Family Guys? What Sitcoms Say About America Now


Family Guys? What Sitcoms Say About America Now

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Transcript


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'Days to go to the Presidential vote.

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'It's no surprise the candidates disagree with each other,

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'but if you watch the news channels,

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'it looks like the whole of America is tearing itself apart.'

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The American people are boiling. The American people are furious.

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We in America are going to have to choose between

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a homosexual agenda and liberty.

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Did I slip through a wormhole in the middle of the night

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and this looks like America?

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The news is always about conflict.

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It's about division, it's about people screaming at each other.

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'The America that we see on the news is a very different place'

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from the country that I see out here on the street.

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I think there's another way to understand America.

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'Don't just watch the news, watch the sitcoms.

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'This is the sitcom both presidential rivals love

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'and America adores.'

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'Republicans especially. They've listed it as their top sitcom.'

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Get down here.

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Why are you guys yelling at us when we're way upstairs? Just text me.

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-'Yet it's got teen sexuality.'

-Wow! You're not wearing that outfit.

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What's wrong with it?

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Honey, do you have anything to say to your daughter about her skirt?

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Sorry. Oh, yeah, that looks really cute, sweetheart.

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Thanks.

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'It's got a gay couple who have adopted a baby.'

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-Don't you love it?

-Yes.

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What the hell is that?

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I had Andre do it while we were gone.

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Is that us with wings?

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We're floating above her. Always there to protect her.

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OK, well, that's reassuring, right, Lily? Yes.

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We tore you away from everything, but don't worry. Your fathers are floating fairies.

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'And it's got an interracial marriage.'

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I come from a small village.

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Very poor, but very, very beautiful.

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It's the number one village in all of Colombia for the...

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-What's the word?

-Murders.

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Yes, the murders.

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'Modern Family is more like the America I know,

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'because the sitcoms explore the common ground in American life.

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'They reflect the loves, hates and fears of the American family.'

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The truth of how Americans live are built into every sitcom.

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'Charlottesville, Virginia.

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'The President's in town,

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'and thousands of Democratic party supporters

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'are hanging on his every word.'

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You guys have more at stake in this election than anybody.

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When you step into that voting booth, the choice that you make

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in that one instant, is going to shape your country,

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it's going to shape the world for decades to come.

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'That same day, Barack Obama's Republican rival Mitt Romney

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'said much the same.

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'I'm right. The other guy's wrong. The choice is that simple.

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'It's how two-party politics works.'

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The greatest nation on earth. God bless you.

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God bless the United States of America.

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'But these speeches tell you more about the candidates than they do about America.'

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If you really want to understand America,

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I wouldn't watch the news, I really wouldn't.

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I would, I would watch TV,

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and sitcoms. I get so much more out of it.

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'Sitcoms are the closest thing America has to the soaps in Britain,

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'and they're made here, in the entertainment capital of the USA.

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'Los Angeles, California.'

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Sitcoms are just about the biggest phenomenon on American TV.

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They cost millions to make,

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and the fates of whole networks rest on finding the next big hit.

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'And the biggest hits come when a sitcom is in perfect tune

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'with how American families are living at that moment.

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'The sitcom writers say they have to be hard-wired

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'into the lives of their audience.'

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The politicians and the parties are after the American family.

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They're after their votes, but they're after a definition

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of what it means to be an American family.

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It's exactly what the sitcoms are doing,

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defining the American family in various different ways.

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'Dan Bucatinsky is a leading sitcom actor and writer

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'who's appeared in shows like Frasier, Will and Grace

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'and Curb your Enthusiasm.'

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It's political.

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You know, the making of a television show, the popularity of a sitcom.

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It's political, even if they don't want it to be, because of that fact,

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and because the American family in sitcom, the portrayals of

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the American family on TV, that cuts right to the core of everything.

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'Sitcoms react fast.

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'The Middle, first broadcast in 2009,

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'took the pain of the recession straight into the living room.'

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Oh, my god, Mike. It's 2009.

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What? Already?

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Yeah, Mike. 2009. How did this happen?

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No payments till 2009!

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No payments till 2009!

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No payments till 2009! The economy's going to be great by then!

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Great. Now, with interest,

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we owe 650 on a VCR we sold at the garage sale last year for two bucks.

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You know what? It'll be fine.

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The secret of comedy, I'm about to give you the secret of comedy...

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..is reality.

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Barnet Kellman is an Emmy Award-winning writer and director

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who's worked on The Middle.

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Any real concerns in people's lives...

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will appear eventually on the screen in front of us.

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It's fine. It'll be fine. We're fine.

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These things have a way of working themselves out.

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As long as the dryer hangs on and I sell a car this month,

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we're going to be fine.

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'Frankie Heck and her family are fighting to survive

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'in credit crunch America.

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'For eight million viewers, it captures the spirit of the times.

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'For 25 years, Howard Rosenberg was one of America's most influential

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'TV critics.

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'In the Los Angeles Times, he made or broke TV sitcoms.'

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The comedies that have always worked for me,

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no matter how surreal they may be on one level,

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always have an undercurrent of plausibility,

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which is something that I can relate to, I can say, "Oh, yeah, you know."

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"Maybe the rest of it is sort of silly, but that has happened to me."

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We will open the doors of opportunity to everybody

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who's willing to work hard and walk through them.

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I will do everything in my power to get our economy going again,

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so people can have good jobs

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and don't have to worry about living pay cheque to pay cheque.

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'The candidates talk about the economy, but it's a sitcom,

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'The Middle, that best brings alive the fears of ordinary families

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'and helps explain the urgency with which the candidates tell voters

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'they get how tough life is.'

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The recent recession has been a profound shock for America.

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Four million families have had their houses foreclosed by the bank.

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There are millions of houses like this right across America.

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The trauma of the recession has forced sitcoms to show

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just a little of how many people are now forced to live.

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Oh, you're home early. And you make dinner. What a nice surprise.

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Yeah, well, it's really more of a bad surprise.

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Oh, you forgot ketchup! Oh, this sucks.

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I'm out of a job.

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What?

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Wait, found it! It was under the French fries.

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Their closing the quarry down for a few months

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so scientists can come and dig up the rest of it.

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-Dude!

-Yeah.

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Oh, my god, you lost your job? Are we going to be OK?

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-Don't worry. It's just a few months.

-We'll be fine.

-Absolutely.

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Nothing to worry about. Mike, can I see you in the kitchen for a sec?

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'The Heck family say something politicians can't.'

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Oh, my god, Mike. We're screwed.

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Yeah. I would not want to be us right now.

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'Economically, it's a tightrope act.

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'They've got all the elements'

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of the American dream...

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..although it needs a paint job.

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But how do they keep it together?

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What does it cost to maintain this in daily struggle, and daily strife

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and daily tensions, and daily abrasions?

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First step, a trip to the Frugal Hoosier,

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Indiana's number one expired food store.

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So are we, like, poor, now?

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No, we're not poor. We're just thrifty.

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We're trying something new called living within our means.

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You mean we were living outside our means? Oh, God!

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You should be thanking me.

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Listen, smart consumers, they're the kids who are popular.

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'During periods when it gets heavy and the economy's coming down'

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you see that integrated into storylines.

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You see people, you see divorces, you see food stamps,

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you see public assistance, you see where that kind of

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works its way into the humour of "I can't afford that".

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'Rodney Barnes is an award-winning sitcom writer and director.'

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If you pay attention to the storylines and story arcs, you can

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kind of gauge what's happening in the psyche of the country at that time.

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Mum, are we going to be OK?

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I don't know.

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Huh?

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I don't know if we're going to be OK, Sue.

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I really don't. Frankly, I have no evidence that we will.

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That's not what you're supposed to say.

