Current:Home > NewsAn appreciation: How Norman Lear changed television — and with it American life — in the 1970s -Secure Horizon Growth
An appreciation: How Norman Lear changed television — and with it American life — in the 1970s
View
Date:2025-04-18 01:49:09
NEW YORK (AP) — In many American living rooms, the 1960s didn’t really begin until Jan. 12, 1971.
That was the night the comedy “All in the Family” debuted, almost instantly changing television and American society with it. Creator Norman Lear, who died at age 101 on Tuesday, was the man behind that transformation.
The series introduced the brash bigot Archie Bunker, his “dingbat” wife Edith, his feminist daughter Gloria and his liberal son-in-law Mike Stivic. From their house in the New York City borough of Queens, they co-existed loudly and watched the world spin uncontrollably.
Archie Bunker, portrayed by Carroll O’Connor, embodied the “American Way” — as most middle-aged white Americans understood it at the time — and watched in confused exasperation as “others” redefined it.
Coming out of a tumultuous decade of fundamental change, and smack in the middle of a contentious war overseas, these realities were hardly foreign to most Americans. They just rarely saw them reflected on television after dinnertime, after the nightly news was over.
HE HELPED TELEVISION COME OF AGE
If not in its infancy, television was barely out of its adolescence at the time. Most people had only one set in their homes — my family had upgraded from black-and-white to color less than two years earlier — and viewers watched the same handful of over-the-airwaves channels. Television programmers — watched closely by network censors and the Federal Communications Commission — rarely tread on topics that risked upsetting anyone.
“Before ‘All in the Family,’ television comedy was a vast playground for witches, Martians and crazy ladies who constantly dressed in disguises or mistook their husband’s boss for the milkman,” Aljean Hermetz wrote in The New York Times in 1972.
“Relationships were relentlessly stapled out of cardboard and then wrapped in cellophane with professional-looking bows,” Hermetz wrote. “The few non-plastic situation comedies were gentle and relatively melodramatic and contained no meanness.”
Bunker was incredulous at a Black neighbor portraying Santa Claus — after all, he reasoned, everyone knew Santa was white, right? He reacted in shock when Sammy Davis Jr. kissed him on the cheek. England, he said, was a “fag” country — a word you wouldn’t hear on network television today. Even the sound of a flushing toilet was novel for TV then.
Menopause, miscarriage, marital spats — it was all fair game. Viewers learned to confront reality, and their differences, and find things to laugh about.
“I never thought of the shows as groundbreaking,” Lear told the Harvard Business Review in 2014, “because every American understood so easily what they were all about. The issues were around their dinner tables. The language was in their schoolyards. It was nothing new.”
The show was such a success, and so quickly, that in 1972 the liberal lead character in Lear’s sitcom “Maude” was deciding to undergo an abortion — the year before the Supreme Court legalized abortion with the Roe v. Wade decision.
It wasn’t without controversy. Lear asked TV Guide and other publications not to include “abortion” in their pre-show synopses. Two CBS stations in Illinois didn’t air it. The network didn’t want to air it, either, until Lear told them they’d have to find another show for their Tuesday night schedule.
HE BROADENED THE VOICES THAT WERE HEARD
That was the power that Lear had at the time. By the 1974-75 season, he was behind five of the 10 most-watched programs. And across the 1970s, whether it was race or gender or single parenthood, Lear used that power to create other sitcoms that reflected worlds that had rarely, if ever, been seen on television before.
There was the junkyard owner memorably portrayed by comic Redd Foxx in “Sanford and Son” (“This is the big one, Elizabeth,” he’d say, clutching his chest and pretending to have a heart attack). There was the struggling Black family in the Chicago projects in “Good Times” (with the “dy-no-mite” son portrayed by Jimmie Walker).
And most memorable of all, there was the striving Black family acclimating into a Manhattan “deluxe apartment in the sky” in “The Jeffersons,” a series introduced each week by the unforgettable theme song “Movin’ on Up.”
Actress Bonnie Franklin showed viewers the struggles and triumphs of a single mom raising two daughters in “One Day at a Time,” a series that made Valerie Bertinelli America’s sweetheart.
It was a run of creative and commercial success never truly duplicated — certainly not by Lear, who had his share of later strikeouts and, for a younger generation, became better known as a liberal activist.
The candor and comedy he brought to the airwaves in the 1970s sealed his status, however, and any television show with realism at its core owes Norman Lear a debt.
In lasting until he was 101, Lear lived long enough to see his work appreciated by those who didn’t live through it the first time. “One Day at a Time,” for example, was remade from 2017 to 2020 with a Cuban family at its center. And Jimmy Kimmel lovingly helped produce televised run-throughs of some of Lear’s classic scripts acted by current stars.
Somehow, it worked. The exercise proved the durability of his scripts — and, instead of sounding dated, how so much of what they discussed is still relevant today.
___
David Bauder, the media writer for The Associated Press, has covered television for more than 25 years. Follow him at http://twitter.com/dbauder
veryGood! (92523)
Related
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Actor Joel Edgerton avoids conflict in real life, but embraces it on-screen
- Charges against Alec Baldwin in the 'Rust' movie set shooting dropped for now
- Comic Roy Wood Jr. just might be the host 'The Daily Show' (and late night TV) need
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Opinion: Books are not land mines
- And the winner is: MTV Movie & TV Awards relies on old clips as it names its winners
- Here are all the best looks from the Met Gala 2023
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- Dame Edna creator Barry Humphries dies at age 89
Ranking
- Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
- 'Shy' follows the interior monologue of a troubled teen boy
- A man is charged in the 2005 theft of Judy Garland's red 'Wizard of Oz' slippers
- Ballroom dancer and longtime 'Dancing With The Stars' judge Len Goodman dies at 78
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- An upscale inn rarely changed the communal bathwater. A probe found 3,700 times the standard limit of legionella bacteria.
- Howie Mandel’s Masked Singer Exit Interview Will Genuinely Make You Laugh
- Here's the latest list of the '11 Most Endangered Historic Places' in the U.S.
Recommendation
Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
A Black, trans journey through TV and film; plus, inside Beyoncé's 'Renaissance' tour
Soccer Star Alex Morgan Deserves Another Gold Medal for Her Latest History-Making Milestone
Howie Mandel’s Masked Singer Exit Interview Will Genuinely Make You Laugh
Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
It Cosmetics Flash Deal: Save $24 on the Your Skin But Better CC Cream
Paris Hilton Reveals Name of Her and Carter Reum's Baby Boy
Marriage and politics are tough negotiations in 'The Diplomat'