Originally posted by Boober_Baby
Y'know, Byron, I've been reading all your arguments and while they're all super, it still doesn't change the fact that I (and the rest of the UF, probably) don't want to watch a show about a bunch of boring old biddies! Do you really think we care if they all won an Emmy? What does that mean, other than a bunch of other boring old biddies liked them.
And I really don't see how anyone over the age of 12 (or under the age of 65) could find this stuff funny. I put their humour on par with Rosie O'Donnel... and no one finds her funny.
*sigh*
I think it's interesting that if somebody doesn't like a show or a person, they automatically try to pretend the successes and awards they've won are trivial li'l fluffs.
Again, another weak argument from the opposition (and besides, you said you could "take 'em or leave 'em", not a
true oppositionist).
First, they're not "boring". If they were, they never would have attained classic sitcom status, had 7 successful years on the air, and won all the Emmys they did---which, by the way, doesn't mean "other boring old biddies" liked them, but that the industry recognized the genuine comedy and success of the show, and how it reached America.
As for you not seein' how anyone over the age of 12 could find them funny, allow me to quote Betty White herself:
"What came as a surprise to all concerned was the way Golden Girls cut across all the demographic lines. Over half of our mail came from kids, but the twenty-, thirty-, and forty-something and beyond were well represented. It tickled me whenever some very small person, tugging at mother's sleeve, would point and say, 'There's Wose!' Too young to pronounce it, they still knew the character---all the characters. Ruesy always said that the ones who approached her were much taller, and their voices were deeper.
How was our show able to reach all the age groups? Perhaps because we weren't specifically aiming at any one of them, but mainly, I think, because we were truly funny."
---"Here We Go Again, My Life in Television", Betty White, 1995
And funny they certainly were.