Jake Harper

From The Character Database
Revision as of 10:05, 3 September 2024 by Laguna97 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Character Infobox|image=<tabber> |-| Kid=centre|400px |-|Preteen=centre|400px |-|Teenager=centre|400px |-|Adult=centre|400px </tabber> |gender=Male|race=Human|origin= Two and a Half Men Season 1 Episode 1: Pilot (Most Chicks Won't Eat Veal) September 22, 2003 |alignment=Good|age=10 (S1) 21-22 (S12)|created by= Chuck Lorre, Lee Aronsohn|occupation=...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jake Harper
Jake-two-and-a-half-men-kid-min.jpg
Jakekid-min.jpg
JakeTween-min.jpg
JakeTAHM-min.jpg

Vital statistics
Names Jacob David Harper, Jake, Jake the Snake, The Half Man
Gender Male
Race Human
Occupation Student, Army Cook
Origin Two and a Half Men Season 1 Episode 1: Pilot (Most Chicks Won't Eat Veal) September 22, 2003
Alignment Good
Age 10 (S1) 21-22 (S12)
Created By Chuck Lorre, Lee Aronsohn
Height 1.7m (5ft 7in) (as an Adult)
Weight varies

Jake Harper, portrayed as a carefree and dim-witted character, is known for his laid-back attitude and poor academic performance, which is often a source of humor on the show. He is characterized by his love for food and his lazy nature, frequently making him the target of jokes from his father, uncle, and others due to his lack of intelligence, limited vocabulary, and overall obliviousness to the sarcasm and mockery around him.

Jake serves as the "Half Man" in the series' title and is central to the dynamic between his father, Alan, and his uncle, Charlie. While he remains one of the key characters throughout the series, his role becomes somewhat less prominent compared to Charlie, Alan, and, later, Walden. There are episodes where he is either not involved in the main storyline or only makes brief appearances. Alan reveals that Judith, Jake's mother, has primary custody of him, which explains his sporadic presence at Charlie's beach house, which Jake refers to as his "weekend beach house" during his teenage years.

Jake is connected to several family members and former stepfamily members, including his half-sister (or possibly full sister) Milly Melnick, his uncle Charlie, his grandmother Evelyn, his cousin Jenny, and his ex-stepparents Herb Melnick, Kandi, and Walden.

Appearance[edit | edit source]

Jake Harper undergoes significant changes throughout the series:

  • Seasons 1-2: As a young child, Jake is portrayed as healthy, charming, and relatively innocent. He has a typical American kid's look with short, light brown hair and a slightly chubby physique.
  • Season 3: Jake begins to show signs of becoming more rude and obnoxious. His hair remains short, but his physique starts to change as he becomes heavier and less active.
  • Season 4: Jake's physical appearance starts to reflect his transition into adolescence. He is heavier and less motivated, showing a shift in his demeanor and style. He begins decorating his room with posters of women in bikinis.
  • Season 5: Jake starts junior high, and his look evolves to include baggier clothes and a more disheveled appearance. He wears old man shoes and beige clothing, reflecting his disinterest in school and his growing distance from Alan.
  • Season 6: With puberty, Jake’s voice deepens, and he becomes taller and thinner, though he maintains a large appetite. His style becomes more relaxed, and he starts to engage in more mature activities like drinking alcohol.
  • Season 7: Jake’s hair grows longer and becomes paler. He adopts a more disheveled look and often appears with a casual, laid-back demeanor. His appearance reflects his growing distance from Alan and Charlie.
  • Season 9: Jake's look is consistent with his previous season appearance, featuring longer, messy hair and a casual style. His physical appearance is marked by a more pronounced adolescence with a laid-back attitude.
  • As a young adult, Jake's appearance is more refined but still casual. He often appears with a relaxed style, reflecting his struggle to find direction and maturity. His appearance includes longer, less maintained hair and a generally disheveled look.

