them.
Overview: Wesayso insists Roy replace Earl as the father of the Sinclairs, who are selected as the Wesayso spokesfamily.