Early in the series, Sam and Marcie fawn over the "cool kids" and anxiously attempt being accepted among them, so they can be "popular". But the actresses playing the cool kids were not as pretty, assertive, nor stylish as Nicole Eggert and Alyssa Milano were (way back then, that is), so it was highly implausible for those average girls to be the popular kids.
The production didn't exactly "go all out" when it came to decorating Angela's office. As can be seen in Junior Executive (1986), instead of a solid and stylish mahogany desk worthy of an agency president, Angela's "desk" is simply a distressed wooden table, without a single drawer, better suited for a country kitchen than an exec's office.
Angela is supposed to be super-wealthy, yet lives in a very modest home, very lower middle class and one that is mediocrely decorated at that. The production certainly didn't "go all out" when it came to spending budget for props and set decor. (This is also the case with Two 1/2 Men, who are supposed to live on Malibu Beach, yet live in a tiny house instead of a sprawling mansion, which is the only type of dwelling in The Colony.) In contrast, "Who's the Boss" copycat, "The Nanny" didn't pull any stops when it came to their own set decor and props.
In nearly every title, poking from the screen's "ceiling", in at least one scene.