PirateJohnny said:Three people walked into a bar. They asked the bartender for a drink. The bartender served them their drinks.
Now THAT'S funny.
???
PirateJohnny said:Three people walked into a bar. They asked the bartender for a drink. The bartender served them their drinks.
Now THAT'S funny.
jfrancispastirchak said:PirateJohnny said:Three people walked into a bar. They asked the bartender for a drink. The bartender served them their drinks.
Now THAT'S funny.
???
PirateJohnny said:jfrancispastirchak said:PirateJohnny said:Three people walked into a bar. They asked the bartender for a drink. The bartender served them their drinks.
Now THAT'S funny.
???
It's a joke with no stereotypes.
dtuba said:Corky Marlowe said:Not really a comedy stereotype, but if I were from the South, I'd be quite annoyed by the practice of using subtitles when Southerners are speaking on TV, primarily on reality shows.
I suspect a lot of people outside the South wish closed-captioning had been available back in the days when Keith Jackson and Frank Broyles did ABC's college-football games. Jackson is from Georgia; Broyles was longtime coach at the University of Arkansas, and while, as a Southerner, I never had problems understanding either of them, a lot of people in northern (and maybe a few western cities) complained to ABC about their inability to understand either of them. Oddly, I never recall complaints about Don Meredith's Texas accent on "Monday Night Football," except for one viewer whose name and home state I forget who wrote to ABC during the first season of "MNF," when Keith Jackson was doing play by play (Frank Gifford was still under contract to CBS), complaining that ABC had a Georgian (Jackson), a Texan (Meredith), and a New Yorker (Howard Cosell), and couldn't understand any of them.
One of my pet peeves, when people speaking perfectly good English (accented or not) are subtitled. An insult to everyone involved, really.
bpatrick said:dtuba said:Corky Marlowe said:Not really a comedy stereotype, but if I were from the South, I'd be quite annoyed by the practice of using subtitles when Southerners are speaking on TV, primarily on reality shows.
I suspect a lot of people outside the South wish closed-captioning had been available back in the days when Keith Jackson and Frank Broyles did ABC's college-football games. Jackson is from Georgia; Broyles was longtime coach at the University of Arkansas, and while, as a Southerner, I never had problems understanding either of them, a lot of people in northern (and maybe a few western cities) complained to ABC about their inability to understand either of them. Oddly, I never recall complaints about Don Meredith's Texas accent on "Monday Night Football," except for one viewer whose name and home state I forget who wrote to ABC during the first season of "MNF," when Keith Jackson was doing play by play (Frank Gifford was still under contract to CBS), complaining that ABC had a Georgian (Jackson), a Texan (Meredith), and a New Yorker (Howard Cosell), and couldn't understand any of them.
One of my pet peeves, when people speaking perfectly good English (accented or not) are subtitled. An insult to everyone involved, really.
Lkeller said:2. Dialogue is much more realistic these days. Actors talk like they do in real life, so they'll talk fast or mumble sometimes. Nobody emotes anymore.
Lkeller said:So if I'm watching a show with hard to understand dialogue (especially stuff from the BBC, for example), I'll turn on closed-captioning.
Lkeller said:So I actually appreciate it when they throw in subtitles.
FreddyE1977 said:or, the most obvious one of all...
The Dad in a traditional nuclear family who is a bumbling, incompetent moron.
He is married to a woman 10,000 times smarter than he his, and even his youngest,
least-experienced children are constantly rushing to his aid to help bail him out of whatever
mess he created for himself this week.
He is the stated reason Bob Newhart would not allow the writers to give him children
on any of his sitcoms.
FreddyE1977 said:or, the most obvious one of all...
The Dad in a traditional nuclear family who is a bumbling, incompetent moron.
He is married to a woman 10,000 times smarter than he his, and even his youngest,
least-experienced children are constantly rushing to his aid to help bail him out of whatever
mess he created for himself this week.
landtuna said:Not all sitcoms are cast that way.
WOW !! You nailed it!Lkeller said:landtuna said:Not all sitcoms are cast that way.
Of course not - I was referring to the comedies that portray the father or husband as a hapless compulsive idiot who has to be rescued from predicaments of his own making by his smarter and non-complusive wife and/or kids.
The wife is generally slim and pretty, while the husband is fat. Come to think of it, this stereotype could be said to go back to The Honeymooners. Though they dressed Audrey Meadows (Alice) in frumpy house-dresses, she was an attractive woman, and we all know Jackie Gleason was a "plus size" man.
