Like lots of other folks,
I’ve tried my best to understand the rise of Donald Trump and his rhetoric-inflected
political style. A number of sources have been offered – variously blaming
different stripes of liberalism (“political correctness”) or conservatism (“Fox
News.”) I suppose you can pick your poison.
World leaders like der Führer
(Adolf Hitler) and Il Duce (Benito Mussolini) have come to the minds of many with
long-enough memories to pull up WWII. As a child of the 1970’s, a more populist
(if no less strident) personality has risen from the bell-bottomed well of my
mind: Archie Bunker. Yes, he of All in the Family fame.
Controversial and
extremely popular, the 1970's sitcom was written and produced by Norman Lear – one of
the media/elite/liberals of the day. Archie, as the lead character, was lifted
up and lambasted as a racially-insensitive, popular-culture-bashing, equal
opportunity bigot. It was obvious, from the context of the show, that Archie
was wrong on so many fronts: his opinions of women, his prejudices against
every race but his own (White Anglo-Saxon Protestant, of course,) his definite
distrust of big government, and his especially-escalated disdain for “fruitcakes”
– a leading light opposing homosexuality, if you will.
Yet, Archie loved America
and, in truth, his family – so all was forgiven in the end.
He was a lovable
lout of a very different sort than had ever been seen on American television.
(On a side note, I remember my pastor lamenting from the pulpit: “This new show
called All in the Family sure seems
to be awfully popular. Well, I’ll tell you – it’s not all in my family!” He was
not a fan.)
Fast forward 40+ years,
and Archie Bunker has hit the big time. Rather, Donald Trump has struck a chord
with heir-apparent Archie Bunkers all over America. What was once intended as an
epic parody of an untenable worldview has now become a whole other sort of
fashionable.
Nowhere is the mindset on
clearer display than the lyrics to the show’s theme song, Those Were the Days, written for the producers by Lee Adams and
Charles Strouse.
Boy, the
way Glen Miller played. Songs that made the hit parade.
Guys like us, we had it made. Those were the days.
And you knew who you were then, girls were girls and men were men.
Mister, we could use a man like Herbert Hoover again.
Didn't need no welfare state. Everybody pulled his weight.
Gee, our old LaSalle ran great. Those were the days.
Guys like us, we had it made. Those were the days.
And you knew who you were then, girls were girls and men were men.
Mister, we could use a man like Herbert Hoover again.
Didn't need no welfare state. Everybody pulled his weight.
Gee, our old LaSalle ran great. Those were the days.
Nostalgia is a powerful
force, whether it is for a past that is based in reality and truth – or,
whether it is a hopeful vision of “what should have been.” Everybody who tuned
in from 1971-1976 (when All in the Family
was the #1 show in America) knew that Archie’s barbed witticisms and
slanted perceptions were based on the latter. Nobody really wanted Herbert
Hoover for president again. (Hoover’s policies were widely seen as aggravating
what came to be known as The Great Depression, 1929-40.)
But now, it seems, Archie’s
opinions – once the domain of satire – have come full circle and risen to the
level of a movement -- all in the name of “making America great again” –
supposedly by restoring a set of lost values that are difficult to pin down in
actuality. But, Trump promises that he can somehow make them happen.
The appeal of his message
is visceral; rationality and feasibility do not matter. Trump has managed to
hit all the right notes in capturing the essence of the All in the Family closing theme (from a rarely heard second verse
of the show’s song):
People seemed to be content. Fifty dollars paid the rent.
Freaks were in a circus tent. Those were the days….
I don't
know just what went wrong. [But] those were the days.
Archie’s long-suffering
wife, Edith, was often commanded by Archie, upon offering her own (often
contrary) opinion: “Stifle yourself, Edith!”
Hmmmm. Sounds familiar.
I can see the parallels here. Deep down, Archie was afraid. Exactly the type of person Trump gathers under his wing.
ReplyDeleteOutstanding observation, in my opinion!
ReplyDelete