Personality[edit | edit source]

Jake is a laid-back, chill, easygoing, affectionate, and well-intentioned child, yet he's mostly unmotivated, underperforms, lacks intelligence, and often irritates his father and uncle. In essence, he represents a hopeless case. He's also quick to form relationships for little effort, believing that money can buy love. Additionally, he seems to be growing distant from his father Alan, who is increasingly desperate to move out and own a home, and who is also becoming overly frugal. However, by the middle of the tenth season, he confesses his love for his father and would prefer no one else to be his parent. Despite his straightforward personality, Jake is quite insightful, understanding that Charlie's lifestyle isn't something to emulate and that he should aim to improve himself...and Alan, who doesn't want to end up like either of them. Jake can be surprisingly astute at times, like when he mentions wanting a girlfriend just for the daily cupcake. Charlie explains to his nephew that it's acceptable for a person to have sex without forming emotional attachments, using cupcakes as an analogy. Upon realizing Jake understood the metaphor, Charlie was impressed, saying, "how about that, the booger-eater got it!". It's evident from his childhood that Jake isn't destined for much. This is especially true when it comes to his job performance at a position given to him by Evelyn, which a monkey outshines him. He was abandoned twice as a baby, once by Judith's mother and once by Alan, who he admits to before Walden adopts Louis. Though often foolish, uninformed, messy, and lazy, Jake has had experiences with sex and relationships, and he's even more knowledgeable than Alan in these areas. In an episode where he's invited to a party with friends who are "experienced," he's seen contemplating whether to attend, which he ultimately decides against. However, in Three Girls and a Guy Named Bud, he does engage in a threesome with two of his classmates, much to Berta and Charlie's delight. Jake has also had experiences with alcohol, which usually result in him throwing up or becoming violently ill. In Damn You, Eggs Benedict, he uses Alan's money to buy a six pack and becomes intoxicated on Eggnog while in Judith and Herb's car. The last time he's featured in the series is in Keith Moon Is Vomiting In His Grave, where he and Eldridge steal from Charlie, once again ending up vomiting. Jake shares many traits with his Uncle Charlie. They are both laid-back, enjoy eating and watching TV, and are both lovers of alcohol. They are also both known for their womanizing ways.

Biography[edit | edit source]

Season 1: Jake initially appears quite different from his later portrayal. In the beginning, he is of a healthy weight, kind, charming, and embodies the traits of a typical American kid—much more innocent and impressionable. His presence even prompts Charlie to briefly reconsider his own lifestyle. Although Alan dislikes Charlie's way of life, he decides to have Jake live with Charlie over Evelyn, wanting to avoid Jake turning out like them. Jake understands that his parents are divorcing but treats the matter with a surprising amount of casualness.

Season 2: Jake begins to show signs of becoming lazier and more self-centered. He gains weight and starts displaying a somewhat dense attitude, laying the foundation for his character's humorously clueless behavior.

Season 3: Jake's behavior takes a turn for the worse. He becomes rude, obnoxious, and disrespectful towards both Alan and Judith. In the episode "Weekend in Bangkok with Two Olympic Gymnasts," he retorts to Judith with, "I can't watch it, it's under my nose," when told to watch his mouth. His poor behavior extends to school as well; in "Principal Gallagher's Lesbian Lover," Jake is suspended for mocking a girl with large breasts. In "That Voodoo That I Do Do," he is reluctantly enrolled in ballet classes by Charlie to help him get closer to the instructor, Mia. Throughout this season, Jake forms a bond with Kandi, Alan's girlfriend (later wife and ex-wife), to the extent of saying that if Kandi used the bathroom, "it would be [his] step-stool."

Season 4: Jake starts to drift away from Alan, spending less time with him. In "It Never Rains in Hooterville," Jake decorates his room with posters of women in bikinis, prompting Alan to take him on a camping trip to spend quality time together. Alan grows increasingly worried about Jake's future, as evidenced in "Corey's Been Dead for an Hour," where he dreams of a future where both he and Jake are working at a movie theater, with Jake constantly eating the popcorn—a humorous illustration of Alan's fears about Jake's lack of ambition and direction in life.

Season 5: Jake begins junior high after it was decided that "it was in everyone's best interest that he moves on" from elementary school. On his first day, he skips school because Charlie and Alan filled his mind with horror stories about what to avoid there, combined with being forced to wear old man shoes and only beige clothing. He continues to distance himself from Alan; for example, he refuses to go to the movies with him, suggesting instead that Alan just drop him off. When Alan asks, "So basically, you'll go to the movies with anyone except me," Jake replies, "I wouldn't go with Hitler."

