"All of Us" is inspired by the domestic adventures of entertainment superstars Will Smith and Jada Pinkett-Smith and reflects a new generation's enlightened attitude toward the extended-family dynamic with humor, sensitivity, and heart. Robert James is an entertainment reporter for a local Los Angeles television station whose best friend is also his publicist, the thrice-divorced Dirk. Robert is handsome, smart, and a thoroughly modern man in his thinking, as he should be, considering his romantic and parental entanglements. On the verge of finalizing his divorce from the self-absorbed Neesee, the mother of their endearing five-year-old son Bobby, Jr., he is madly in love with Tia, a funny, clever kindergarten teacher. This humorous and heartwarming comedy is a fresh, timely look at many young parents' new, compassionate attitude toward how divorced parents raise their children together.
Mona and Dee Dee are half-sisters with the same father who didn't really know each other when they were little and are complete opposites, but as adults they live in the same apartment building and at least try to bond.
Malcolm McGee is a responsible, sensible twentysomething who ends up sharing a Kansas City apartment and a business venture with relentlessly-enthusiastic tow-truck owner Eddie Sherman, a fast talker with outlandish frenetic energy. Eddie's charming schemes always get the two into hot water, but no matter what, these opposites always end up bailing each other out, even if they drive each other crazy. When the guys unexpectedly receive a considerable sum of money, they decide to buy the old Irish pub below their apartment--and the entire building, including Eddie's garage, as an investment. The guys give the place a facelift by turning it into a sports bar and renaming it McGee's. They hang out there with local regulars including Tim, a gentle giant working as a male nurse, and Nicolette, a motor-mouthed police-academy cadet with a love-crazed obsession for Eddie. As Malcolm manages McGee's and Eddie tries to bolster his fledgling one-man/one-truck towing operation into a fleet, success for these two could be as simple as staying out of trouble.
The further (animated) adventures of Buzz Lightyear of "Toy Story" and "Toy Story 2." Buzz, along with fellow Star Command Rangers Mira Nova, Booster, and XR, fight to keep the universe safe from the evil clutches of Emperor Zurg and his henchman, Warp Darkmatter.
The exploits of one class at Breaker High is presented, the unique aspect being that the high school is located on the Universe Explorer, a cruise ship which sails around the world providing the students with opportunities to experience the world first hand. The eight featured students, who become friends despite their differences, are: Alex Pineda, the jock; Ashley Dupree, the wealthy pampered southern beauty queen; Cassidy Cartwright, the popular one; Denise Williams, the feminist academic; Jimmy Farrell, the gluttonous doofus; Max Ballard, the angry loner; Sean Hanlon, the one always looking for the easy way especially to make money; and Tamira Goldstein, the naive innocent. All of them want to attend Breaker High, except for Max as he is divorced Captain Ballard's son, he sent there by his mother so that father and son can form a bond which doesn't exist at the beginning of the sailing, and as Max was getting into a bad crowd at home in Portland.
Retired Navy commander Jim Kennedy is divorced and has a teenage son. He takes over the famous cruise ship, where he and his crew tackle various scenarios with different passengers every week.