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What Was the Most CONSERVATIVE TV Show (non-political)?
Self | October 16, 2017 | PJ-Comix

Posted on 10/17/2015 9:49:59 AM PDT by PJ-Comix

The other day I was watching a rerun of a popular TV show from the past. Suddenly it occurred to me that this was the most CONSERVATIVE TV show ever despite the fact that it wasn't specifically a political show.

Okay, I'll give you the name: DRAGNET. I was watching the color version that came back to the airwaves in 1967. Detective Joe Friday didn't fool around. He was all business with NO apologies in enforcing the law. Also notable was how he sneered at hippies, drug addicts, or (in the case of the episode I was watching) idiotic teenyboppers who shoplifted strictly to be members of a dopey club.


TOPICS: Music/Entertainment
KEYWORDS: dragnet; televisionshows
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To: MUDDOG

81 posted on 10/17/2015 10:42:17 AM PDT by musicman (Until I see the REAL Long Form Vault BC, he's just "PRES__ENT" Obama = Without "ID")
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To: PJ-Comix

Some pretty good stuff in “The Walking Dead”.


82 posted on 10/17/2015 10:44:46 AM PDT by LS (YSess"Castles Made of Sand, Fall in the Sea . . . Eventually" (Hendrix))
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To: PJ-Comix

Actually, it was Siler City.

http://triad-city-beat.com/fresh-eyes-aunt-bees-siler-city-cat-house/


83 posted on 10/17/2015 10:44:52 AM PDT by fieldmarshaldj (Resist We Much)
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To: PJ-Comix
Major Dad, maybe?

Fifties TV shows just reflect the way the country was back in the 1950s.

To do anything remotely conservative in later decades took an effort.

84 posted on 10/17/2015 10:45:47 AM PDT by x
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To: Argus

FYI my dad was foreman of a ranch in AZ and one day he took me to our barn that “Have Gun Will Travel” was filming at. I met Richard Boone and he gave me a “Have Gun Will Travel” autographed card after he did a fight scene.


85 posted on 10/17/2015 10:47:23 AM PDT by LS (YSess"Castles Made of Sand, Fall in the Sea . . . Eventually" (Hendrix))
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To: afraidfortherepublic

Webb later gave his ex-wife a tv series, “Emergency!”, and was also on friendly terms with the man she married, as he popped up on Dragnet 1967 episodes and would co-star with London on the aforementioned series. If he was as creepy as all that, it’s unlikely either she or the new husband would have had anything to do with him.


86 posted on 10/17/2015 10:47:27 AM PDT by fieldmarshaldj (Resist We Much)
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To: PJ-Comix

There was one syndicated series from around 1958, entitled “Official Detective.” It was a crime anthology series, hosted by Everett Sloane. I recall an episode in which ended with the typical criminal, a youthful mug that held some people hostage in a restaurant, felled by police gunfire. Then, at the end, when we return to host Sloane, he comments, dripping with utter contempt for the criminal, words to the effect that “the thug died from his wounds, thankfully saving the state the expense for his execution.” Then the end credits.

Beautifully cold, like a slap to the face to a liberal.

But almost all filmed series from the 1950s/1960s exudes a relative conservatism (with the exception of a few lib shows like “The Defenders” or “East Side West Side”). Even watching “Dr. Kildare,” with homo Richard Chamberlain, I’m amazed at how staunchly conservative and unwaveringly pro-morality its messaging is.

All this changes drastically in the 1970s. Not that everything becomes blatant propaganda, and there was still a fair amount of family-friendly fare. And it seems amazingly so, compared to the sick drek we have now. But in the 1970s, even a series that seemed to totally avoid politics and perhaps even lean conservative, like “Cannon” would sometimes serve up a discordant note. For example, there was an episode of that series in which guest Fritz Weaver played a sad-sack nut who worked at a munitions lab for the government, and in his crazed mind, plants a bomb at an amusement park to send some kind of anti-war message. He’s caught at the end, and the police and even “Cannon” seem to just treat him like some poor, sick, misguided dude worthy of sympathy. Had the same plotline appeared in a police/detective show ten years earlier, the main characters would slap the snot out of the villain, and yell at him for endangering the lives of dozens of innocent women and children at the amusement park, and basically look upon the guy as a loathesome piece of human scum.


