Sheriff Andy Griffith

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Who?mikejones!
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See this clip making the rounds on some social media. Wise words the modern world should take heed of
White Liberals=The Worst
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tmaggies
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Tom Doniphon
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The world needs more Mayberry.
NoahAg
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That's a whole lotta hetero white privilege toxic masculinity to assume Opie even identifies as a "boy!"
Let's go, Brandon!
cevans_40
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TexAgs91
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He's a good dad, but he seemed to me to be more of a benevolent dictator. There's also a pretty good write-up I saw...

Quote:

The old Andy Griffith Show, one of the most-watched, best-loved sitcoms ever, is lauded as a slice of small-town, apple-pie Americana, hearkening back to a simpler, better time when men were men, women were virtuous, and children occasionally were well-behaved. At the same time, one might ask: When a television program from any era is praised by the mainstream media, could there be some underlying leftist message? The answer is yes.

The first and most obvious commie message is Andy's refusal to carry a gun. Heroically, he captures evildoers every time without a pistol. Notice also that Barney, the one who wants to carry a gun, is a buffoon, and whenever he touches his gun it goes off at random. There is no question what sentiment the producers were expressing. Further, on those rare occasions when there's a truly violent criminal to pursue, Andy reaches into the rifle rack. And you thought Rosie O'Donnell was the first gun-control hypocrite.

Another modern, leftist, anti-everything-traditional message is the complete absence of a nuclear family on the Griffith show. Barney is single and desperate; Andy is widowed and moderately content; Gomer and Goober were single and whatever; Thelma Lou and Helen were single; Bea was a spinster…I can't remember whether anybody on the show was married with children. The nuclear family was pass even for Mayberry residents of the early 1960's. Other anti-family messages: A rare married couple portrayed on the show wasn't happy unless they were having violent domestic disputes; another couple, with the husband played by Jack Nicholson, abandoned their baby at the beginning of an episode.

There are other implausible tweaks. On some old episodes, you'll see Andy, Barney, Thelma Lou, and Helen having dinner at the local greasy spoon after 10 P.M. This almost never happened in real towns like Mayberry, and in fact is not very popular today in the south outside cities the size of Atlanta. You'll also see occasional mention of cocktails before dinner a decidedly citified custom that would have been extraordinary in a small southern town in the 1960's.

And there are anti-gender role stereotype messages. Whenever a man from the country walks into town to find a wife, he is a buffoon. Earnest T. Bass and a two-episode character played by Alan Hale represented this anachronism. (Alan Hale played the Skipper on Gilligan's Island; in Mayberry, he came complete with overalls.) Both considered it the man's job to pursue the woman and to provide for the family later on. No wonder they were portrayed as buffoons. And for their parts, Andy and Barney endured all sorts of abuse at the hands of Helen and Thelma Lou. On many an occasion, Andy and Barn would (completely innocently) step into a pile of the women's wrath, and spend most of an episode trying to apologize, explain, and beg their way out of it. Of course, the tables were seldom, perhaps never, turned.

There are other messages. The old man who owned the department store was a miser who hated people and cheated his employees. No one ever made a strong moral statement about Otis, the town drunk who had a wife at home but seemed to spend most nights in jail. Helen, the public schoolteacher, knew what was good for children better than their parents did.

There are plenty of superficial old-fashioned small-town quirks in the shows, such as the town band and the townspeople's exaggerated ignorance of anything cosmopolitan. Occasionally the point was made that children need to learn discipline. But these features always floated on the surface. The underlying messages were that the nuclear family is uncommon and perhaps unnecessary; gender-role stereotypical living is mostly without merit; guns are bad; capitalists are evil; teachers are better than parents; and according to one ridiculous episode, killing a bird (by accident, no less) is about the greatest crime imaginable.
No, I don't care what CNN or MSNBC said this time
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Who?mikejones!
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That's all fine and dandy, but this clip is pretty relevant and important information to the modern parent
TexAgs91
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I agree. He's always been a good dad on the show.
No, I don't care what CNN or MSNBC said this time
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ABATTBQ87
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Tom Doniphon said:

The world needs more Mayberry.
We need more John Wayne as well

Tom Doniphon
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Damn straight.
White Liberals=The Worst
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NoahAg said:

That's a whole lotta hetero white privilege toxic masculinity to assume Opie even identifies as a "boy!"
"Wisdom and knowledge is inherently white and therefore racist and a toxic form of white supremacy!"

