womzilla: (Default)
[personal profile] womzilla
[livejournal.com profile] kip_w is working his way through a bargain-bin collection of motion picture musicals from the 30s and 40s, and recently reached an Amos and Andy film, Check and Double Check. ("Years later Gosden was quoted as calling Check and Double Check 'just about the worst movie ever.'", says the Wikipedia.) Kip's key sentence is "It would have been interesting to know what the black extras in the Mystic Knights of the Sea Lodge felt about standing behind poorly made-up Anglos saying stupid things in ridiculous accents."

One of the things which continues to amaze me about the world is that the radio show of Amos & Andy was quite popular among American blacks, to the point that Gosden and Correll, the white actors who played the eponymous characters on the radio, were honored by black organizations like the Chicago Urban League and the DuSable Club, and praised by black leaders like Roy Wilkins (later head of the NAACP).

My first roommate in college was black--a fellow named Maurice Parks, who attended Duke on a scholarship, and, unrelatedly, died a few years later from a chronic autoimmune disease. Mo would invariably watch the few black-populated sitcoms which were available, which at that time basically meant Good Times and What's Happenin'?. I hadn't realized before then that there were American blacks who were so starved for representations of people who looked like them that they'd actually watch What's Happenin'?, but it was so. In the years since, I've learned that, without fail, the top-rated TV shows among blacks are shows that have black main characters, while the top-rated TV shows among whites have primarily white main characters.

So, on some level, it's clearer in hindsight; blacks liked Amos & Andy because, stereotyped and ridiculous as it was, it was about people like them, acting, often, like people like them.

(By the way, [livejournal.com profile] sarah_ovenall, I think you and kip_w would enjoy reading each other's movie reviews.)

Date: 2005-11-25 09:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wild-patience.livejournal.com
Unfortunately, most of the TV shows featuring black casts are pretty bad shows. An exception to this is the new sitcom, "Everybody Hates Chris." (Oops! I just typoed that as "everybody hates Christ.") I watch this sometimes. You probably know that it's based on Chris Rock's junior high days. It's pretty funny; it's got a good cast. But when you watch this, you get all the promos for the other shows on UPN. Most of the other sitcoms seem to have black casts as well, to the point where [livejournal.com profile] calimac", who is not much of a TV watcher, asked if UPN was a black network. The teasers they show for these other sitcoms are dreadful. They rely heavily on sexual innuendo and very heavy-handed cliches.

I suppose that, like the really bad white sitcoms, they have to fill the air time with something and they rely heavily on the better shows to lead into these lesser shows. You just wish that there were more better ones or, if they are there are you're not aware of them, that they get promoted better by the networks and the TV critics so that we viewers can watch them. If I hadn't read good things about "Everybody Hates Chris," I wouldn't have watched it. Several TV critics said it was very good so I turned it on.

Profile

womzilla: (Default)
womzilla

March 2016

S M T W T F S
  12345
6789101112
13141516171819
202122232425 26
2728293031  

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated May. 8th, 2026 04:56 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios