8 TV Dads With Bad Credit

On television, there are dads with good credit, and dads with very bad credit. If you’re a fan of Game of Thrones, for example, you know that, “A Lannister always pays his debts.” However, not everyone on TV is as fiscally responsible as the current residents of King’s Landing. Below we celebrate eight iconic TV dads who have less than stellar credit, along with a bit of advice for how they might clean it up.

Homer Simpson, The Simpsons

He may have been featured in a MasterCard commercial, but Homer Simpson is definitely not a model of financial responsibility. In a season 12 episode, Homer’s credit card is denied at a restaurant. Maxing out your credit card can have a significant impact on your credit score, but that’s not the worst financial offense Homer commits.

In the 20 th season, the Simpsons’ home is actually foreclosed upon after Homer takes out a home equity loan saying that he thought the house had to pay back the loan, not him. D’oh! A foreclosure is one of the most damaging items to have on your credit report, so take a lesson from Homer and don’t take all of the equity out of your home.

George Bluth, Arrested Development

The Bluth family may be wealthy, but they have their fair share of money problems. The series begins with George Bluth being arrested for shady bookkeeping and fraud.

In an early episode, Michael says the family’s finances have been frozen by the Securities and Exchange Commission and viewers later discover that George Bluth was involved in building houses overseas for Saddam Hussein even though Americans were not allowed to do business in Iraq.

While the account freeze would not necessarily show up on a standard credit report, it would show up on an investigative report that creditors sometimes use. Needless to say, George Bluth’s credit is definitely not “solid as a rock” — the company slogan thought up by Gob. Thankfully, there’s always money in the banana stand.

Jimmy Cooper, The O.C.

Jimmy Cooper, played by Tate Donovan, may come across as a nice guy compared to his cold wife Julie in the first season of this hit TV drama from the mid-2000s, but he has a dark secret — money problems. Jimmy comes under investigation by the SEC in the first season for using his position as an investment manager to embezzle some of the money from the portfolios he managed to make up for his own losses.

While he is able to avoid jail time for his crimes, he ultimately is forced to declare bankruptcy. A bankruptcy will stay on your credit report for 10 years after it is reported. That means Jimmy Cooper is only now nearing the end of the repercussions from his bankruptcy, even though The O.C. has been off the air for more than five years.