Pretty sure I have seen this or variations of this said by liberal "intellectuals" in the last two years.
ABATTBQ87
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rausr
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rocky the dog
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Quote:

Quote:
The old Andy Griffith Show, one of the most-watched, best-loved sitcoms ever, is lauded as a slice of small-town, apple-pie Americana, hearkening back to a simpler, better time when men were men, women were virtuous, and children occasionally were well-behaved. At the same time, one might ask: When a television program from any era is praised by the mainstream media, could there be some underlying leftist message? The answer is yes.

The first and most obvious commie message is Andy's refusal to carry a gun. Heroically, he captures evildoers every time without a pistol. Notice also that Barney, the one who wants to carry a gun, is a buffoon, and whenever he touches his gun it goes off at random. There is no question what sentiment the producers were expressing. Further, on those rare occasions when there's a truly violent criminal to pursue, Andy reaches into the rifle rack. And you thought Rosie O'Donnell was the first gun-control hypocrite.

Another modern, leftist, anti-everything-traditional message is the complete absence of a nuclear family on the Griffith show. Barney is single and desperate; Andy is widowed and moderately content; Gomer and Goober were single and whatever; Thelma Lou and Helen were single; Bea was a spinster…I can't remember whether anybody on the show was married with children. The nuclear family was pass even for Mayberry residents of the early 1960's. Other anti-family messages: A rare married couple portrayed on the show wasn't happy unless they were having violent domestic disputes; another couple, with the husband played by Jack Nicholson, abandoned their baby at the beginning of an episode.

There are other implausible tweaks. On some old episodes, you'll see Andy, Barney, Thelma Lou, and Helen having dinner at the local greasy spoon after 10 P.M. This almost never happened in real towns like Mayberry, and in fact is not very popular today in the south outside cities the size of Atlanta. You'll also see occasional mention of cocktails before dinner a decidedly citified custom that would have been extraordinary in a small southern town in the 1960's.

And there are anti-gender role stereotype messages. Whenever a man from the country walks into town to find a wife, he is a buffoon. Earnest T. Bass and a two-episode character played by Alan Hale represented this anachronism. (Alan Hale played the Skipper on Gilligan's Island; in Mayberry, he came complete with overalls.) Both considered it the man's job to pursue the woman and to provide for the family later on. No wonder they were portrayed as buffoons. And for their parts, Andy and Barney endured all sorts of abuse at the hands of Helen and Thelma Lou. On many an occasion, Andy and Barn would (completely innocently) step into a pile of the women's wrath, and spend most of an episode trying to apologize, explain, and beg their way out of it. Of course, the tables were seldom, perhaps never, turned.

There are other messages. The old man who owned the department store was a miser who hated people and cheated his employees. No one ever made a strong moral statement about Otis, the town drunk who had a wife at home but seemed to spend most nights in jail. Helen, the public schoolteacher, knew what was good for children better than their parents did.

There are plenty of superficial old-fashioned small-town quirks in the shows, such as the town band and the townspeople's exaggerated ignorance of anything cosmopolitan. Occasionally the point was made that children need to learn discipline. But these features always floated on the surface. The underlying messages were that the nuclear family is uncommon and perhaps unnecessary; gender-role stereotypical living is mostly without merit; guns are bad; capitalists are evil; teachers are better than parents; and according to one ridiculous episode, killing a bird (by accident, no less) is about the greatest crime imaginable.

Elections are when people find out what politicians stand for, and politicians find out what people will fall for.
White Liberals=The Worst
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ABATTBQ87 said:

Tom Doniphon said:

The world needs more Mayberry.
We need more John Wayne as well


That was nails.
Actual Talking Thermos
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Why is it hypocritical for the sheriff of a sleepy small town to arm himself on the rare occasions when he is preparing to deal with known dangerous criminals but not when dealing with the townsfolk in his close-knit community? At the time I doubt it was seen as an anti-police message to portray a sheriff handling most situations in a coolheaded, non-threatening manner.
titan
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Wycliffe_03 said:

NoahAg said:

That's a whole lotta hetero white privilege toxic masculinity to assume Opie even identifies as a "boy!"
"Wisdom and knowledge is inherently white and therefore racist and a toxic form of white supremacy!"

Pretty sure I have seen this or variations of this said by liberal "intellectuals" in the last two years.
If that is white supremacy, then its endorseable. Much better than `liberal intellectualism' products.
FJB
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Andy Griffin is where we want to be. The Rifleman is what we need to get there.

Dr. Mephisto
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TexAgs91 said:

He's a good dad, but he seemed to me to be more of a benevolent dictator. There's also a pretty good write-up I saw...