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Oh, I know, I know.

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I'm just supposed to pick you all up

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and tell you everything's going to be fine, but you know what?

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I don't know any more!

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You want to know the truth? Your dad's big on truth.

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Basically, our lives suck right now. I'm not into sugar-coat it.

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2009 has been a rotten, rotten year.

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We can't afford a new dryer, we can't afford unexpired food,

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I can't even afford the LCD light-up angel that

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I ordered on the TV to surprise you all at Christmas!

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"Surprise!"

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If I don't sell a car, that means no job.

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That also means maybe no house,

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but the tornado will probably blow it all away anyway.

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Oh, my god. Let's just pack it all in.

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Let's just give you kids to Madonna or something,

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and your dad and I will go and live in a tent city somewhere,

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because the truth is we're screwed!

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'I think the idea of the American dream has changed,

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'that your children will do better than you did,

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'that you will provide for them the opportunity for them'

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to go on and advance their lives

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and create a legacy for them.

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I don't think people believe that so much any more.

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'David Isaacs is an Emmy-winning writer and producer

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'with credits from M*A*S*H to The Simpsons and Mad Men.'

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The title is, to me, very prophetic,

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because is there really a middle any more?

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Is there a chance for you to carve out not a rich in dollars life,

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but a healthy economic life free from fear,

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free from fear of falling off the edge?

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Ours is a fight to restore the values that built the largest

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middle class and the strongest economy the world has ever known.

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This Obama economy has crushed the middle class.

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Big decisions will be made in Washington on jobs, the economy.

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Today more Americans wake up in poverty than ever before.

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'To many working-class families, the presidential rivals

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'look like a different species'

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'Rich, powerful and seeing every issue

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'as part of a grand ideological battle.

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'Not just the economy, but race, gay marriage and abortion.

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'That's how the party machines like it.

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'Homer Simpson knows what he's dealing with.'

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America, take a good look at your beloved candidates.

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They're nothing but hideous space reptiles!

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CROWD GASP AND SCREAM

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It's true, we are aliens. But what are you going to do about it?

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It's a two-party system. You have to vote for one of us.

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He's right. This is a two-party system.

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Well, I think I'll vote for a third party candidate.

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Go ahead. Throw your vote away! Ha-ha-ha!

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THEY CACKLE

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'The Simpsons have got it right.

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'But though the candidates insist there are only two ways

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'of seeing America,

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'don't be tricked into believing that's what all Americans think.'

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What I believe is that there are millions of ordinary Americans

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who don't think this way.

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They could be the 40% of Americans who refuse to align

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with either party.

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They could be the millions of Americans

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who don't bother to vote at all.

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But I see plenty of evidence that these people -

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if you like, the "ignored middle" -

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do not see their lives as a struggle

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between the conservative and the liberal.

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And what is more, they're moving in a way that leaves the politicians

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and the news media behind.

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There is a divide between the American family that is being

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pushed down our throats by the politicians

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of what feels like the right way to live,

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and what we're seeing on television, and what people in America -

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the same people voting for those politicians -

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actually believe in their hearts

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and are seeing on their TVs as what makes a family.

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There's a huge chasm.

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'Sitcoms are all about the American family.

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'And while there are 60 million married couples,

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'what really excites the pundits and politicians are the one million

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'gay couples, and whether or not they count as family, too.'

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What would you do if one

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of your children came to you and said they were gay?

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You can't separate what happens in marriage

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and in families from how it affects everything in American life.

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We have to choose between the homosexual agenda and freedom.

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We have to choose between the homosexual agenda

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and the constitution, because we cannot have both.

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'The sitcoms show us a different picture

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'of who Americans are willing to call family.'

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'This is the story of two sisters...'

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'Years before politicians would deal seriously with gay issues,

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'sitcoms got there first, even if the character, Jodie Dallas,

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'was a 70s idea of what being gay meant.'

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If anyone's interested, I've thought it over and I've definitely decided

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to go ahead with a sex-change operation.

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Ha-ha-ha!

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He's starting with that sex-change stuff again!

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Can we talk about this later? People are eating.

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'Soap included a character played by Billy Crystal

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'who was identifiably gay.'

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My hips will become rounded.

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'He wanted a sex change,'

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also implying that all gay men wanted to change their genders.

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I just got used to you being a...

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Homosexual.

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I always thought you'd outgrow it, that it was just a phase.

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And now, when I'm finally used to you being a...

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Homosexual.

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You're going to get a sex-change operation and be a girl?

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Jody, for God's sakes, what am I going to tell people?

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Oh, my god, I think I'm having a cerebral haemorrhage. I can feel it.

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He couldn't just be gay.

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He had to be crazy, flamboyant, cross-dressing gay.

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'But that's what he had to play and it was always played for laughs.'

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I'm sorry, I didn't realise

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you had company... Good God!

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APPLAUSE

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What the hell does he think he's doing?!

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He's not going out dressed like that, is he?

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No, it's too chilly. I'll take a wrap.

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'In fact, Jodie Dallas offended just about everyone.

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'He failed the reality test.'

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-He's sick!

-So am I.

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He looks better in that dress than I do.

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I think the tremendous amount of controversy and backlash

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and complaint around the character of Jodie Dallas on Soap

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may have just kind of scared people off for a while.

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I think that it made them realise that,

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"Mmm, these gay characters might be just a little bit too dangerous,

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""a little bit too complicated, a little bit too dicey.

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"If we're doing a gay character and we're pissing off everybody,

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"including the gay people and the anti-gay people,

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"we might want to rethink this."

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You may kiss!

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CHEERING

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'But in the 1990s, increasing numbers of gay people came out

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'to their friends and family.

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'And the sitcom writers were quick to tune into this trend.'

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Morning.

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So, how was dinner with Richard?

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Oh, it was great. We had dinner at the restaurant...

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'In this episode of Ellen, sitcom fiction would mirror real life.'

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No, they're nice. They're big.

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'Jonathan Stark is an Emmy Award-winning writer

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'who co-wrote one of the most famous storylines in sitcom history.'

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She was an everywoman.

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She dated guys.

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She had normal friends, a normal, normal life.

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Well, we went back to his room so we could continue talking.

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Ellen, you didn't!

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Oh, didn't I?

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'The real Ellen DeGeneres was different.'

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'We knew she was gay.'

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I'm sure people knew she was, but it was never talked about,

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it was never discussed.

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It was like, "Well, that's what she is, so, you know,

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"but that's only the comic, not Ellen we see on TV."

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'In 1997, four seasons into the show, Ellen DeGeneres, the actress,

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'came out as gay.'

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When she came out as a person on the cover of Time,

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it was huge. It got international media coverage,

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it was all over the national news.

0:17:490:17:51

I mean, I know people who came out to their families

0:17:510:17:54

by handing them that magazine.

0:17:540:17:56

'The ABC network decided the fictional Ellen

0:17:560:17:59

'could also come out.

0:17:590:18:01

'It was a risk. Half of Americans believed gay sex should be a crime.'

0:18:010:18:06

Ellen, are you coming out or not?

0:18:060:18:08

Yeah, Ellen quit jerking us around and come out, already!

0:18:100:18:13

Come on!

0:18:130:18:15

What is the big deal? I've got a whole hour.

0:18:150:18:18

This risk in this was beyond any risk

0:18:200:18:24

I've ever seen in television.

0:18:240:18:28

'The basic story for Ellen was she goes out on a date

0:18:290:18:32

'with an old friend of hers,'

0:18:320:18:33

who's in town shooting something, and his producer is Laura Dern.

0:18:330:18:37

..interrupted. Nice sweater.

0:18:370:18:40

Thank you. Who are you?

0:18:400:18:41

Oh...

