Listen to enough celebrity media junkets and you start to hear the exact same questions repeated on a loop. But for former child stars Jodie Sweetin and Andrea Barber, one specific recurring question about their long-time co-star John Stamos finally hit a breaking point in April 2025. The two actresses decided to drop the polite PR smile during a recent episode of their rewatch podcast and address the uncomfortable reality of being asked if they ever crushed on a man who practically helped raise them on set.
11 Years Old and Fielding Romance Questions
Barber did not hold back when the topic came up on their audio show. She pointed out the bizarre nature of journalists looking for a cute soundbite about her feelings for a grown adult when she was just starting middle school.
“It’s like when people ask us in media interviews, they’re like, ‘Did you ever have a crush on John Stamos?’ Like, that is a gross question. No!”
Sweetin immediately jumped in to validate her friend’s frustration. She noted that Stamos, along with Dave Coulier who played Uncle Joey, operated much more like an uncle in real life. They were buddies to the young girls, making the constant romantic framing from outside observers feel completely out of bounds.
“They’re like my uncles,” Sweetin agreed during the recording. “They are just our buddies, and, yeah, this is kind of a weird question.”

Inside the Rewatch Audio Show Sparking the Pushback
The candid moment did not happen under the hot lights of a late-night television set. It occurred during an intimate recording session for How Rude, Tanneritos!, a project the two women launched through the iHeartRadio network on Apple Podcasts back in July 2023.
The format of the show is simple but highly effective for long-time fans. The two friends sit down to watch every single episode of the classic sitcom, pausing to share backstage memories, personal anecdotes, and unscripted truths about growing up on a major studio lot.
This relaxed environment allows them to speak freely without a publicist hovering over their shoulders. It’s less like a formal interview and much more like eavesdropping on two lifelong friends sharing wine and venting about their week. Over the past two years, they have published dozens of episodes chronicling the show’s history.
When Stamos himself promoted his memoir titled If You Would Have Told Me in late 2023, he actually stopped by their studio to talk about the book. The respect between the three performers is obvious, making the invasive media questions even more frustrating for the women to navigate.
- Launched in the summer of 2023 with iHeartPodcasts
- Hosted exclusively by the actresses behind Stephanie and Kimmy
- Features deep dives into all eight seasons of the sitcom
- Includes guest appearances from original cast and crew members
The 35-Year Shift From Co-Stars to Family
When the original series premiered on ABC in September 1987, the age gap between the adults and the children dictated a clear boundary on set. Stamos was a heartthrob in his mid-twenties, complete with his signature leather jackets and heavily styled hair. Sweetin was still in kindergarten at just five years old. Barber was eleven, barely out of elementary school.
This makeshift family resonated deeply with television audiences across the globe. By the time the show wrapped its initial eight-season run on May 23, 1995, an estimated 24.3 million viewers tuned in for the finale.
| Television Milestone | Viewership Numbers |
|---|---|
| Original Series Finale (1995) | 24.3 million total viewers |
| Netflix Sequel Premiere Launch (2016) | 14.4 million average viewers |
| Sequel 18-49 Demographic Reach | 10 million viewers within one week |
When the cast reunited for Fuller House in February 2016, the nostalgia factor was a guaranteed draw. According to Symphony Advanced Media ratings, the reboot was a runaway hit for Netflix. The sequel series pulled in an average of 14.4 million viewers per episode during its first 35 days on the platform.
Despite everyone now being an adult, Sweetin and Barber noted that their off-camera dynamic with Stamos barely shifted. They weren’t suddenly treating each other as equal-aged peers. He was still the protective older figure they had always known, and their bond was built on shared inside jokes and cast dinners rather than Hollywood romance.
Stepping Away From the Spotlight and Returning
Barber brings a unique perspective to these media interactions because she actually walked away from the industry for years. After the original sitcom concluded, she temporarily retired from acting to focus entirely on her education. She eventually earned a master’s degree in England before agreeing to return for the streaming revival.
This time away from the constant glare of Hollywood likely gave her the distance needed to look back at standard press questions with a more critical eye. When you step out of the celebrity bubble and live a normal life, the strange habits of entertainment journalists become much more obvious.
Sweetin has also been incredibly open about her complex relationship with growing up on television. Earlier in the year, she went viral for discussing her first kiss, which happened directly on the soundstage. But talking about your own coming of age is very different from being asked to romantically objectify an adult co-star who acted as your guardian.
Changing the Script on Child Actor Nostalgia
The entertainment industry often struggles to separate beloved characters from the very real human beings who brought them to life. Fans and journalists alike remember Uncle Jesse as the epitome of nineties cool, frequently forgetting that the little girls interacting with him on screen were not watching him through a romantic lens.
For decades, women in Hollywood have had to smile through invasive or awkward interview questions just to keep the press junket moving smoothly. Sweetin and Barber are simply choosing to stop playing along with this specific trope.
When reporters try to force a romantic narrative onto a relationship built during childhood, it crosses a clear boundary. The pushback from the podcast hosts highlights exactly why reporters need to rethink their approach:
- It ignores the elementary school age of the child actors.
- It forces grown women to validate past romantic narratives.
- It completely disregards the established parental dynamic built on set.
- It prioritizes a catchy headline over genuine professional respect.
The legacy of their long-running sitcom remains untouched, but the tolerance for lazy journalism is clearly shrinking. As audiences continue to tune into their weekly audio show, it becomes clear that these actresses are ready to control their own story. The days of awkwardly laughing off inappropriate questions are over, and the entire #FullHouse fandom is better off for it, as they finally get the unfiltered truth about what life was actually like behind the scenes of a #TelevisionClassic.



