LizzieMaine
Bartender
- Messages
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- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
My distaste for "meme" is due largely to my intense dislike for Richard Dawkins, but that's a personal distaste on my part. If the dictionary accepts it, so be it.
I have many distinct memories of the 1960's, but I never experienced "The Sixties" -- they didn't happen in my town. That simply demonstrates that other decades can be turned into -- ick -- memes with little relation to reality -- which can be used just as easily for manipulative purposes as "The Fifties." "The Sixties" have, in fact been used almost as often for that purpose as "The Fifties," and in much the same way, by the very same people. "The Sixties" are used as the mirror adversary of "The Fifties," either good or evil depending on the perspective of the manipulator.
"Andy Griffith" was definitely not a "Sixties" show in the sense of "The Sixties". But I'd submit that it was actually a "Forties" show more than a "Fifties" show -- much of its structure seems to consicously emulate that of "The Great Gildersleeve," especially the way in which the town was portrayed. One of the Griffith writers, John Whedon, had been "Gildersleeve's" head writer in the mid-1940s, so this similarity is likely not coincidental. The Paul Henning-Jay Sommers series, "Beverly Hillbillies," "Petticoat Junction," and "Green Acres" are similarly much, much more in a 1940s style than "The Fifties"
I have many distinct memories of the 1960's, but I never experienced "The Sixties" -- they didn't happen in my town. That simply demonstrates that other decades can be turned into -- ick -- memes with little relation to reality -- which can be used just as easily for manipulative purposes as "The Fifties." "The Sixties" have, in fact been used almost as often for that purpose as "The Fifties," and in much the same way, by the very same people. "The Sixties" are used as the mirror adversary of "The Fifties," either good or evil depending on the perspective of the manipulator.
"Andy Griffith" was definitely not a "Sixties" show in the sense of "The Sixties". But I'd submit that it was actually a "Forties" show more than a "Fifties" show -- much of its structure seems to consicously emulate that of "The Great Gildersleeve," especially the way in which the town was portrayed. One of the Griffith writers, John Whedon, had been "Gildersleeve's" head writer in the mid-1940s, so this similarity is likely not coincidental. The Paul Henning-Jay Sommers series, "Beverly Hillbillies," "Petticoat Junction," and "Green Acres" are similarly much, much more in a 1940s style than "The Fifties"
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