0:18:410:18:42

Ellen, this is Susan Richmond, my producer.

0:18:420:18:45

-Hi, Ellen.

-Yeah.

0:18:450:18:47

Of course, one thing leads to another and she tries to convince herself

0:18:470:18:51

that she really likes this guy.

0:18:510:18:53

Did you ever go out with him, or...?

0:18:530:18:55

'42 million people were watching.'

0:18:550:18:57

Yeah, that's a bad idea, I guess.

0:18:570:19:00

I don't date men.

0:19:000:19:03

Oh.

0:19:030:19:05

LAUGHTER

0:19:060:19:10

Why?

0:19:120:19:13

LAUGHTER

0:19:130:19:16

The laugh is the truth.

0:19:160:19:19

The laugh signals acceptance, the laugh signals recognition.

0:19:190:19:23

The laugh signals personal identification.

0:19:230:19:26

And when she says, "I'm gay."

0:19:260:19:29

Yes, I'm gay.

0:19:300:19:33

When she says that, you realise, "Oh, my god,

0:19:330:19:36

"It's all come together. She's letting it go."

0:19:360:19:39

Wow.

0:19:390:19:42

I know this is a big shock.

0:19:440:19:45

I really don't expect you to accept it right away.

0:19:450:19:49

Take your time, let it sink in.

0:19:490:19:51

Well, I, for one, think it's super.

0:19:540:19:58

APPLAUSE

0:19:580:20:01

'I remember the audience standing up cheering.

0:20:010:20:03

'I remember Ellen crying.'

0:20:030:20:05

'I remember half the cast crying, and I remember shivering.'

0:20:050:20:08

It was one of those things in your life, not just in television,

0:20:080:20:12

but in your life, where you really say,

0:20:120:20:15

"Wow, this is really, really something. Don't forget this moment."

0:20:150:20:19

'The episode reflected and accelerated change

0:20:190:20:23

'that was already happening.

0:20:230:20:24

'Today, four in ten Americans have close friends or relatives

0:20:240:20:27

'who are gay.'

0:20:270:20:29

Just one thing.

0:20:290:20:31

Are you sure this is what you want?

0:20:310:20:33

Aren't you sweet? Yes, I am sure, thank you.

0:20:340:20:36

OK.

0:20:360:20:38

Everybody, pay up!

0:20:380:20:40

Damn!

0:20:400:20:41

LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

0:20:410:20:44

Television is one of those mediums that goes back and forth.

0:20:480:20:50

It's always a little bit behind society,

0:20:500:20:53

so society will change and then television will be right behind it.

0:20:530:20:57

'In the 2000s, for many younger Americans,

0:21:010:21:04

'different was the new normal, and they expected to see that on TV.

0:21:040:21:09

'The sitcom writers came up with a show

0:21:090:21:11

'that perfectly captured the attitude.

0:21:110:21:14

'Will & Grace gave us a lead character who was a regular guy

0:21:170:21:20

'who just happened to be gay.'

0:21:200:21:22

What are you doing?

0:21:220:21:23

Hanging out.

0:21:230:21:24

-Come over.

-Will, I can't.

0:21:240:21:27

'Come on, Grace.'

0:21:270:21:28

You know you want to.

0:21:280:21:29

Of course I want to, but...

0:21:290:21:31

It's going to be a good one. I can feel it.

0:21:310:21:34

It's always good.

0:21:340:21:35

Still...

0:21:350:21:37

Well, if you're not going to come over,

0:21:370:21:38

do you want me to talk you through it?

0:21:380:21:41

It's tempting, but I think I'll watch ER here.

0:21:440:21:47

He was normal, and just like us.

0:21:480:21:52

He worried about his clothes, he worried about his job,

0:21:520:21:55

he had problems with his parents.

0:21:550:21:57

'Janis Hirsch is a leading sitcom writer who worked on Will & Grace.'

0:21:580:22:03

Suddenly, gay people are just like you,

0:22:030:22:07

but dressed better and are funnier.

0:22:070:22:09

'In this episode, Will, Grace

0:22:090:22:11

'and their gay friend Jack settle down to watch a sitcom.'

0:22:110:22:14

"I think I'm about to be kissed."

0:22:140:22:16

Gay sex is so hot.

0:22:160:22:18

'They expect to see a gay kiss.'

0:22:240:22:26

This is it! This is it! This is not it.

0:22:260:22:27

Where is the camera going? Why are we looking at a fireplace?

0:22:270:22:30

Get off the flames and follow the flamers!

0:22:300:22:32

LAUGHTER

0:22:330:22:37

Oh, come on! They didn't show us anything!

0:22:370:22:39

I can't believe this!

0:22:390:22:41

Oh, come on, Jack. What did you expect?

0:22:410:22:44

I expected a kiss!

0:22:440:22:45

And this closet case upstairs...

0:22:450:22:46

'Later, they go to protest outside the network.'

0:22:460:22:49

..and I want to know how long I'll have to wait until I can see

0:22:490:22:52

two gay men kiss on network TV.

0:22:520:22:53

Not as long as you'd think.

0:22:530:22:55

'Once again, a show had reflected change, and then consolidated it.'

0:22:580:23:03

Not your boyfriend, my ass!

0:23:030:23:05

When you're laughing, the next day when you see someone who's gay,

0:23:080:23:15

instead of going, "Eugh," or whatever

0:23:150:23:18

your reaction was going to be,

0:23:180:23:20

you're interested, you're talking.

0:23:200:23:23

You know, when you see gay couples now with kids,

0:23:240:23:29

you know, your first instinct isn't necessarily to say,

0:23:290:23:32

"Where's the mum?"

0:23:320:23:34

You just go, "Oh, cool, these are your kids."

0:23:340:23:36

And I think that started with Will and Grace, I really do.

0:23:370:23:40

'The politicians argue over gay rights,

0:23:440:23:46

'but when asked whether a gay couple raising a child counts as a family,

0:23:460:23:50

'two-thirds of Americans say yes.

0:23:500:23:52

'In the last decade

0:23:530:23:54

'the proportion of gay couples raising children has doubled.

0:23:540:23:58

'One in four of them are now doing it.

0:23:580:24:00

'In this episode of Modern Family,

0:24:000:24:01

'Mitch and Cam bring home their newly adopted baby.'

0:24:010:24:05

She barely slept on the plane and she's still wide awake.

0:24:050:24:07

Oh, stop worrying.

0:24:070:24:08

Cam, that orphanage was all women.

0:24:100:24:12

Maybe she can't fall asleep unless she feels a woman's shape.

0:24:120:24:14

I guess that's possible.

0:24:140:24:16

So, here.

0:24:160:24:17

What the hell is that supposed to mean?

0:24:170:24:19

Yes, I've gained a few extra pounds while we were expecting the baby.

0:24:190:24:23

Which has been very difficult, but apparently your body does

0:24:230:24:27

a nesting, very maternal, primal thing

0:24:270:24:29

'where it retains nutrients -

0:24:290:24:31

'some sort of molecular physiology thing - but that's science.

0:24:310:24:36

'You can't fight it.'

0:24:360:24:38

So...

0:24:380:24:39

I'm not saying anything.

0:24:410:24:43

You're saying everything.

0:24:430:24:44

'Some people feel TV's treatment of gay people

0:24:460:24:50

'is "typical liberal bias".

0:24:500:24:53

'Pat Buchanan is one of the biggest names on the conservative wing

0:24:530:24:56

'of the Republican Party.'

0:24:560:24:57

'This isn't the good country we grew up in.'

0:24:570:25:00

There's no doubt that the idea of homosexuality

0:25:020:25:05

and gay marriage, it's portrayed as positive and healthy

0:25:050:25:09

and happy and a normal lifestyle and even a commendable lifestyle,

0:25:090:25:14

and Hollywood plays a major role in that.

