Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search
14 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Turns out no one asked TV Land to yank the "Dukes Of Hazzard" (Original Post) Archae Jul 2015 OP
I used to watch it as a kid. Loved the car jumping. bravenak Jul 2015 #1
Yep so terrible Duckhunter935 Jul 2015 #2
I never missed an episode. Remember the cliffhanger episodes? bravenak Jul 2015 #3
I agree Duckhunter935 Jul 2015 #4
They did wreck a lot of good cars... REPUguy Jul 2015 #8
I think it's nice that no one HAD to ask them. A sense of DECENCY, maybe...??? MADem Jul 2015 #5
I can rather imagine them being controversy-averse, given they were running Cosby show too until hlthe2b Jul 2015 #6
Good for TV Land 4now Jul 2015 #7
Simple marketing. They don't want to be associated with it underpants Jul 2015 #9
^^^This^^^n/t Gormy Cuss Jul 2015 #11
Killing the old shows is a bit too PC. Owl Jul 2015 #10
The Dukes of Hazzard was simple minded TV Cassidy1 Jul 2015 #12
It probably was at the end of it's run anyway ProudToBeBlueInRhody Jul 2015 #13
This is the one thing in the last few weeks that leaves me a bit disappointed DemocraticWing Jul 2015 #14
 

bravenak

(34,648 posts)
3. I never missed an episode. Remember the cliffhanger episodes?
Sat Jul 4, 2015, 06:49 PM
Jul 2015

I used to get stressed out when they ended an episode mid jump. Like omg they're dead!! Noo!!
Lol! Then they like changed characters for a while and I was very unhappy with that. Who were those dudes anyway? Cousins? Did not like.

 

Duckhunter935

(16,974 posts)
4. I agree
Sat Jul 4, 2015, 06:53 PM
Jul 2015

When they had the character problems. Shows went downhill. They killed a lot of good cars. 😔

REPUguy

(88 posts)
8. They did wreck a lot of good cars...
Sat Jul 4, 2015, 07:26 PM
Jul 2015

during the first 6 seasons.

Season 7 was filmed mostly using miniatures so no real Chargers were destroyed. I think they ran out of the full size cars. I believe they said that least 19 Chargers were destroyed during the first 6 years and maybe more, I think they lost count.

MADem

(135,425 posts)
5. I think it's nice that no one HAD to ask them. A sense of DECENCY, maybe...???
Sat Jul 4, 2015, 07:02 PM
Jul 2015

I never watched a full episode of that show--I saw a few minutes, here and there, but I always changed the channel. Why? That flag was as creepy as a pointy headed outfit made out of sheets. Always gave me the creeps! CLICK!

And there WERE NO BLACK PEOPLE in Hazzard County....!! Who in their right mind would want to live there???? Gaaah!!!


...Get that? The confederate flag had been almost completely absent from popular culture until the era of Civil Rights and desegregation, when it emerged as the symbol of latent white supremacy, but to the show's creator being quoted in 2001, that very-racist reemergence was all just an "innocent tradition." Having watched the show many times in my youth, I don't recall a lot of black people ever being on camera, either. Given the factual demographics of the South, how is it possible that the small southern town where Bo and Luke lives is as completely devoid of black people as one of those ‘Sundown Towns' of the Jim Crow era? The answer, of course, is that in 1979 and 2001 Waldron was merely expressing the casual, almost-guileless racism which has characterized most television production in general, not just on the roof of the General Lee: if you just pretend there are no black people, then you're not racist. See how that works?

It's not just the cast making this noise, either. Plenty of people seem to think some cultural watershed is at hand, and that the TV Land decision bodes ill for freedom. At The Daily Beast, Tim Teeman uses the word "ban" ten times to complain about TV Land pulling reruns, even though he's completely in favor of removing the confederate flag from public spaces. On the right side of the political aisle, opinions have gotten downright ridiculous, with former Bush speechwriter Marc Thiessen blaming "white liberals" in northeastern urban centers for the "creeping miasma of political correctness" which he sees behind the decision of TV Land executives to "ban" the show - which, again, is not what they actually did. But has anyone seen Color of Change, the organization which led the boycott of Glenn Beck on Fox News, say or do anything like that for ‘The Dukes of Hazzard'? Did the NAACP issue a call for the show to be dropped? Can anyone find a single example of "white liberals" organizing to pressure TV Land? Of course not, because these things never happened, and such a campaign has never, ever existed at any time.

