Angus Forbes
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 261
- Location
- Raleigh, NC, USA
It's the first show of its kind to introduce racism, sexism, welfare, environmental issues, the political activism of the younger generations, guns, ageism, and on the list goes. And of course, back to the topic of this thread, getting by in a recession.
This brings me full circle -- the way that Lear addressed these issues was to dump the problems, largely, onto Archie, and therefore onto the working class man. But these were not situations controlled by the working-class man; rather, many have a long history grounded in hypertrophied self interest further up the food chain. Archie (and by extension the working man) was portrayed as an ignorant, angry bigot whose disappearance would solve the world's ills. I remember reading an interview with Carl (Rob?) Reiner (who played Meathead) where he said, as I recall, that he (Reiner) believed basically just this regarding the nature of the working-class man.
If you are interested in the origin of American racism, for example, read "The Mind of the South," by W. J. Cash, in order to understand how the little guy fit into all this historically (not to imply that the South is any more racist than the North). Too bad Lear didn't read it before creating Archie, although Archie was, I suppose, a New Yorker (New Jersey?).
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