The Middle does not fit that stereotype - it's more a depiction of total family dysfunction and two hapless parents - popularized by Malcolm in the Middle...minus the genius kid.
I never watched Ozzie and Harriet much, but in my memory, Ozzie was a bit hapless and scattered (though not fat), while Harriet was calm and composed.
As for Ward Cleaver - yes, he may have been "smart and know everything," but he always came off to me as a little cold and distant. I preferred my own father - a very imperfect man, but much more emotionally available.
Lucas McCain (The Rifleman) was a great dad, even though he killed somebody in practically every episode. ;D
landtuna said:Did any kid back then actually believe Ozzie Nelson, Robert Young, Hugh Beaumont or even Chuck Conners were accurate depictions of real fatherhood?
jfrancispastirchak said:landtuna said:Did any kid back then actually believe Ozzie Nelson, Robert Young, Hugh Beaumont or even Chuck Conners were accurate depictions of real fatherhood?
Maybe some, especially back then, but not in retrospect. An outspoken rebel of Father Knows Best, Billy Grey, who portrayed son "Bud", later blasted the show's peaceful, euphoric context, declaring it out of touch with reality, even "back then".
landtuna said:jfrancispastirchak said:landtuna said:Did any kid back then actually believe Ozzie Nelson, Robert Young, Hugh Beaumont or even Chuck Conners were accurate depictions of real fatherhood?
Maybe some, especially back then, but not in retrospect. An outspoken rebel of Father Knows Best, Billy Grey, who portrayed son "Bud", later blasted the show's peaceful, euphoric context, declaring it out of touch with reality, even "back then".
And if you REALLY want another prospective of the show and especially Robert Young read Lauren Chapin's autobiography. It is chilling.
Lkeller said:Of course not - I was referring to the comedies that portray the father or husband as a hapless compulsive idiot who has to be rescued from predicaments of his own making by his smarter and non-complusive wife and/or kids.
Lkeller said:The wife is generally slim and pretty, while the husband is fat. Come to think of it, this stereotype could be said to go back to The Honeymooners. Though they dressed Audrey Meadows (Alice) in frumpy house-dresses, she was an attractive woman, and we all know Jackie Gleason was a "plus size" man.
Lkeller said:The Middle does not fit that stereotype - it's more a depiction of total family dysfunction and two hapless parents - popularized by Malcolm in the Middle...minus the genius kid.
Lkeller said:I never watched Ozzie and Harriet much, but in my memory, Ozzie was a bit hapless and scattered (though not fat), while Harriet was calm and composed.
Lkeller said:As for Ward Cleaver - yes, he may have been "smart and know everything," but he always came off to me as a little cold and distant.
Lkeller said:Lucas McCain (The Rifleman) was a great dad, even though he killed somebody in practically every episode. ;D
jfrancispastirchak said:Chilling indeed. I browsed through parts of her book at the library one day, but I was more disturbed by her off-camera trials than what she reported about the show.
jfrancispastirchak said:landtuna said:Did any kid back then actually believe Ozzie Nelson, Robert Young, Hugh Beaumont or even Chuck Conners were accurate depictions of real fatherhood?
Maybe some, especially back then, but not in retrospect. An outspoken rebel of Father Knows Best, Billy Grey, who portrayed son "Bud", later blasted the show's peaceful, euphoric context, declaring it out of touch with reality, even "back then".
landtuna said:jfrancispastirchak said:Chilling indeed. I browsed through parts of her book at the library one day, but I was more disturbed by her off-camera trials than what she reported about the show.
Most of the book is what happened to her after she was off the show but she does go into some detail about the image that the producers wanted of Robert Young and how he did not live up to it with regard to the three children on the show and while the show was filming.
My intent was not to blast Young but rather to show that TV image can and usually is far different than the actual actor. In Young's case he was shown as a caring and compassionate father which is a role he did not fulfill with regard to his cast.
landtuna said:jfrancispastirchak said:Chilling indeed. I browsed through parts of her book at the library one day, but I was more disturbed by her off-camera trials than what she reported about the show.
Most of the book is what happened to her after she was off the show but she does go into some detail about the image that the producers wanted of Robert Young and how he did not live up to it with regard to the three children on the show and while the show was filming.
My intent was not to blast Young but rather to show that TV image can and usually is far different than the actual actor. In Young's case he was shown as a caring and compassionate father which is a role he did not fulfill with regard to his cast.