Season 6: Jake undergoes a significant transformation. With puberty, his voice becomes deeper, and he grows taller and thinner, though his enormous appetite remains unchanged. He also begins to engage in more mature activities, such as helping Alan carry an unconscious, half-naked woman and drinking alcohol ("Damn You, Eggs Benedict"). Charlie's insults towards Jake become more frequent and pointed.

Season 7: Jake's hair grows longer and lighter, and his behavior continues to diverge from his earlier self, becoming more immature and self-aware about being in "the awkward years." Toward the end of the season, he befriends Eldridge, a troublemaking kid who plays the drums and has issues with his parents. The two often get into trouble together, including sneaking out of the beach house and stealing Charlie's beer. Alan is initially upset but softens after meeting Eldridge's mom, Lyndsey, whom he later starts dating, unbeknownst to Jake and Eldridge until later.

After Jake and Eldridge discover that their parents are dating, Jake threatens to live with Judith and Herb. However, Alan promises to keep no more secrets, convincing Jake to stay with him and Charlie. Alan considers Eldridge a bad influence because of incidents like sneaking out, stealing beer, and getting drunk, but he lets it slide due to his relationship with Lyndsey. The kids oppose their parents moving in together, but Charlie bribes them with money to get Alan out of the house. When the house burns down, Alan, Jake, Eldridge, and Lyndsey all move in with Charlie. Eldridge and his mom later move out after Chris McElroy, Eldridge's father, reunites with Lyndsey. A few episodes later, Jake and Eldridge watch Courtney try on dresses at Charlie's house.

In the season 9 opener, "Nice to Meet You, Walden Schmidt," Jake appears briefly, playing a minor role with just three scenes and minimal dialogue. He seems unemotional about Charlie's passing, even after Rose uses a crude term to describe his death, asking Alan and Evelyn if they're hungry. It's suggested that Jake's main concern is food rather than his uncle's death. He's missing from the episode until the end, where Judith drops him off at Charlie's beach house, where he witnesses Walden Schmidt hugging Alan. Alan introduces Jake to Judith, who expresses interest in him. Later, Judith mentions buying the house, indicating a budding relationship. In "People Who Love Peepholes," Jake makes a short appearance as Alan leaves him at Charlie's beach house, which Walden Schmidt had purchased. "Big Girls Don't Throw Food" sees Jake allowed to stay at Charlie's beach house with Alan, but they're forced to share a room, which Jake is reluctant about. Walden convinces Jake to drop out of school and start his own business, boasting about skipping school and college to begin his internet career and making his first million at 19. This episode marks Jake's first significant role, focusing on the growing relationship between Alan and Walden. When Judith learns about Jake quitting school, she visits Charlie's beach house, Walden Schmidt's Malibu Beach House, to talk about Walden's influence on Jake's decision to leave school, only to end up kissing him unknowingly, caught on camera. Jake was still planning to leave school. In "Those Fancy Japanese Toilets," it's implied that Jake has his first sexual encounter with his chemistry tutor, Megan, sparked by her intense desire after seeing Walden. Although they're seen making out in the next episode. However, Jake is grateful for the experience, which is unusual for him. Jake later mentions in "Frodo's Headshots" that he and Megan have never had sex, after Alan has a nightmare about Jake impregnating Megan. During a deep conversation with Alan, Jake finally confesses his love and longing for Charlie in "Thank You for the Intercourse." He and Walden are concerned about Alan's behavior, reminiscent of his uncle Charlie. In "Not In My Mouth!", Jake engages in sexual activity with Zoey's neighbor, Zoey, and later tells a friend (presumably, Eldridge) over the phone about having sex with her five times in half an hour. It's unclear if Jake was a virgin before this encounter.