0:25:140:25:17

I mean, homosexual marriage,

0:25:170:25:19

is overwhelmingly supported by Hollywood and the people who make

0:25:190:25:24

and create the culture, the popular culture which we all consume.

0:25:240:25:28

No doubt, you don't need a weatherman

0:25:280:25:31

to know which way the wind is blowing.

0:25:310:25:34

'The sitcom writers insist, "We're just holding a mirror to society."

0:25:360:25:40

Hollywood gets a lot of criticism for being overly liberal

0:25:400:25:43

and pushing an agenda, but America's watching, the ratings show that.

0:25:430:25:48

If they did not like the message, they would not watch,

0:25:480:25:51

and if they did not watch we would be shut down.

0:25:510:25:53

It happens all the time.

0:25:530:25:54

One of the jobs of comedy is to patrol moral boundaries.

0:25:540:26:00

Boundary keepers, to test the limits, to find out where we are,

0:26:010:26:05

that's one of the endeavours. That's what we're exploring.

0:26:050:26:08

We're trying to find the compass.

0:26:100:26:12

When we go too far, we get called back.

0:26:150:26:19

When we say something that nobody else is saying, when we acknowledge

0:26:190:26:24

a previously unacknowledged truth, we get rewarded for it.

0:26:240:26:29

So patrolling that boundary, finding out where the limits are,

0:26:290:26:34

is what the business of comedy is.

0:26:340:26:37

'Sitcoms need to stay close to the boundaries of public opinion.

0:26:370:26:42

'Cross those boundaries and the public switch off.

0:26:420:26:46

'And in some places, the boundaries have shrunk.

0:26:460:26:48

'While sitcoms have caught the more liberal attitude

0:26:480:26:51

'to gays and lesbians, on other issues

0:26:510:26:54

'they've reflected a different movement in public opinion.'

0:26:540:26:58

Whereas in Britain we have become ever more liberal,

0:26:580:27:00

in the United States,

0:27:000:27:02

attitudes on some key issues have actually hardened.

0:27:020:27:04

In America, the story of change isn't one of constant progress,

0:27:050:27:09

of always moving in one direction.

0:27:090:27:12

It's more complicated.

0:27:120:27:14

'Back in the early 70s, one of the most popular sitcoms was Maude,

0:27:160:27:20

'a show that confronted one of the most controversial issues of all.

0:27:200:27:25

'The central character was played by Bea Arthur,

0:27:250:27:28

'better known these days for her role in The Golden Girls.'

0:27:280:27:31

We've been through an awful lot together.

0:27:310:27:33

A lot.

0:27:330:27:34

Six husbands. Your two, my four.

0:27:340:27:37

Right.

0:27:370:27:38

For 22 years, Vivian, we've been everything to each other.

0:27:380:27:42

I mean, there wasn't a confidence that we couldn't share,

0:27:420:27:45

we've been like sisters, Vivian.

0:27:450:27:47

Like sisters, Maude.

0:27:470:27:48

Then can I trust you to keep a secret?

0:27:490:27:51

'When this episode was broadcast in 1972,

0:27:510:27:54

'abortion had already been legalised in some states,

0:27:540:27:57

'but it would be another two months

0:27:570:27:58

'before it was made legal across the country.'

0:27:580:28:01

Vivian.

0:28:030:28:04

I'm pregnant.

0:28:060:28:08

'This was a woman in her late 40s, this is a woman who had wrinkles,'

0:28:090:28:14

and so when she got pregnant...

0:28:140:28:16

"What? She got pregnant?"

0:28:160:28:18

"Yeah, she got pregnant."

0:28:180:28:20

People expected, well, naturally,

0:28:200:28:22

if she gets pregnant, this is American television,

0:28:220:28:24

she will have the child and give it up for adoption.

0:28:240:28:27

No, she has an abortion.

0:28:270:28:30

This was a stunner.

0:28:300:28:32

You know, I've been thinking.

0:28:320:28:34

There is no earthly reason for you to go through with this at your age.

0:28:340:28:38

You know it, I know it, Walter knows it.

0:28:380:28:41

I don't want you to talk. Just don't talk about it!

0:28:410:28:43

I didn't say anything, but now that you mentioned it,

0:28:430:28:45

it's legal in New York now, isn't it?

0:28:450:28:47

Of course it is, Walter. Mother, I don't understand your hesitancy.

0:28:470:28:51

When they made it a law, you were for it.

0:28:510:28:53

Of course, I wasn't pregnant then!

0:28:530:28:56

What's ironic about the Maude episode,

0:28:560:28:59

here is something that happened, what, 40 years ago on television,

0:28:590:29:03

and even if it was controversial, it was deemed ultimately acceptable.

0:29:030:29:06

That same episode could not play on television today,

0:29:060:29:10

would not even be attempted today

0:29:100:29:12

because the atmosphere in this country is so poisoned,

0:29:120:29:16

it's impossible for people to have a rational discussion

0:29:160:29:19

about anything without being shouted down, and that includes abortion.

0:29:190:29:24

Just tell me, Walter...

0:29:240:29:26

that I'm doing the right thing,

0:29:270:29:29

not having the baby.

0:29:290:29:31

For you, Maude, for me.

0:29:340:29:36

And in the privacy of our own lives, you're doing the right thing.

0:29:370:29:42

I love you, Walter Findlay.

0:29:450:29:47

APPLAUSE

0:29:510:29:53

'Now, in 2012, abortion divides America like no other issue.'

0:29:550:29:58

You don't care.

0:29:580:30:00

He was running a legal system.

0:30:000:30:02

-You know who has blood on her hands? You.

-That's ridiculous, Bill.

0:30:020:30:04

You don't care about these babies. It isn't ridiculous.

0:30:040:30:07

You're the zealot.

0:30:070:30:08

As President, I'll protect the sanctity of life.

0:30:140:30:18

I'll honour the institution of marriage.

0:30:180:30:21

Washington politicians who want to decide who you can marry or control

0:30:210:30:25

health care choices that women should be making for themselves...

0:30:250:30:28

Only you can make sure that doesn't happen.

0:30:320:30:35

'The sitcoms have largely avoided the subject of abortion since Maude in the '70s.'

0:30:350:30:39

'It's an issue that tears America apart, with roughly half

0:30:400:30:44

'the country passionately opposed to it and half in favour.'

0:30:440:30:47

'TV producers don't like those odds.'

0:30:480:30:52

Most networks would probably not deal with that subject matter,

0:30:520:30:56

because they don't want the backlash that comes with it.

0:30:560:30:59

You know, I think Family Guy had an abortion episode

0:30:590:31:02

and the network wouldn't let them air it.

0:31:020:31:05

If you have a few moments, I'd like you to watch this video presentation.

0:31:050:31:08

Yeah, I got a few minutes. My wife's getting an abortion.

0:31:080:31:10

'This is the episode of Family Guy that the network wouldn't run.'

0:31:100:31:14

Hello, friend. I hear you're contemplating having an abortion.

0:31:150:31:19

But before you do, remember, science has proven that within

0:31:190:31:22

hours of conception, a human foetus has started a college fund and has

0:31:220:31:25

already made your first mother's day card out of macaroni and glitter.

0:31:250:31:29

-Ah!

-But don't take my word for it. Just ask my little friend Ziggy.

0:31:310:31:36

Hi, I'm Ziggy the zygote.

0:31:360:31:38

I'm looking forward to being an active member of your community.

0:31:380:31:42

Can I hug you?

0:31:420:31:43

Ha-ha! Of course you can, Ziggy,

0:31:430:31:45

because even though they're not visible yet, you already have

0:31:450:31:49

tiny arms, arms that will one day work, play and fold in prayer.

