Teheheman
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- Joined
- Jun 9, 2006
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My personal take on this? I don't care. He was asked a question about his beliefs and what he felt and he gave an answer. Just like the Chik-Fil-A thing, they were asked about it, they gave an honest answer. People wanna compare this to the Dixie Chicks, and the reason that this is more free speech than they had was mostly, in my personal opinion, was the fact that they were out of the country when they said it(Also, you kind of have to know your audience before you say stuff about a president popular with the people buttering your bread you know? But, the thing that bothered me more than that is they said it in England and not here). I actually read the article and it didn't seem that the interview was stuck on stuff like that or the race thing(Which I heard Jesse Jackson called him "More offensive than Rosa Parks' bus driver"). It DID seem like he was asked about sin, and asked about all this and was giving an honest answer. It's not like they asked him "Hey, what's your favorite Ice cream?" and he said "THE GAYS ARE RUINING THE COUNTRY". But, I do gotta give him credit. He HAS turned his life around from drugs and booze to religion and if religion is keeping him on the straight and narrow, and not letting him go back to the way he was before, then more power to him.
Daniel
Daniel
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Still, I don't think this was all A&E's master plan. I think they did misjudge their audience a bit. I speculate that they mistakenly thought most of the show's audience was there to ridicule the family for being red necks. But as it turned out, the audience just kinda like the family for who they were and identified with them. I'm not talking about specific religious values. I'm saying the family members do often have clever senses of humor and an endearing working class attitude. They just seem like regular guys you might know. It certainly beats the bland male models or materialistic idiots so often seen on TV. The dinner prayer at the end of each episode was always pretty pleasant and avoided controversy, and audiences appreciated that.