I just saw this Don Surber’s blog site and everything he said rings true to me.
This is probably because I was born in 1943 and my formative years occurred during that time frame. I hope you get as much out of it as I did because if I had a choice I would return to those simpler times when the bad guys were held accountable and it was understood that hard work and working smart would enable you to achieve success.
Sure, bring back the 1950s
I have the TV on as I write this.
Other people might have the radio on, but I like the images on the screen beyond my laptop. TV is moving from cable to streaming and taking the good shows with it. Viewers are left with reality nonsense and reruns of mediocre films.
But there are rerun channels on now and they run shows so old, some are older than me.
Television was better in black-and-white. The actors are leaner. The scripts are crisper. The world looks better.
Maybe it is all convertibles that inundate the shows. Every model of car came in ragtop back then. Everyone rode with the top down, including Ike.
A sniper in Dallas ended that in 1963.
Television was better for several reasons. The acting and writing were better because so many actors and writers were veterans of World War II and Korea. War matured and focused on them.
Also, there was a bevy of magazine stories to turn into teleplays. Rod Serling, Alfred Hitchcock, and the Perry Mason show based many of their episodes on such stories.
Today’s fiction writing seems limited to news stories in NYT and WaPo. And their stories are lame with holes in their plots even a Russian tank commander could drive a convoy through.
The Westerns featured men dealing with manly problems. Yes, there were battles between the Indians and the cowboys, but often the storyline was the Lone Ranger or the Cartwrights standing up for the Indians.
The shows showed the hardships of cattle drives (“Rawhide”) and people drives (“Wagon Train”). The pioneers risked so much for oh so little.
Radio also made TV better as Jack Benny, Burns and Allen, and other comics moved from radio to TV. Benny’s pauses were better on TV.
Then there are the wardrobes. The people who came into your living room in the 1950s were men in suits and ties and women in dresses. For example, when Peter, Paul, and Mary were on the Jack Benny show, the men wore ties (one wore a jacket and the other a sweater) and Mary wore a dress and high heels. And as beatniks, they were the nonconformists.
The 1950s empowered women. The 1960s empowered feminists. The feminist embrace of what they call transgenders (and in most cases are really transvestite) shows how little they really care about women.
Mock Donna Reed all you want, but her show was called “The Donna Reed Show.” She made the calls, not Carl Betz. In fact, she called the shots, not ABC. She got the network to back down and reduced her workload to 26 shows so she could spend time with her actual family. Her show sold a lot of Campbell’s soup.
Sexist? The biggest star in the 1950s was not Bob Hope or Jack Benny. It was Lucille Ball.
Liberals scoff. To them, the 1950s were too middle class. Liberals hate the middle class and always have. They want a world where they are the 1% and everyone else is poor.
Brent Staples of NYT was among those upset that Americans dared elect Donald John Trump as president in 2016.
Staples cited a poll that said “seven in 10 Trump supporters prefer the more culturally homogeneous America of the 1950s” and that the same proportion of Clinton voters believe that American society has changed for the better since then.
“The poll showed white evangelical Protestants — a potent Trump-voting block — to be the group most alienated from the American present. About three-quarters of them say the culture has mainly changed for the worse in the past six decades.
“This discontent is clearly related to the country’s recent decision to legalize same-sex marriage. White evangelicals also tend to be uncomfortable with the demographic shifts that have created a browner, more multilingual country.”
So the black man explains that the reason Trump voters prefer the old days is because of their racism.
But considering how liberals define whiteness — self-reliance, hard work, and the scientific — believing in a middle-class America is racist, right?
The left loves to mock the nuclear family of the man as the breadwinner and the woman as the homemaker.
But the Carters, Clintons, and Obamas were nuclear families. Only after her husband’s presidency ended and her daughter was an adult did Mrs. Clinton seek a job outside the home. Liberals embrace the nuclear family for themselves because they know the concept works. That is why they want others to reject it.
(UPDATE: Hillary worked for the Rose Law firm before Chelsea’s birth and Mrs. Obama had a part-time job as a lawyer for a hospital when her husband was a senator.)
Karen Pence was the first wife of a president or vice president who worked outside the home when her husband was in office. This alarmed lefties because she taught at a Christian school. Now they hail Jill Biden for teaching on the side.
As for television, it was better back then because it believed in America and the American dream, both of which liberals hate.
TV has devolved from promoting the nuclear family to promoting the Kardashians, the nuked family. Dad became a girl, the girls became whores and the brother got fat and left. Kim went through husbands until she could find the craziest one (that would be Kanye West) and every one became rich by promoting this chaotic lifestyle.
No one in their right mind would say that’s better.
Well, the “Beverly Hillbillies” is on and Elly Mae is feeding a mule deer. After that comes “Hee Haw” so it’s time to shut the laptop my laptop computer off until Monday.