06-20-2022, 02:02 PM
(06-20-2022, 01:40 PM)Tiger Blood Wrote: you might want to read some articles about how the show has been molded to represent the current views of todays society from a very specific slant. if you can see that and what the show is trying to push, i don't know what to tell you.
they're doing this wth all types of shows and movies now.
Oh my....you really are serious.
Social issues have always been in TV shows. Its television....whether we like it or not, people care about those issues and if it's popular in social spectrum then it's going to find it's way into TV. It only becomes a problem when it's a social issue where there are two sides but only one is represented. If it's a social issue where there's only one side to it, then who cares? Nazis are bad....racism is bad....there's no harm there.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1979/09/23/the-sitcoms-get-serious/e99582ce-e759-479c-a442-910c2d080a91/
This is an article from 1979 about Happy Days working in a social issue before they even called them social issues.
The golden girls always covered social issues:
https://screenrant.com/the-golden-girls-way-ahead-of-its-time/
A Million Little Things (a show i mentioned earlier) is a show that does a pretty good job on incorporating social issues and doing it's best to capture both sides. They sometimes miss but I don't think they're pushing an agenda when that happens.
I think this is more of a case where you a) need an appetite for this kind of show (comics, gore, satire) and b) need to actually watch the show to fully understand. However, I don't think that's in the cards for you.