beaker
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- Apr 13, 2002
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Well it's interesting to study...the transition from the 1960's to the 1970's. I wasn't even born til 1978, so for me it's referential. Thanks for bringing up Norman Lear!Exactly, Beaker, they couldn't even use the word "pregnant" on "I Love Lucy" it was "expecting", they slept in separate beds, etc. Norman Lear definitely made a turn around in pop culture with his sitcoms, and they were some of the best written shows on television, PERIOD. That's what made Sesame Street as ground breaking as it was: catering to mixed language children in urban neighborhoods, having a racially mixed cast of actors, etc. Heaven FORBID they try to put a show on network television today like "All in the Family" it wouldn't last 2 seconds. That's why I don't watch any network shows anymore, all cable for me these days because I don't like the way everything is clean and shiny for everyone today.
That whole Spielberg/E.T. thing bothered me tremendously as E.T. was one of my favorite movies growing up and still is (saw it when it originally came out in theaters), but to give credit to Spielberg, at least when he put it on DVD, he put out BOTH the original and revised one. Unlike a certain director of a famous franchise who redoes his movies every few years on DVD that you can't find an original copy of the film anymore...
He pretty much helped collapse and smash through this very Leave it To Beaver/Dick Van Dyke(not saying anything wrong with those, but they werent real) paradigm and injected a dose of real America. Poor/lower working class families and an inner city sensibility. A lot of those All in the Family episodes had a heavy heart, and I think that's why Roseanne resonated so deeply all those years later.
The 1960's seemed like simply the 1950's continued, so in comes the 1970's with the rise of black voices, strong female voices, and a voice that said "surprise surprise America, life ain't leave it to Beaver". Which is why I really respect Sesame Street deciding from day one to have it set in a not so pretty urban inner city. Every kids show before and since then has been this eerily sterile fantasyland of controlled chaos, the sort parodied in Greg the Bunny or Death To Smoochy. I mean heck even in that very first Sesame Street airing from November 1969 Gordon is talking about some pretty real stuff.
Real shows do not appear anymore, let alone in comedy form. Roseanne was of a dying breed, informed by Lear's groundbreaking work. Now I absolutely love Modern Family, Big Bang Theory, The Office, etc but I miss the All in the Family/Roseanne/Jefferson realism. Or shows like My So Called Life. People today don't want real.
They want sugar coated pop for a smart phone society with short attention spans and bowling lane bumpers.