Pamela Anderson's Lisa. The show revolved around Tim's self-image as a confident, capable family man who often had to deal with drama - often of his own making - involving his wife Jill (Patricia Richardson) and their three sons.

Home Improvement became one of the biggest sitcoms of the decade and helped propel Allen on to movies like The Santa Clause or Toy Story. There was a warmth to Home Improvement that helped set it apart from other comedies of its era, and it came to a close in 1999 after eight seasons. The series was still pulling in strong numbers when it ended, with Allen and Richardson being offered huge paydays to commit to another series. Creative fatigue and a desire to move on to other projects convinced them it was time to end it.

Related: Why Jonathan Taylor Thomas Left Home Improvement After Season 7

Allen later returned to television for another sitcom with Last Man Standing - which is available on Hulu -  which ran on ABC for six seasons before switching to Fox for its final three. The show followed Allen's Mike Baxter, a family man who works for a sporting goods chain called Outdoor Man. Last Man Standing wasn't afraid to make references to Home Improvement through its run, including castmates like Richardson or Jonathan Taylor Thomas making appearances. For the final season, Last Man Standing pulled the ultimate meta move by having Tim "The Tool Man" Taylor himself appear, with Allen playing both parts. The episode "Dual Time" involves Mike's wife Vanessa calling in the handyman to fix their broken garbage disposal unit, and the episode fills viewers in on Taylor's life post Home Improvement.

How Last Man Standing Pulled Off Tim Allen’s Home Improvement Crossover

After getting the customary gags about how Baxter and Taylor look exactly alike out of the way, "Dual Time" sees Tim fill Mike in on his backstory. He reveals he hosted Tool Time - which Allen's Toy Story referenced - for eight years but decided to end it when couldn't think of ways to keep topping what he'd already done - mirroring Allen's reason for ending Home Improvement. Since his show ended, Tim became a higher-up at Tool Time sponsor Binford Tools and performs quality inspections at their various outlets, which brought him to Denver for Last Man Standing.

Despite the years that have ed, the episode proved Tim's handyman skills haven't improved much and true to his nature he gives the disposal unit too much power and breaks it further. Allen also reveals to Baxter his neighbor Wilson ed away and that he sometimes thinks of rebooting Tool Time as he still misses it. In an interview with The Wrap, Last Man Standing showrunner Kevin Abbott revealed it was tricky for Fox to get permission from Disney to use Home Improvement's - which showed Wilson's face in the finale - Tim for the episode, and that Allen himself was very protective of the character. In fact, Abbott first wanted Tim to be revealed as divorced and just working as a handyman, but that idea was shot down. Season 9 was the final season of Last Man Standing too, with "Dual Times" commenting on the age of time and moving on to new challenges, which is a theme Allen no doubt found resonant when pairing two of his most popular sitcom characters.

Next: How Much Tim Allen Turned Down For Home Improvement Season 9