Quote:

The old Andy Griffith Show, one of the most-watched, best-loved sitcoms ever, is lauded as a slice of small-town, apple-pie Americana, hearkening back to a simpler, better time when men were men, women were virtuous, and children occasionally were well-behaved. At the same time, one might ask: When a television program from any era is praised by the mainstream media, could there be some underlying leftist message? The answer is yes.

The first and most obvious commie message is Andy's refusal to carry a gun. Heroically, he captures evildoers every time without a pistol. Notice also that Barney, the one who wants to carry a gun, is a buffoon, and whenever he touches his gun it goes off at random. There is no question what sentiment the producers were expressing. Further, on those rare occasions when there's a truly violent criminal to pursue, Andy reaches into the rifle rack. And you thought Rosie O'Donnell was the first gun-control hypocrite.

Another modern, leftist, anti-everything-traditional message is the complete absence of a nuclear family on the Griffith show. Barney is single and desperate; Andy is widowed and moderately content; Gomer and Goober were single and whatever; Thelma Lou and Helen were single; Bea was a spinster…I can't remember whether anybody on the show was married with children. The nuclear family was pass even for Mayberry residents of the early 1960's. Other anti-family messages: A rare married couple portrayed on the show wasn't happy unless they were having violent domestic disputes; another couple, with the husband played by Jack Nicholson, abandoned their baby at the beginning of an episode.

There are other implausible tweaks. On some old episodes, you'll see Andy, Barney, Thelma Lou, and Helen having dinner at the local greasy spoon after 10 P.M. This almost never happened in real towns like Mayberry, and in fact is not very popular today in the south outside cities the size of Atlanta. You'll also see occasional mention of cocktails before dinner a decidedly citified custom that would have been extraordinary in a small southern town in the 1960's.

And there are anti-gender role stereotype messages. Whenever a man from the country walks into town to find a wife, he is a buffoon. Earnest T. Bass and a two-episode character played by Alan Hale represented this anachronism. (Alan Hale played the Skipper on Gilligan's Island; in Mayberry, he came complete with overalls.) Both considered it the man's job to pursue the woman and to provide for the family later on. No wonder they were portrayed as buffoons. And for their parts, Andy and Barney endured all sorts of abuse at the hands of Helen and Thelma Lou. On many an occasion, Andy and Barn would (completely innocently) step into a pile of the women's wrath, and spend most of an episode trying to apologize, explain, and beg their way out of it. Of course, the tables were seldom, perhaps never, turned.

There are other messages. The old man who owned the department store was a miser who hated people and cheated his employees. No one ever made a strong moral statement about Otis, the town drunk who had a wife at home but seemed to spend most nights in jail. Helen, the public schoolteacher, knew what was good for children better than their parents did.

There are plenty of superficial old-fashioned small-town quirks in the shows, such as the town band and the townspeople's exaggerated ignorance of anything cosmopolitan. Occasionally the point was made that children need to learn discipline. But these features always floated on the surface. The underlying messages were that the nuclear family is uncommon and perhaps unnecessary; gender-role stereotypical living is mostly without merit; guns are bad; capitalists are evil; teachers are better than parents; and according to one ridiculous episode, killing a bird (by accident, no less) is about the greatest crime imaginable.



Man, whoever wrote this is a lot of fun at parties, I bet.

This writer is totally missing the point.

TAGS is a comedy with touching and heartfelt lessons brought along side. There are great moral takeaways that you get while laughing at the residents of Mayberry.

The writer is looking to find something to complain about too hard. In doing so, he or she is missing what makes TAGS great.

Tom Doniphon
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A little Josey Wales wouldn't hurt either...

dead
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ABATTBQ87 said:

Tom Doniphon said:

The world needs more Mayberry.
We need more John Wayne as well


John Wayne, who agreed with white supremacy
FrankK
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FrankK
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dead
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https://texags.com/forums/16/topics/3303106/replies/62543159
Jason_Roofer
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rocky the dog said:

Quote:

Quote:
The old Andy Griffith Show, one of the most-watched, best-loved sitcoms ever, is lauded as a slice of small-town, apple-pie Americana, hearkening back to a simpler, better time when men were men, women were virtuous, and children occasionally were well-behaved. At the same time, one might ask: When a television program from any era is praised by the mainstream media, could there be some underlying leftist message? The answer is yes.

The first and most obvious commie message is Andy's refusal to carry a gun. Heroically, he captures evildoers every time without a pistol. Notice also that Barney, the one who wants to carry a gun, is a buffoon, and whenever he touches his gun it goes off at random. There is no question what sentiment the producers were expressing. Further, on those rare occasions when there's a truly violent criminal to pursue, Andy reaches into the rifle rack. And you thought Rosie O'Donnell was the first gun-control hypocrite.