In "Why We Gave Up Women," Jake views his Uncle Charlie as a spirit of women at the hospital. Jake often and regularly used marijuana with his closest companion, Eldridge. Following his high school graduation, he and Eldridge attempted employment in a control room operated by Walden and Billy's firm, but ended up downloading excessive pornography, which led to a virus spreading across all the hard drives and the server crashing. Subsequently, they enlisted in the military, where they were observed facing difficulties during boot-camp. Jake's involvement has been somewhat divided with Eldridge, with him now being the primary focus of his role.

In the episode titled "I Changed My Mind About the Milk," Jake and Eldridge have decided to enlist in the military. Jake begins a relationship with Missi, the daughter of one of Walden's acquaintances, Missi. They engage in a brief, non-committal sexual relationship for a couple of episodes, but Missi ends things when Jake expresses his desire for a more serious commitment. Jake then starts dating a woman in her forties, who has three children, including one older than Jake. Initially, Jake and Tammy Sue almost get married in Vegas but decide against it at the eleventh hour and continue their relationship. Tammy privately tells Alan that she has no intention of getting married to Jake, which eases Alan's worries. In the episode titled "TwoAndAHalfMen-ep1015-jpg 191939," Jake has an affair with his younger sister's daughter, who is the same age as him, which leads to the breakup of their relationship. Jake and Ashley fight to be together, but Ashley eventually gets Tammy's approval, only to have Ashley's ex-boyfriend return and propose to her, leaving Jake heartbroken. Jake is then posted to Japan for a year, so he spends a weekend with his dad before his departure. Jake doesn't appear in Season 11, but he is referenced multiple times. He continues to stay in touch with the family and even sends them Japanese marijuana for Christmas and homemade sushi, which unfortunately spoils due to the melted ice. Walden's friend, Barry, is mistakenly identified as Jake by Alan, Berta, and Jenny when they first meet him. Living in Japan now, it's uncertain if Jake has ever met Charlie's daughter, Jenny. It's also possible he may not even be aware of her existence. In the season finale, Jake receives a check for 250,000 from Charlie and wins 2.5 million from gambling in Vegas before leaving his dad and Walden in fear for his life due to Charlie's threats.

Trivia[edit | edit source]

  • In the episode "Ate The Hamburgers, Wearing The Hats," his complete name, Jacob David Harper, is disclosed. T
  • The theme song from Seasons 1 to 8 features Jake singing, with Elizabeth Daily lending her voice to the character of Tommy Pickles from the Nickelodeon show Rugrats.
  • The exact moment Jake first had sex remains a mystery, but it's likely occurred in Season 8, Episode 1 with Tiffany and Joanne. They were caught leaving Jake's room, and he later denied any sexual activity, claiming they were just friends who slept on the floor while he slept on his bed. However, Charlie's observation of them leaving Judith and Herb's house, which is far from the beach, exposed Jake's lie. It's possible Jake had sex with his tutor or girlfriend, Megan, who first appeared in "Springtime on a Stick" and might have been involved in "Those Fancy Japanese Toilets." Another possibility is with Jennifer, Zoey's promiscuous neighbor in "Not In My Mouth!".
  • In "The Price of Healthy Gums Is Eternal Vigilance," a Plank plush toy is seen on Jake's bed, suggesting he enjoys watching Ed, Edd n Eddy. Although Jake's substance abuse would have disqualified him from military service, the decision to have him join the Army was likely a plot device to reduce Angus T. Jones' screen time. Jones, who was a Seventh-day Adventist and openly criticized his role in the show for contradicting his religious beliefs, was seeking a way out of his contract.
  • It's been suggested that Jake might not be Alan's son, as Charlie begins to doubt this at the end of Season 6, Episode 1. This suspicion is heightened by the fact that many of the handymen at Judith's house resemble Jake. This could explain why Jake doesn't exhibit any traits from Alan, such as being frugal or desperate to keep a girlfriend. However, he does share some of his father's and uncle's unfortunate experiences with women, indicating he is a Harper.
  • Jake doesn't appear in Season 11, but he is frequently mentioned and his photo is seen in the season finale episode "Oh WALD-E, Good Times Ahead." In "Oontz, Oontz, Oontz," Jake makes an uncredited cameo through a tribute montage (compiled of footage from previous episodes) where Alan reflects on his time raising Jake.
  • Despite being talked about by both Jenny and Louis, Jake never meets either of them in the series.