0:31:490:31:53

Yay!

0:31:530:31:54

'The creators of Family Guy did find a way to get past the ban.'

0:31:540:31:58

We're doing a live reading of an episode

0:31:580:32:00

that will never air on television.

0:32:000:32:01

'When it does get on air,

0:32:010:32:03

'the show pulls in seven million viewers.'

0:32:030:32:06

So, how did it go at the clinic?

0:32:090:32:11

Fine, at first, but then there was a complication.

0:32:110:32:14

We have decided against the procedure.

0:32:140:32:16

Really? Why?

0:32:160:32:17

Because it's killing babies, Brian.

0:32:170:32:19

If God wanted us to kill babies, he'd make them all Chinese girls.

0:32:190:32:23

All we're doing is holding a mirror up.

0:32:260:32:28

'So while traditional sitcoms avoid abortion,

0:32:300:32:34

'satirical cartoons do want to talk about it.'

0:32:340:32:38

'That's because younger Americans want to see taboo subjects on TV,

0:32:380:32:42

'and cartoons top what they watch.'

0:32:420:32:45

'80% of South Park's viewers are under 35.'

0:32:450:32:49

'The show articulates the visceral discomfort

0:32:520:32:55

'that many Americans feel about abortion.'

0:32:550:32:58

All right, Miss Anders. All ready for your abortion?

0:32:580:33:00

LAUGHTER

0:33:000:33:02

Ready as I'm ever going to be, I guess.

0:33:020:33:04

Well, try to relax. It will all be over very soon.

0:33:050:33:08

LAUGHTER

0:33:080:33:09

Doctor, can we turn off that television?

0:33:090:33:12

Oh, yes, I'm sorry.

0:33:120:33:14

LAUGHTER STOPS

0:33:140:33:16

OK.

0:33:160:33:18

Great.

0:33:180:33:19

Well, here we go.

0:33:190:33:21

VACUUM CLEANER BUZZES

0:33:210:33:27

'The sitcoms reveal an America that is embracing gay rights

0:33:400:33:43

'but still uncomfortable about abortion.

0:33:430:33:47

'That might have something to do with religion.

0:33:470:33:50

'Gay rights can be seen as "learning to love your neighbour",

0:33:500:33:53

'while for many people in this country, abortion will always be

0:33:530:33:57

'about the destruction of life.

0:33:570:33:59

'And religion matters.

0:34:000:34:01

'76% of Americans expect to meet God on Judgment Day.

0:34:010:34:06

'Homer Simpson's beaten them to it.'

0:34:070:34:09

God, I got to ask you something. What's the meaning of life?

0:34:090:34:13

Homer, I can't tell you that.

0:34:130:34:15

Come on.

0:34:150:34:17

'It's Sunday morning at Brentwood Presbyterian Church in Los Angeles.'

0:34:200:34:24

This city isn't Alabama in the Bible Belt,

0:34:240:34:28

yet this place is so popular that it has to hold two services

0:34:280:34:32

just to fit everyone in.

0:34:320:34:34

'Three quarters of Americans pray every day.'

0:34:350:34:39

'God is everywhere. It's no surprise that he makes guest appearances.'

0:34:390:34:44

'In this episode of The Simpsons, Homer stops going to church.'

0:34:480:34:52

God?

0:34:520:34:54

Thou hast forsaken my church!

0:34:540:34:57

Well, kind of, but...

0:34:570:35:00

But what?

0:35:000:35:01

I'm not a bad guy. I work hard and I love my kids,

0:35:010:35:05

so why should I spend half my Sunday hearing about how I'm going to hell?

0:35:050:35:09

Hmm... You've got a point there.

0:35:100:35:13

'Homer and God chat about a common experience for the 11 million

0:35:130:35:18

'Americans watching - the ups and downs of church.'

0:35:180:35:22

You know what I really hate about church? Those boring sermons.

0:35:220:35:26

I couldn't agree more.

0:35:270:35:29

America is a more religious society.

0:35:290:35:31

All the puritans came over here - what do you expect?

0:35:310:35:33

We were started by people

0:35:330:35:36

in belt buckle hats or whatever they were, I don't know.

0:35:360:35:39

It's strictly religious.

0:35:390:35:40

'For many Americans, church is at the centre of family life...'

0:35:400:35:44

-You used to drive that blue car.

-Kids, could you wait outside...

0:35:440:35:47

'..and by rejecting church, Homer rejects his family.'

0:35:470:35:50

Homer, please don't make me choose between my man and my god

0:35:500:35:52

because you just can't win.

0:35:520:35:54

There you go again. Always taking someone else's side.

0:35:540:35:58

Flanders, the Water Department, God.

0:35:580:36:01

I'm only going to ask you one last time.

0:36:010:36:04

Are you sure you won't come with us to Church?

0:36:040:36:06

"Coming up next, Make Your Own Ladder."

0:36:060:36:09

Very sure.

0:36:090:36:10

'The sitcoms reflect the fact that almost half of Americans

0:36:180:36:23

'attend church or some other place of worship.'

0:36:230:36:26

'For many, life without faith is unthinkable.'

0:36:290:36:32

'Although, unlike Homer Simpson,

0:36:320:36:34

'it doesn't take the house burning down to convince them.'

0:36:340:36:38

You know I have a feeling there's a lesson here.

0:36:380:36:41

Yes, the lesson is...

0:36:410:36:43

No, don't tell me, I'll get it.

0:36:430:36:45

Oh, I know. The Lord is vengeful!

0:36:450:36:48

Oh, spiteful one, show me who to smite and they shall be smoten.

0:36:480:36:53

Homer, God didn't set your house on fire.

0:36:530:36:55

No, but he was working in the hearts of your friends and neighbours

0:36:550:36:58

when they went to your aid, be they Christian, Jew or miscellaneous.

0:36:580:37:04

Hindu! There are 700 million of us.

0:37:040:37:06

Oh, that's super.

0:37:060:37:08

I was rude to everyone of you and you've saved my life

0:37:080:37:12

when you could have just left me to fry like the proverbial pancake

0:37:120:37:15

that I am.

0:37:150:37:16

Oh, Homie, I'm so glad to hear you say that.

0:37:160:37:20

Now, would you give church another try?

0:37:200:37:22

I'll be there next Sunday, front row centre.

0:37:220:37:25

SNORING

0:37:250:37:27

'The Simpsons remain an all-American, God-fearing family.'

0:37:270:37:31

There is an undeniable love for each other.

0:37:310:37:35

You know, Marge and Homer are never going to split up.

0:37:350:37:38

They're going to be together the rest of their lives.

0:37:380:37:41

The presidency has a funny way

0:37:410:37:42

of making a person feel the need to pray.

0:37:420:37:46

'American politicians often work God into their speeches,

0:37:470:37:50

'because they know he's a lot more popular than they are.'

0:37:500:37:54

In the wake of failures and disappointments,

0:37:540:37:56

I've questioned what God had in store for me.

0:37:560:38:01

And, suddenly, God and Jesus appeared before me!

0:38:010:38:04

And they said I should start my own church,

0:38:040:38:06

because none of the others had it right.

0:38:060:38:09

'Mitt Romney, Barack Obama's rival, is a Mormon, a faith whose founder

0:38:090:38:13

'this episode of South Park mercilessly ridicules.'

0:38:130:38:16

# Many people believed Joseph

0:38:180:38:20

# Dum dum dum dum dum

0:38:200:38:22

# And that night he saw an angel

0:38:220:38:24

# Dum dum dum dum dum. #

0:38:240:38:26

And please bless mother and father

0:38:260:38:29

and please keep our bellies full of yum yums and luscious goodies.

