All in the Family is widely remembered for the sociocultural barriers it broke on TV, but its responsibility for another, ...
Most people remember "All in the Family," the hit 1970s sitcom starring Carroll O'Connor as Archie Bunker, the prejudiced but ultimately loving patriarch of the Bunker family. Fewer people, however, ...
In today’s edition of Sitcom Sliding Doors, imagine a world in which Archie Bunker, the bigoted patriarch of All in the Family, was played not by Carroll O’Connor but… Captain Stubing from The Love ...
The story of Archie Bunker and his working-class family in Queens arrived on American TVs as loudly and rudely as the “terlet” flush that broke TV ground in the first episode. Archie embodied the ...
It was a nifty idea, carried out by an all-star cast (and directed by old hand James Burrows) who accepted their mission with pride and faithful adherence to the original characters and concepts. But ...
The 1970s sitcom All in the Family forever changed television. The show aired on CBS for nine seasons from 1971 to 1979 and followed the life of Archie Bunker and his family. All in the Family tackled ...
These are the opening song lyrics for a TV series that first aired in 1971 called “All in the Family.” The show was built around a character named Archie Bunker who shocked the nation with his verbal ...
Since the show wrapped, many of the sitcom's stars — including Carroll O'Connor, Jean Stapleton and Rob Reiner — have died Though their characters were often at odds with each other on screen, off it, ...
Archie Bunker, for those of us who are old enough to remember the “All in the Family” television series, was a comical bigot who often argued with his son-in-law, a liberal whom Archie called ...