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Scandal |
The first show that came to mind
when I thought of the 1950’s was “Leave it to Beaver”. This was a very popular
show and explains perfectly what the American Family was supposed to look like.
The average family consisted of a father with a job, a mother that stayed at
home, and their kids. This image of a family made up, according to Steven Mintz
who wrote “The Modern Family”, 70 percent of American households. American
families in the 1950’s never got divorced and never had a single mom running
the house. Lately that has changed dramatically. According to Steven Mintz,
there is a growing amount of divorces because it had been accepted today where
back in the 1950’s it was not accepted. There has also been a major increase in
household that are run by a single mother. Steven Mintz said that the numbers
of single-mom households tripled since the 1960’s, which doesn’t even include
the 1950’s. In the 1950’s a single mom running a household would have never
been seen, but a lot has changed since then.
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Bates Motel |
On top
of everything changing, I think, along with Ella Taylor, the author of a
article from the University of Washington, that T.V. was in charge of changing
the worlds view. The producers of the shows were taking a leap by putting all
of the gay marriages, interracial couples and single mom’s running the
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Modern Family |
I think
that people let T.V. change them in a major way. At the same time we wouldn’t
live in the world that we do today if it wasn’t for T.V. There is defiantly
some good and bad in the way our world has changed but it also doesn’t force
everyone to be the “cookie cutter” family or for them to be people that
everyone wants them to be.
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Family watching T.V. |
Sources:
This website helped me
get the ideas about how television was and the views on television in the
1950's.
This also helped me with
television in the 1950's.
I was able to watch old
and new shows on this website and compare them.
This gave me the opinion
of a scholar to help make my paper stronger. This scholar had the same point of
view as me so her article was backing up what is had said.
I really enjoyed your topic because you included Scandal (that's my favorite TV show). You really touched on some topic in your research that I hadn't thought about, and it made me look at things from a new perspective. My question for you is was there any laws or "rules" in the 1950's that might have restricted TV shows from showing any of the touchy topics?
ReplyDeleteI was impressed with how you used specific examples to show how people and families have become more progressive over time. I found it interesting how you argued that television could influence people and how they think so strongly. Do you think a television show could completely change someone's view on something?
ReplyDeleteYou make some interesting observations about "family" on TV today -- the fact that you include some of the examples you do (on Scandal) shows how times have changed in that you accept these couples as "family" in a way that previous generations wouldn't have! I'm wondering if you think the family of Leave it to Beaver was more "realistic" in reflecting families of that period, of if you think Modern Family depicts real families of today with greater realism?
ReplyDeleteHey Dani! I think that yes there were some laws back then that restricted some of the things that we see in television today but I think that they didn't really need laws because people in the 50's would of been appalled if they had seen something unlike the norm in a T.V. show.
ReplyDeleteJames, I think a T.V. show is very capable of changing someones view on something because if it is in a T.V show it is automatically seen as a norm, so if they see it then they will want to change and be like the show so they could fit in.
ReplyDeleteMrs. Lawson, I think that that family in Leave it to Beaver was a portrayal on families in the 1950's but I think that it was dramatized to be like everyone wanted it to be. Even with Modern Family, not everyone has a gay couple in their family but the producers used their idea of modern in the T.V. show and think that is very similar to what they did in Leave it to Beaver.
ReplyDelete