The collector who owns the real General Lee, pro golfer Bubba Watson, has said he will remove the confederate flag from its roof, but that's not because anyone made him do it. And because it's his property, he has the right to do whatever he wants with it. Likewise, TV Land's decision is their right to make, and it has nothing to do with censorship but everything to do with demonstrating sensitivity to an event.

Consider the experience of Dave Barry: the former Miami Herald columnist's first novel Big Trouble, a comedy involving an airport, terrorists, and a suitcase nuclear bomb, was produced with a huge budget, an all-star cast, and weeks of media marketing, but by horrible coincidence was scheduled to hit theater screens on the 14th of September, 2001. Disney not only pulled the film release, and all of the ads from television, immediately after the terrorist attacks that week, but when they did eventually release it the following year, ‘Big Trouble' received such a low-key opening that it never even came close to breaking even. Was Dave Barry a victim of censorship and liberal bias? Or was Disney merely exercising their rights as a corporate entity to avoid controversy altogether? Maybe you think the company was lame, or wrong, but it's not your decision to make. Likewise, it's not up to actors where, when, or under what circumstances their performances get to see the light of day. As long as we live in a capitalist system, that is not how things will ever work.

I doubt the Duke boys are forever gone from television altogether, even with the General Lee bearing the confederate flag. In fact, their populist message of working class uprising against the 1% - as represented by Boss Hogg, who dresses like a plantation owner - is really quite subversive, and resonates nicely with the current rise of liberal politicians like Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren. Furthermore, the capitalist system is too unoriginal to leave the show alone forever. Proof of that is readily available in the 2005 big screen version starring Johnny Knoxville, who coincidentally had a part in ‘Big Trouble.' In all probability, we will see a whole new ‘Dukes of Hazzard' come along soon enough, but this time there simply won't be a flag on the roof of the car…and there will be black people living in Hazzard County. When that happens, Fox News pundits can complain about it for completely different reasons.



http://crooksandliars.com/2015/07/no-one-actually-asked-tv-land-pull-dukes

hlthe2b

(102,327 posts)
6. I can rather imagine them being controversy-averse, given they were running Cosby show too until
Sat Jul 4, 2015, 07:16 PM
Jul 2015

quite recently...

underpants

(182,858 posts)
9. Simple marketing. They don't want to be associated with it
Sat Jul 4, 2015, 07:30 PM
Jul 2015

There was ONE poll that said that 57% didn't see it as hate. Okay, that leaves 43% who do. Who are they? Are they the segments/demos who affect their advertising buys? It would appear so.

 

Cassidy1

(300 posts)
12. The Dukes of Hazzard was simple minded TV
Sat Jul 4, 2015, 09:53 PM
Jul 2015

that was really not that much different than the shows that preceded it.


The Dukes just repackaged stock characters and settings for its viewers, but it also helped solidify the status of two other elements in the inventory of Southern stereotypes. The Dukes had the benefit of drawing symbols from movies that were contemporaries of shows like The Hillbillies and The Real McCoy.


The Dukes was a simple series that required little digestion or deep thought on the part of the viewer: "Dukes considered the South to be a land of freedom, moral valued, and simple people. Good and evil are easily defined, and the good guys always won."


An essentialized setting provides the set for a program boasting characters essentialized and exoticized to a literally hilarious extreme. The contents of Hazzard County, as created by Warner Brothers, are a brilliant amalgamation not of what tells about the South, but what sells the South.



http://xroads.virginia.edu/~ug97/blake/part1.html




DemocraticWing

(1,290 posts)
14. This is the one thing in the last few weeks that leaves me a bit disappointed
Sun Jul 5, 2015, 01:00 AM
Jul 2015

The Dukes of Hazzard was a comedy show that exaggerated the stereotypes about the South, and the General Lee is part of the joke. It kind of feels like removing All in the Family because Archie Bunker was a backwards reactionary, without realizing the point of the show is to make fun of him.

It doesn't help that Ben Jones is apparently a professional Lost Causer now though. He parlayed his role on that show into a Congressional seat and now he's clinging to fame by defending the Confederacy. It's kind of sad to see, especially every time he pops up on TV with a "D" next to his name. Those people are in our party too.

Latest Discussions»General Discussion»Turns out no one asked TV...