Boy Meets World cast revisits its most emotional episode: “It changed me”

More than two decades after it first aired, Boy Meets World’s emotionally charged episode “We’ll Have a Good Time Then” continues to resonate deeply — not just with fans, but with the cast themselves. On a recent episode of their rewatch podcast Pod Meets World, stars Rider Strong, Will Friedle, and Danielle Fishel opened up about the creative risks, raw performances, and real-life grief behind the show’s boldest moment.

A sitcom steps into silence

Sitcoms are known for their punchlines, not their pain. But every so often, a long-running comedy delivers a tonal curveball — an episode that trades laughs for life lessons. For Boy Meets World, that moment came in Season 6 with “We’ll Have a Good Time Then,” an installment that saw the return and sudden death of Shawn and Jack’s estranged father, Chet Hunter, played by Blake Clark.

BLAKE CLARK AND RIDER STRONG ON BOY MEETS WORLD - "We'll Have a Good Time Then..." - Airdate: January 22, 1999

As Rider Strong recalled on Pod Meets World, the episode stood out for how dramatically it broke from the show’s usual rhythm. “The second half is really silent,” he said. “There’s just no laugh. There’s something jarring about that.”

For Strong, who portrayed Shawn Hunter throughout the series, the emotional weight of the episode was palpable — both then and now. Rewatching it brought him to tears, he admitted. “I freaking cried,” he said. “When I started crying in the show, I was, like, crying in real life sitting here last night. It just felt very personal.”

No B-story, just raw emotion

While many sitcoms cushion heavy themes with comedic subplots, this episode did no such thing. Will Friedle, who played older brother Eric Matthews, reflected on how the show leaned fully into the drama — perhaps too much, in his opinion.

“This needed to be a two-part episode with a funnier B-story,” Friedle suggested. “It is a very heavy 22 minutes. I think 44 minutes broken up with some kind of B-story probably would have made this story more impactful.”

Still, Friedle praised the performances, especially Clark’s. “Blake is great. There’s this energy to him on the screen that you can’t take your eyes off of,” he said. “As enjoyable as a melodramatic special episode of a sitcom can be, this was a good version of that.” For Danielle Fishel, who played Topanga Lawrence, the seriousness of the episode felt earned. “I really loved it,” she said. “For once, Chet was being held to the fire about what his lifestyle has done to his sons, and he couldn’t escape it. He couldn’t just tap dance his way out of it.” The absence of humor didn’t bother her — if anything, she respected the creative decision to go all in. “We’re doing an emotional, true family story,” she said. “And it’s real life.”

More than just acting

One of the episode’s most powerful scenes — Chet’s on-camera death in a hospital room — demanded more from the cast than standard sitcom fare. According to Strong, that intensity wasn’t just good acting; it was transformative.

Will Friedle, Ben Savage, Danielle Fishel, Rider Strong and Matthew Lawrence ON BOY MEETS WORLD

“We just bonded so much,” he recalled of working with Blake Clark. During one rehearsal, the two broke down sobbing. Afterwards, Clark, known primarily for comedic roles in films like The Waterboy and 50 First Dates, pulled Strong aside and said, “I feel like we were acting.” The moment was pivotal for both actors. “It changed me,” Strong said. “It was sort of a revelation for him.”

That authenticity seems to have struck a chord with viewers as well. Over the years, Strong has heard from countless fans who connected with the episode in deeply personal ways. “Having lost a parent, this episode really, really, really affected them,” he shared. “It’s a huge swing. I’m sure it turned off some people, maybe a lot of people. But for the people who it did get through to, this is a hard-hitting episode.”

A very special episode, remembered

“We’ll Have a Good Time Then” aired in 1999, but its themes of estrangement, regret, and grief still land with emotional precision. What made it so impactful, the cast now agrees, wasn’t just the story — it was the willingness to abandon formula and let the moment breathe. “It felt like our show’s attempt at being like a play, like a real drama play,” Strong said. “There was something awkward about it, but in the best way — like we were reaching for something more.”

In the world of sitcoms, “very special episodes” often age into clichés. But once in a while, one manages to break through — not by doing what’s expected, but by refusing to. That’s what Boy Meets World did with this episode, and why, all these years later, its cast and fans still feel its impact.

As Friedle put it: “You’re emotionally invested in the characters. And as heavy as it is, it’s still a story worth telling.” You can listen to the full episode of Pod Meets World wherever you get your podcasts.

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