Another modern, leftist, anti-everything-traditional message is the complete absence of a nuclear family on the Griffith show. Barney is single and desperate; Andy is widowed and moderately content; Gomer and Goober were single and whatever; Thelma Lou and Helen were single; Bea was a spinster…I can't remember whether anybody on the show was married with children. The nuclear family was pass even for Mayberry residents of the early 1960's. Other anti-family messages: A rare married couple portrayed on the show wasn't happy unless they were having violent domestic disputes; another couple, with the husband played by Jack Nicholson, abandoned their baby at the beginning of an episode.

There are other implausible tweaks. On some old episodes, you'll see Andy, Barney, Thelma Lou, and Helen having dinner at the local greasy spoon after 10 P.M. This almost never happened in real towns like Mayberry, and in fact is not very popular today in the south outside cities the size of Atlanta. You'll also see occasional mention of cocktails before dinner a decidedly citified custom that would have been extraordinary in a small southern town in the 1960's.

And there are anti-gender role stereotype messages. Whenever a man from the country walks into town to find a wife, he is a buffoon. Earnest T. Bass and a two-episode character played by Alan Hale represented this anachronism. (Alan Hale played the Skipper on Gilligan's Island; in Mayberry, he came complete with overalls.) Both considered it the man's job to pursue the woman and to provide for the family later on. No wonder they were portrayed as buffoons. And for their parts, Andy and Barney endured all sorts of abuse at the hands of Helen and Thelma Lou. On many an occasion, Andy and Barn would (completely innocently) step into a pile of the women's wrath, and spend most of an episode trying to apologize, explain, and beg their way out of it. Of course, the tables were seldom, perhaps never, turned.

There are other messages. The old man who owned the department store was a miser who hated people and cheated his employees. No one ever made a strong moral statement about Otis, the town drunk who had a wife at home but seemed to spend most nights in jail. Helen, the public schoolteacher, knew what was good for children better than their parents did.

There are plenty of superficial old-fashioned small-town quirks in the shows, such as the town band and the townspeople's exaggerated ignorance of anything cosmopolitan. Occasionally the point was made that children need to learn discipline. But these features always floated on the surface. The underlying messages were that the nuclear family is uncommon and perhaps unnecessary; gender-role stereotypical living is mostly without merit; guns are bad; capitalists are evil; teachers are better than parents; and according to one ridiculous episode, killing a bird (by accident, no less) is about the greatest crime imaginable.




Geez. I'm tired after reading that little essay. My brain is just not used to that kind of gymnastics. Yikes. Hate to have to live that that authors world. Lol.

I liked it better when folks just said "I don't like this show" and went on about their day rather than wasting so much time penning a pedantic diatribe to help validate their opinion to others.
Tom Doniphon
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Look at you, being obtuse and dense again.

Here's your attention.... run along.
Repeat the Line
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Mayberry was a theocracy
dead
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It warms me knowing that you're always thinking of me
annie88
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he seemed to me to be more of a benevolent dictator

Nah. Not at all.
“My philopsophy is this: Its none of my business what people say of me or think of me. I am what I am and I do what I do. I expect nothing and accept everything. And it makes life so much easier." ~ Sir Anthony Hopkins
Tom Doniphon
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Thinking of you? You interject stupidity all over the board.

I think more of the cow **** on my boots.
annie88
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It's amazing how many people have trouble looking back in the past when things were different in terms of just about everything. That show ran from 1960 to 1968. It was literally a different world then l, and these nuts try to look at it through the lens of today and also through the lens of crazy with the left.

There is literally no pleasing these people.
“My philopsophy is this: Its none of my business what people say of me or think of me. I am what I am and I do what I do. I expect nothing and accept everything. And it makes life so much easier." ~ Sir Anthony Hopkins
dead
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annie88
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Tom Doniphon said:

Thinking of you? You interject stupidity all over the board.

I think more of the cow **** on my boots.
“My philopsophy is this: Its none of my business what people say of me or think of me. I am what I am and I do what I do. I expect nothing and accept everything. And it makes life so much easier." ~ Sir Anthony Hopkins
jja79
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ABATTBQ87 said:

Tom Doniphon said:

The world needs more Mayberry.
We need more John Wayne as well




If we had more John Wayne's we'd be speaking Japanese today. Thank Heaven for the Greatest Generation (of which he's not included) that saved freedom.
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