0:38:290:38:32

Aaah!

0:38:320:38:34

Oh, my gosh!

0:38:360:38:37

I am Morona. I am a native American.

0:38:370:38:40

A native American? But your skin is white.

0:38:400:38:44

Yes. Long ago, all native Americans were white.

0:38:440:38:47

We all came to America from Jerusalem,

0:38:470:38:49

and while we were here we were visited by Christ.

0:38:490:38:53

Jesus lived here in America?

0:38:530:38:55

'You might wonder how a man who is a member

0:38:560:38:58

'of such a controversial church

0:38:580:39:01

'could be nominated for President by the Republicans,

0:39:010:39:04

'the most religiously conservative of the two parties.'

0:39:040:39:08

'Here's his explanation.'

0:39:080:39:09

We were Mormons, and growing up in Michigan, that might have

0:39:090:39:13

seemed unusual or out of place, but I really don't remember it that way.

0:39:130:39:17

My friends cared more about what sports teams

0:39:170:39:19

we followed than what church we went to.

0:39:190:39:22

Keep him away from me!

0:39:220:39:23

'South Park's Mormon character Gary explains that what matters

0:39:230:39:26

'to Americans isn't what faith people have,

0:39:260:39:29

'but that they at least have a faith.'

0:39:290:39:31

Look, maybe us Mormons do believe in crazy stories

0:39:310:39:34

that make absolutely no sense,

0:39:340:39:35

and maybe Joseph Smith did make it all up.

0:39:350:39:37

But I have a great life and a great family.

0:39:370:39:39

And I have the book of Mormon to thank for that.

0:39:390:39:41

The truth is, I don't care if Joseph Smith made it all up

0:39:410:39:44

because what the Church teaches now is loving your family,

0:39:440:39:47

being nice and helping people, and even though people in this town

0:39:470:39:50

might think that's stupid, I still choose to believe in it.

0:39:500:39:52

All I ever did was try to be your friend, Stan,

0:39:520:39:54

but you're so high and mighty you couldn't look past my religion

0:39:540:39:57

and just be my friend back.

0:39:570:39:58

You got a lot of growing up to do, buddy. Suck my balls.

0:39:580:40:00

Conservatives have accepted Romney's faith,

0:40:040:40:06

but other forms of reconciliation can be harder to achieve.

0:40:060:40:10

But tonight, because of what we did on this day, in this election,

0:40:100:40:15

at this defining moment, change has come to America.

0:40:150:40:20

When Barack Obama won in 2008, many Americans hoped it would end

0:40:230:40:26

the country's oldest division - race.

0:40:260:40:30

Today, optimism among black people is at a high,

0:40:310:40:35

but 80% still think their country has a race problem.

0:40:350:40:38

I don't think you can legislate feelings,

0:40:410:40:44

I don't think that you can legislate a point of view.

0:40:440:40:47

If you don't like people of colour, if you don't get it,

0:40:470:40:49

if you don't associate with people of colour,

0:40:490:40:51

you can have a President that's blue

0:40:510:40:53

and that's not going to change how you personally feel

0:40:530:40:56

about your neighbour.

0:40:560:40:57

'The reality is that race remains the wound that will not heal.

0:41:000:41:03

'And you can see America's racial divisions reflected in its sitcoms,'

0:41:030:41:08

'but in ways that are more complex

0:41:080:41:11

'and more surprising than you might expect.'

0:41:110:41:15

'Back in the '70s, sitcoms appeared

0:41:170:41:19

'that brought the lives of ordinary African Americans to the screen.

0:41:190:41:23

'And these mainstream shows, like Good Times,

0:41:230:41:26

'were popular with both black and white audiences.'

0:41:260:41:29

I said, hold it.

0:41:290:41:31

Hold it!

0:41:320:41:34

Well, it's comforting to know there's

0:41:360:41:39

still some respect for Black Power around here.

0:41:390:41:42

When I was a kid and I was watching Good Times,

0:41:450:41:48

I was sitting on the floor watching TV and I asked my mother,

0:41:480:41:50

"Where's the ghetto?"

0:41:500:41:52

And she said "You're sitting in it."

0:41:520:41:55

And I had no idea, you know,

0:41:550:41:57

you're just a kid watching something funny.

0:41:570:42:00

Alyson Fouse writes for TV sitcoms and Hollywood feature films.

0:42:000:42:05

They were struggling, but to me it always felt like

0:42:050:42:08

this is a family trying to make it where they are.

0:42:080:42:12

What is it? Another eviction notice?

0:42:120:42:13

Well, it ain't no Valentine card.

0:42:130:42:16

Oh, baby, we got two of those while you was in the hospital.

0:42:160:42:19

But my friend Manny, who works down in the projects, he said

0:42:190:42:21

don't worry about it, because they know I'm a hard-working man.

0:42:210:42:24

They'll extend me.

0:42:240:42:25

Yeah, they'll extend you, right out into the street.

0:42:250:42:28

'Good Times was about the lives of African-Americans

0:42:330:42:37

'stuck in the inner cities.

0:42:370:42:38

'In the '80s, a show hit the screens that was set among a black

0:42:380:42:41

'professional class that was reaping the benefits of Civil Rights.'

0:42:410:42:46

During the '80s and '90s, America was in love with the family

0:42:480:42:53

that lived in this Greenwich Village Townhouse.

0:42:530:42:56

The father was a doctor, his wife was a successful lawyer,

0:42:560:43:00

and they were bringing up their five kids to be respectful,

0:43:000:43:04

hard-working and ambitious.

0:43:040:43:06

They were almost the perfect family, the physical embodiment

0:43:060:43:10

of the sense of hope and aspiration that swept America

0:43:100:43:14

during the Reagan years.

0:43:140:43:16

Heard from the oldest, lately?

0:43:210:43:23

Sandra? Yeah, she called last night.

0:43:230:43:25

Doing OK?

0:43:250:43:26

Four As and a B.

0:43:260:43:28

Four As and a B? All right!

0:43:280:43:30

Princeton.

0:43:300:43:31

Yeah.

0:43:310:43:32

She like it up there?

0:43:320:43:34

Oh, yeah, lots of friends.

0:43:340:43:35

And your second daughter? Where's she going to go?

0:43:350:43:38

Denise? Well, she's talking about Princeton, Yale, Talladega...

0:43:380:43:43

'It was part of the '80s optimism that anything was possible,'

0:43:430:43:46

there was a belief that you could be anything.

0:43:460:43:50

It was just expected you were going to go to college,

0:43:500:43:52

they wore college shirts, you could go to Princeton,

0:43:520:43:55

you could do this, you could be in the Naval Academy,

0:43:550:43:57

you could do anything that you wanted to be,

0:43:570:43:59

and your race really wasn't a factor in what you could or could not do.

0:43:590:44:03

All right. Now, binoculars, everybody raise your binoculars.

0:44:030:44:08

All right, down. Cameras, up.

0:44:080:44:10

And down.

0:44:100:44:11

All right. Let's head out!

0:44:120:44:14

Oh, wait. The guest of honour. Theo!

0:44:140:44:16

Theo!

0:44:170:44:19

'Cosby created a show that wasn't about being black.'

0:44:220:44:25

And I hadn't seen many shows, up until that point,

0:44:260:44:29

that dealt with African American history

0:44:290:44:32

in a way that wasn't painful.

0:44:320:44:34

All right, there you go.

0:44:340:44:37

'In 1992, 44 million people tuned into the final episode

0:44:380:44:44

'of this national institution.'

0:44:440:44:46

'It seemed to prove that whatever their colour, the lifestyles

0:44:460:44:49

'and tastes of Americans were converging.'