87 posted on 10/17/2015 10:51:17 AM PDT by greene66
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To: PJ-Comix
Lassie.

Jack Wrather who owned Chris Craft Boats and owned the rights to Lassie, encouraged his friend Ronald Reagan to run for public office in CA.

88 posted on 10/17/2015 10:51:32 AM PDT by mware
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To: musicman

“Freedom” with Holt McCallany..short-lived tv series on the air around 2000/2001. IIRC they were fighting a military coup after the President’s plane is shot down and he is presumed dead.

Not sure if this was a pilot or a miniseries, but “Shadow on the Land”, late 60s, with Marc Strange, Jackie Cooper, and Gene Hackman fighting a fascist government.


89 posted on 10/17/2015 10:52:38 AM PDT by Radagast the Fool (At my signal, UNLEASH PALIN!!)
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To: Radagast the Fool

oops, I didn’t see the part about a tv show that was non-political, my mistake!!!


90 posted on 10/17/2015 10:53:30 AM PDT by Radagast the Fool (At my signal, UNLEASH PALIN!!)
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To: LS

91 posted on 10/17/2015 10:53:35 AM PDT by MUDDOG
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To: PJ-Comix

Going back, Firing Line with William F. Buckley said it all.


92 posted on 10/17/2015 10:54:16 AM PDT by kenmcg
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To: PJ-Comix

Can’t get much more conservative than “Duck Dynasty”


93 posted on 10/17/2015 10:54:33 AM PDT by circlecity
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To: PJ-Comix
I caught that channel censoring part of this line in an episode yesterday when a police captain was talking to Friday and Gannon about the "new morality" (which we've been boiled in for the last 50 years)...

Capt. Lou Richey: "What it boils down to is the new morality, doesn't it, a new set of values. God is dead. Drug addiction is mind expanding. Promiscuity is glamorous. Even homosexuality is praiseworthy. How you gonna fight that?"

They cut the line on homosexuality, thought it still appeared on the close-captioning. My mouth dropped open. The Gaystapo can't be offended.

94 posted on 10/17/2015 10:54:57 AM PDT by fieldmarshaldj (Resist We Much)
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To: PJ-Comix
Fun Fact: Some episodes of Hwy Patrol had to be filmed on backroads because Crawford lost his driver's license due to DUI.

Not only that....people would try to sneak Crawford liquor on the set. Too bad they couldn't have Broderick do a public service announcement about drunk driving. He could have done it in character speaking in his Dan Matthews rapid-fire delivery. 10-4.

95 posted on 10/17/2015 10:57:02 AM PDT by driftless2 (For long term happiness, learn how to play the accordion)
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To: georgiegirl

Perry Mason perhaps?


96 posted on 10/17/2015 10:57:07 AM PDT by wally_bert (I didn't get where I am today by selling ice cream tasting of bookends, pumice stone & West Germany)
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To: scottinoc
Ginger today ... she's had some unfortunate work done:


97 posted on 10/17/2015 10:57:28 AM PDT by Lizavetta
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To: mware

Wagon Train was good, Death Valley days was more conservative. You lived or died by your own efforts.


98 posted on 10/17/2015 10:57:35 AM PDT by Glad2bnuts (If God himself said every 50 years debt should be erased, and land returned, who am I to disagree?)
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To: PJ-Comix

I seem to remember that was Betty Lynn who played Barney’s girlfriend Thelma Lou. She got mugged in Mt Airy shortly after moving there.


99 posted on 10/17/2015 10:59:29 AM PDT by onedoug
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To: PJ-Comix

Aunt Bea didn’t retire to Mt. Airy, she retired to Siler City.


100 posted on 10/17/2015 11:01:04 AM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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