ForkEmBucky
Senior Member
Elisabeth Shue would call it an adventure.
Paha!
Elisabeth Shue would call it an adventure.
I have one more page to write for this paper that I need to submit in three hours or less. But I'm stuck. I have nothing else to say. Lalalalalalala....
Miss, what are you writing the paper on?
Uhhh, well it's for my broadcast media class. I'm comparing the top prime-time shows in 1973, 1983, and 1993 and analyzing how those trends in programming mirrored American society.
So...yeah.
Make sure to write down, the jews own Hollywood so its whatever the jews like is what we see.
Uhhh, well it's for my broadcast media class. I'm comparing the top prime-time shows in 1973, 1983, and 1993 and analyzing how those trends in programming mirrored American society.
So...yeah.
^^^I'd steer away from that, actually - not something one really should bring up in an academic context.
Hmm. Quite an undertaking. I would find myself hard-pressed to name the shows in question. Is 'All In The Family' one of them?
Make sure to write down, the jews own Hollywood so its whatever the jews like is what we see.
"All in the Family" was #1 in 1973 Good jorrrrrb!
I have the Nielsen's data for all those years in front of me so it's not an issue of "naming" the shows.
Well, 1973 was a tough year. I was only a boy then, but the Arab Oil Embargo (over Israel) led to a quick oil shortage in the west, and gas prices skyrocketed over $1.00 (can you imagine?) for the first time. The United States was hit with an incredible inflation in prices for everything. Archie Bunker was a cultural point-man for that frustration - he was prejudiced (against minorities, his liberal academic son-in-law who he called 'meathead'), but he also grinded out a blue-collar living everyday. I don't think that the networks would have the courage to put out a show like that today.