0:44:490:44:52

'But The Cosby Show turned out to be one of the last sitcoms

0:44:520:44:55

'that was a hit among both black and white audiences.'

0:44:550:44:59

'In 2000, the number one sitcom among white audiences was about

0:45:120:45:16

'a group of friends living in an apartment block here in Manhattan.'

0:45:160:45:20

'Despite being a huge hit with white Americans,

0:45:240:45:26

'and a ratings success across the world,

0:45:260:45:28

'Friends ranked as only the 64th most popular show

0:45:280:45:31

'among African Americans.

0:45:310:45:34

'Friends was not a hit among people of colour.

0:45:340:45:37

'Big with white people, not as big with black people.

0:45:370:45:40

'Friends appeals to the people

0:45:400:45:43

'who look like the people on Friends,'

0:45:430:45:44

and I don't think it crosses colour lines.

0:45:440:45:47

I don't think it's intended to cross colour lines.

0:45:470:45:49

Ross can wrap...

0:45:490:45:51

'Built around the foibles of its six central characters,

0:45:510:45:53

'the friends seem to live in an insular world.'

0:45:530:45:55

Hurry!

0:45:550:45:57

Monica's going to make you pack. She's got jobs for everyone.

0:45:570:46:00

Now, it's too late for me, but save yourselves!

0:46:000:46:02

'Often, you'd never know that it was set in one of the most

0:46:020:46:06

'ethnically diverse cities in America.'

0:46:060:46:08

'Friends is great, but Friends didn't look like the New York I knew.'

0:46:080:46:12

So many sitcoms are so white.

0:46:120:46:16

'The failure of Friends and of many mainstream sitcoms

0:46:220:46:26

'to attract black audiences reflects some hard truths

0:46:260:46:28

'about race and culture in modern America.'

0:46:280:46:31

Although the US is in many ways a divided country,

0:46:350:46:38

Americans today are now less likely than ever to be living in

0:46:380:46:42

racially segregated neighbourhoods,

0:46:420:46:45

but behind their curtains, they're more likely than ever before

0:46:450:46:49

to be watching television aimed squarely at their racial group.

0:46:490:46:53

Black and white Americans live in different TV universes.

0:46:530:46:56

'Sitcoms like Living Single explain what's happened.

0:46:590:47:02

'As cable TV has offered Black Americans more choice,

0:47:020:47:05

'they've opted to watch sitcoms about themselves.

0:47:050:47:08

'Living Single topped what African Americans watched,

0:47:100:47:12

'but only reached 56 in the national ratings.

0:47:120:47:16

'Emmy Award-winning writer Ken Levine has been writing

0:47:180:47:21

'for black and white audiences since the '60s.'

0:47:210:47:24

Sitcoms need to reflect the fact that, in America,

0:47:240:47:29

there are very different cultures,

0:47:290:47:32

because even though there is integration,

0:47:320:47:36

still, people are more comfortable living in their own culture

0:47:360:47:41

and they develop their own culture.

0:47:410:47:43

Living Single was centred around the lives of six twenty-somethings

0:47:460:47:50

living together in a New York apartment,

0:47:500:47:53

and was seen by many as similar to Friends,

0:47:530:47:55

but with a black cast.

0:47:570:47:58

That was during the time when you saw black versions of those shows.

0:48:020:48:07

If they didn't have any black people on the show,

0:48:070:48:10

but the concept was solid, well, make a black show that's

0:48:100:48:12

kind of just like it, with the same problems, but more

0:48:120:48:15

of a cultural point of view that feels like us, that looks like us.

0:48:150:48:19

'Another example of this phenomenon was Girlfriends,

0:48:220:48:26

'which followed the friendships of four black women in New York.

0:48:260:48:29

'It was widely understood as black TV's response to Sex and the City.'

0:48:290:48:33

Joan, you don't have to sell your house.

0:48:330:48:35

Yes, I do.

0:48:350:48:36

But Joan, there's so many memories here.

0:48:360:48:38

My first three-way.

0:48:380:48:40

My first four-way.

0:48:420:48:44

My first doorway.

0:48:460:48:48

If we're not going to deal with each other one on one,

0:48:490:48:52

and you don't see it on television, and the only time you see us

0:48:520:48:55

is in the news if there's a problem, or politicised on one extreme

0:48:550:48:59

or the other, you really start to lose the stuff that makes America

0:48:590:49:04

important, you know, the diversity, and so to me, that's a problem.

0:49:040:49:09

'America's racial divide is visible not just in the way audiences

0:49:090:49:14

'watch sitcoms, but in the storylines, too.'

0:49:140:49:16

I want to thank you for including me

0:49:160:49:18

in your little Sunday sports soiree,

0:49:180:49:19

and I'll have you know that I don't feel at all uncomfortable

0:49:190:49:23

being the only white person up in here.

0:49:230:49:25

OK, well, a little uncomfortable.

0:49:270:49:30

Hey, now I know how you feel at the law firm, Dan.

0:49:300:49:32

Not that anything's going to change.

0:49:320:49:34

'I wish it were otherwise, but I think sitcoms have it about right.'

0:49:360:49:41

I still think that, sadly,

0:49:410:49:45

black people and white people meet in the office,

0:49:450:49:49

work very, very well together in the office...

0:49:490:49:51

..and then go to separate communities.

0:49:540:49:56

'Happy Endings is a new sitcom that shows how younger Americans

0:49:580:50:01

'are more becoming relaxed about race.

0:50:010:50:04

'Today, one in seven marriages are interracial.'

0:50:040:50:08

Hi.

0:50:080:50:09

Listen, I'm sorry. I shouldn't accuse you

0:50:090:50:11

of not communicating if I don't give you a chance.

0:50:110:50:13

It's OK, babe. I'm sorry, too.

0:50:130:50:15

I need to be better at letting you know you can always talk to me.

0:50:150:50:18

Oh, I love my black Han Solo.

0:50:180:50:21

As funny as that show is, somebody's still thinking,

0:50:210:50:26

"Wow, they let him kiss her on TV."

0:50:260:50:29

It's still a big fricking deal because we're so not used to it.

0:50:290:50:35

Oh, and thank you for pushing me to open up to Carl.

0:50:350:50:38

He opened up to me...

0:50:380:50:40

'In sitcoms, we are a lot more comfortable

0:50:400:50:43

'with gay relationships than biracial relationships,

0:50:430:50:48

especially when that mix is black and white,

0:50:480:50:51

because, you know, things in the news still remind you

0:50:510:50:54

that black people are scary and they're dangerous

0:50:540:50:57

and you don't want them dating your daughter.

0:50:570:51:00

It's just how it is.

0:51:000:51:01

'But eventually there will have to be a change

0:51:040:51:06

'in the mainstream sitcoms to keep up with society.

0:51:060:51:10

'By 2050, America will be a majority non-white country.

0:51:100:51:15

'Immigrants and their descendants from south of the border

0:51:150:51:18

'will make up 30% of that population.

0:51:180:51:21

'So it's interesting that when Modern Family

0:51:210:51:24

'decided to show a mixed-race relationship,

0:51:240:51:26

'it went with an older white guy with an attractive Colombian wife.'

0:51:260:51:31

My first husband, he was very handsome but too crazy.

0:51:310:51:35

It seemed like all we did was fight and make love, fight and make love.

0:51:350:51:40

One time, I'm not kidding you, we fell out the window together.

0:51:400:51:44

Which one were you doing?

0:51:440:51:46

I'm hearing this for the first time.

0:51:470:51:50

'Time and again, the sitcoms show Americans dealing with the challenge

0:51:500:51:55

'of a fast-changing culture.

0:51:550:51:57

'And there's a lot of fun to be had with the corresponding growth

0:51:570:52:00

'in political correctness.'

