All in the Family
âAll In The FamilyâEleanor (Ruby) FrancisMarch 1, 2013In January 1971 American families were welcomed into the home of the Bunker family, a white middle-class family living in Queens. Â The sitcom, All in the Family, was amazingly successful with a colorful cast of characters led by Archie, the bigot that America tuned in to watch weekly for five years in anticipation of comic relief about sensitive issues. Â During a time of racial inequity in the âland of the free and the home of the braveâ All in the Family brought an unexpected truth to television as it addressed racism, homosexuality, sex and other subjects that, at that time, were not for prime-time. Â Norman Lear, the showâs creator intended for the comedy to help relieve racial tension at a time when there was still a great deal of inequality in America. The Bunker family included Archie, âa conservative, superpatriotic, working-class American who brow beats his kind, but, â âdingbatâ â wife, Edithâ (Vidmar and Rokeach 36). Â Archie was quite masterful in the use of racial slurs, using terms like coloreds, spades, specks to describe Blacks and Jews. Â Daughter, Gloria and son-in-law, Mike, an unemployed college student lived in the Bunker home, as well. Â Mike, referred to as âMeatheadâ and âPolackâ, regularly provided âeffective rebuttalâ to Archieâs off-handed comments (Vidmar and Rokeach 36).
âPreferredâ, or âdominant readingâ, used in reception studies, is defined as the âproducer-intended meaning of a piece of content; assumed to reinforce the status quoâ (Baran and Davis 258). Â âReception studiesâ are âaudience-centered and focus on how various types of audience members make sense of specific forms of contentâ (257). Â The intention of Lear was to use the comedic tirades of Archie to soften the countryâs racial divide, at least for 30 minutes, one night per week. Â According to Vidmar and Rokeach, Lear intended for Mikeâs responses to Archieâs âconvolutedâ thinking to make sense thus changing societyâs ideas about racism. Â Bringing bigotry out in the open and making fun of it would and have people talking about it and give viewers insight into their own prejudices. Â These factors would, according to Learâs line of thinking, reduce audience prejudices (Lear qtd. in Vladmear and Rokeach 36). Â One example of such open bigotry is clear in the 1972 episode with Sammy Davis, Jr. Â At a point in the show there was a dialogue between Archie and Sammy about whether Archie was prejudiced as he had been told by Mike and Gloria. Â He asked Sammy if he looked prejudiced. Â Sammy replied, âOh Archie, dont tell me youre really paying attention to those young kids. What do they know? I mean, you prejudiced? Look, if you were prejudiced, Archie, when I came into your house, you would have called me a coon or a nigger. But you didnt say that. I heard you clear as a bell. Right straight out, you said “colored.” Â Archieâs response was, âYeah, thatâs what I done all rightâ (Lear, All in the Family). Â Archie, the family patriarch, would make these kinds of comments with no remorse as if he was a man who confidently knew no better. Â Thatâs what made the show so funny to non-prejudiced people. Â His clear ignorance about the ever evolving world around him left him stuck in a time warp where he believed, according to the Bible, that âGod put you [coloreds] over in Africa; he put the rest in all the white countriesâ (Lear, All in the Family).