Title: Rowdee You Are Confirmed So are you Anonymous something, sorry for the delay Source:
[None] URL Source:[None] Published:Jun 22, 2012 Author:The Big Stone Post Date:2012-06-22 21:11:46 by A K A Stone Keywords:None Views:60502 Comments:109
Rowdee loves us, Fred. I am praying she scolds you. You need her advise. Gambling on horse racing and TLBSHOW. She is going to charge into your fantasies of wealth.
Here is where TV changed and helped turn many Americans into degenerates. This show said Divorce is ok to our detriment. It brainwashed many. Some think this is a good values show. It isn't.
The eldest son screwed the mom off stage and the dad was some sort of drug user and homo - is that correct?
The youngest blonde girl had some sort of scandal if I recall correctly.
The Little Rascals were my faves as a kid. But I'm showing my age.
What is interesting, O'Reilly did a segment on the old 50s, 60s and 70s "family" TV shows a few months ago. He had some conservative media research dude come on and show how all the shows we thought were very American and very conservative actually had a Hollywood producer, director or writer put some underhanded progressive undertow in the plots. You got the Brady Bunch right, it told America being divorced was ok. It also highlighted Alice the maid who always seemed to be interested in finally finding Mr. Right but prefers to live in the basement running her own life. An underhanded way of promoting feminism. The offset "lifestyles" never made it on the show but was a sign of the times for Hollywood, which is usually 10 years or so ahead in the sin and depravity dept. The other one O'Reilly showcased was "Happy Days." On the surface it was "Leave it to Beaver" with a mid 50s golden age American family. One father, one mother and the kids belonged to both! But on the underside the show went to great lengths to show that the Cunninghams were square and obsolete in a rapidly modern era. The father was always bested by Fonzi, the James Dean knock off. The mother and children listened more to Fonzi with his broken home background than they did to dear ol hard working dad. Then in later episodes the dad softens to the first signs of the counterculture. Then comes Mork from Ork (soon to have his own spinoff) in a Halloween special on Happy Days with his "nanu nanu" and gasp his rainbow suspenders. What we all thought was wholesome TV took a turn for the obsurd.
So even in the Golden Age of American TV, Hollywood was in secretly injecting their venom behind the scenes and in certain characters, which gave birth to the radical leftist directors and producers like Ron Howard. Don't get me started on "All in the Family" and how on "Andy Griffith" Aunt "B" seemed to not like men.