0:52:000:52:02

Well, that's the end of our tour.

0:52:020:52:04

Now do you see why tolerance is so important, boys?

0:52:040:52:06

I guess.

0:52:060:52:08

We have to accept people for who they are and what they like to do.

0:52:080:52:11

-Hey, what the hell are you doing?

-I was just...

0:52:110:52:13

-There's no smoking in the museum.

-But I'm not in the museum.

0:52:130:52:16

-Get out of here, you filthy smoker!

-Yeah, dirty lungs!

0:52:160:52:19

-Go ahead and kill yourself, stupid tar-breath.

-Dumb-ass.

0:52:190:52:22

Get out of here!

0:52:220:52:24

Have a great day, everybody.

0:52:240:52:25

'South Park's satire of American political correctness

0:52:290:52:32

'has become something of a mission.

0:52:320:52:35

'Nick Gillespie, the editor of the Libertarian magazine Reason,

0:52:350:52:39

'is a fan of the show.'

0:52:390:52:41

So, Nick, at face value South Park looks really liberal.

0:52:420:52:45

It's got kids swearing, it's full of profanity, people take drugs.

0:52:450:52:49

-But is it technically liberal?

-No, it isn't.

0:52:490:52:51

I mean, it makes fun of liberals and political correctness,

0:52:510:52:54

the idea that you have to act a particular way

0:52:540:52:56

otherwise you are a horrible human being,

0:52:560:52:58

as much as it attacks conservatives.

0:52:580:53:00

And from one episode to the next, it's going after different targets.

0:53:000:53:04

What it's about it attacking the idea of authority

0:53:040:53:09

from whatever direction it comes.

0:53:090:53:12

And it's only anti-authority when authority tells you how to behave

0:53:120:53:15

-And tries to kind of cover up the fact that it's full of malarkey.

-OK.

0:53:150:53:20

Let's look at that in an episode.

0:53:200:53:22

In this one, Mr Garrison is trying to get sacked from his school job -

0:53:220:53:26

he's a teacher - in order to get a big lawsuit.

0:53:260:53:29

So he's coming on stage, he's doing a big presentation, and he's trying

0:53:290:53:33

to be as offensive as possible, but the liberal audience won't buy it.

0:53:330:53:37

It is my honour to present the Courageous Teacher award

0:53:370:53:39

to Herbert Garrison.

0:53:390:53:41

APPLAUSE

0:53:410:53:42

'He comes out literally riding his bondage slave,

0:53:420:53:46

'and he's dressed like a drag queen.'

0:53:460:53:49

-Oh, my God!

-That's what our boys were talking about?

0:53:490:53:52

Ding ding! Ding ding!

0:53:520:53:54

He is so courageous.

0:53:550:53:57

'He gets applause from the adults,'

0:53:570:54:00

which is the type of thing, the type of statement that South Park

0:54:000:54:03

makes over and over again, that we have gotten to a point

0:54:030:54:06

where adults in particular are doing the most insane things

0:54:060:54:10

in the name of forcing tolerance,

0:54:100:54:13

forcing acceptance on to people in a way that they just shouldn't be.

0:54:130:54:17

God dammit, don't you people get it? I'm trying to get fired here!

0:54:170:54:21

Oh, that's courageous.

0:54:220:54:23

'This kind of behaviour should not be acceptable from a teacher.'

0:54:230:54:27

Just because you have to tolerate something

0:54:270:54:29

doesn't mean you have to approve of it.

0:54:290:54:32

If you had to like it, it would be called the Museum of Acceptance.

0:54:320:54:35

Tolerate means you're just putting up with it.

0:54:350:54:37

You tolerate a crying child sitting next to you on the airplane

0:54:370:54:40

or you tolerate a bad cold.

0:54:400:54:43

It can still piss you off. Jesus tap-dancing Christ!

0:54:430:54:46

In any given season, it offends

0:54:460:54:47

everybody across the political spectrum,

0:54:470:54:50

because they are very consistent in that Libertarian idea of

0:54:500:54:53

we should be tolerant of people,

0:54:530:54:55

but we don't have to embrace and accept and love everybody equally.

0:54:550:54:59

'So many of the sitcoms are about family.

0:55:030:55:07

'And in a fast-changing world,

0:55:070:55:09

'tolerance is necessary to hold the family together.'

0:55:090:55:12

In Modern Family,

0:55:140:55:16

Mitch decides it's time to tell his relatives about his adopted baby.

0:55:160:55:21

-OK, people, let's all chillax.

-Hey, where's Uncle Cameron?

-Thank you.

0:55:210:55:25

Thank you. Someone who's not insulting me notices he's not here.

0:55:250:55:28

'His conservative father Jay jumps to the wrong conclusion.'

0:55:280:55:31

You two broke up. Well, a baby wasn't going to help that anyway!

0:55:310:55:34

Let me tell you,

0:55:340:55:36

you're better off because he was a bit of a drama queen.

0:55:360:55:38

No, no, no, stop.

0:55:380:55:40

You come into my house and you insult me

0:55:400:55:41

and my boyfriend, who by the way is not that dramatic.

0:55:410:55:45

MUSIC: Intro to "Circle of Life" from The Lion King

0:55:450:55:49

# It's the circle of life... #

0:55:560:56:00

We adopted a baby. Her name is Lily.

0:56:000:56:04

Exciting!

0:56:040:56:05

Just turn it off.

0:56:050:56:07

I can't turn it off. It's who I am.

0:56:070:56:09

-The music!

-Oh, yes, the music.

0:56:090:56:11

Come say hi to Lily!

0:56:110:56:13

'Jay is there to represent a raised eyebrow at all of this.

0:56:130:56:18

'He's tolerant and he loves his son,'

0:56:180:56:24

it's just a new world for him.

0:56:240:56:27

But it's not something that he particularly embraces.

0:56:270:56:33

He accepts, he doesn't embrace it.

0:56:330:56:35

Lily.

0:56:350:56:36

The fact that Modern Family is a favourite among Republicans

0:56:360:56:40

is perhaps because, like Jay, they and millions of other Americans

0:56:400:56:44

are coming to terms with changes within their own families.

0:56:440:56:48

What do I know?

0:56:480:56:50

'The truth of Modern Family is, it's "tolerance is OK." '

0:56:500:56:55

"You don't have to love everybody. But at least accept."

0:56:550:57:01

-Do you want to meet Grampa?

-Are you kidding?

0:57:010:57:04

She's one of us now! Let me see the little pot-sticker!

0:57:040:57:08

-RADIO:

-What it boils down to is,

0:57:080:57:10

what's a few dead babies among friends?

0:57:100:57:12

Obama's got no problem...

0:57:120:57:14

Americans might accept a message of tolerance in their private lives,

0:57:140:57:18

but it doesn't necessarily extend to their politics.

0:57:180:57:21

Yet beneath the noise, profound changes have happened

0:57:210:57:25

that politicians have been powerless to control.

0:57:250:57:28

In the future, the sitcoms will continue to reflect these changes,

0:57:280:57:31

often far better than the new shows, because they'll show families,

0:57:310:57:36

evolving, struggling, and dealing with whatever life throws at them.

0:57:360:57:41

VOICEOVER: 'Cos it doesn't matter how big the storm

0:57:410:57:44

'or how much stuff gets blown your way -

0:57:440:57:46

'if you have each other, that's everything.

0:57:460:57:49

'Because there's nothing more important...

0:57:490:57:51

'Holy crap, is that a dryer?!'

0:57:510:57:53

You see it too, right, Mike?

0:57:560:57:58

The tornado gave us a drier.

0:57:580:57:59

Quick, get it inside before anybody sees.

0:58:010:58:04

Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd

0:58:170:58:20

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