American Geography in a
Box, Fall Season,1958
*Note: This is an entire chapter's outtake from Outside the Gates of Eden: America 1945 till Now, due out from the University of Chicago Press next year. It is © Peter Bacon Hales, 2013
There is a peculiar scene in the
December 31, 1958 episode of The Donna Reed Show. The main plot concerns teenage daughter
Mary and the Junior Prom. Donna has
bustled into the living room, and in a moment Mary will rush through the front
door, eager to show her mother the prom dress the family seamstress has made
just for her.
But in the moment before we see Mary with
her dress in hand, we watch as Donna swoops down on pre-teen Jeff, who’s
simultaneously reading what looks like one of those kids’ periodicals– Boy’s
Life, or Junior Scholastic-- and watching television, having just
finished his after-school snack. His
feet are up on the coffee table, and the dishes are precariously close to being
pushed off onto the carpet. Donna turns off the tv, picks up the dishes, and pirouettes to discover
Mary with her delicious new prom dress.
Simultaneously, Jeff wriggles on the couch, pulling his feet off the
table and folding up the paper.
Though you wouldn’t guess it, this is
one of the rarest moments to be found in ‘50s television: a scene in which
people are actually watching tv– not watching something through
television, as Fred and Ricky did with the fights in that early I Love Lucy
episode, but engaging in the particular combination of fantasy, escape, and
divided attention that characterized tv-watching as various surveys and
sociological studies described it.. As remarkably, it’s quite an accurate
rendering, if the surveys and analyses by Nielsen and other pollsters are to be
taken seriously. Kids came home from
school, and in the interval before the next round of activities– homework, play
with friends, orchestra or band, boy or girl scouts and the like, they turned
on the television, ate a snack, used the phone, checked their homework, read
the paper, played with the dog– all simultaneously.
And the matter-of-fact reproval
implied by Donna’s acts– turning off the tv, picking up the dishes, glancing at
Jeff just long enough to make him sit up and act right– all these, too, had a ring of truth to
them. Everything Donna did was meant to
instruct Jeff in the little lessons of conduct and life that parents were to
impart– and one of them was resistance to the endless mild interest, the ingratiating
presence offered by the set.
When Donna snapped off the tv, the
rattle of gunfire abruptly died away: Jeff was watching a Western. Westerns were popular that year; they
dominated prime time with seven of the top ten shows, and their syndicated
versions went out morning, afternoon and evening– reruns. Advertisers, networks
and stations knew they had something, and they were exploiting it while they
could.
A preteen boy in a prosperous
middle-class family, sitting in the suburban living room, watching a Western on
tv: Jeff was a living demographic sample. By 1958, television programming had
evolved from its experimental early years into a sophisticated,
market-survey-driven symphony of desires and satisfactions among target
audiences and likely advertisers. All of
this was laid out across an imaginative geography, a map of resonant American
places sure to awaken interest in the appropriate viewer. Some of those sites
invoked a nostalgic past, others announced a bold and hopeful future. Inside the box, however, all these collapsed
into a novel sort of interpretive present, a significant contemporary world.
Postwar television was driven by a
rapidly emerging cutthroat industry responding to and feeding a medium with
intense market growth and huge marketplace potential. To survive, television networks and the
production companies that increasingly supplied their wares had to figure out
what was common to these progressively more disparate populations of potential
and actual viewers that they were reeling in, season after season, and then
promote their products to advertisers who fed the industry. Television sought both to recognize the
commonalities shared by these different audiences, and to create new
commonalities that could be exploited for market share and advertising dollars.
By 1958, television producers had
grasped the law of inverse proportions that governed success: one could make a
healthy profit from a small number of extremely wealthy and influential people;
one could do far better with a vast ocean of everyday citizen-viewers if you
could get them to spend disproportionately to their wealth. Somewhere in there could be found an ideal
curve that combined the number of households you could attract, the capacity
and willingness of those households to spend money, and the ability of your
show and its advertising to actually persuade those households to buy the
products you proffered.[1]
From this, television’s most
successful entrepreneurs (individuals, companies, networks) moved to the
corollaries: they produced shows aimed at the “sweet spot” for their sponsors
(the most infamous being the daytime melodramas for housewife audiences
sponsored by cleaning-products companies: hence the name, soap operas)[2];
and they sought to use their shows, their seasonal lineups, and the broader
curve of their offerings over years, to further the goal of ensuring a unified
common culture that could be predicted, catered to and sold– back to itself and to the globe.
American consensus was both the goal
and the product. Shared American
identity was the reassuring fantasy the popular media and especially television
created inside the frame, the screen, the box and the covers, for the pleasure,
the respite, the solace, the entertainment of ordinary Americans; it made
possible a life, a nation, and an economy awash in goods and services just like
those that appeared in the regular “special messages” at the front, middle, and
end of the suspense, laughter, or tears.
This was not a spontaneous consequence
of an upwelling democracy, nor was it a corollary of the moral triumph and
global supremacy of the United States, though the machinery behind the
television industry often presented it as such. Neither was it simply the
seamless providing of entertainment and education to the American families
clustered around the electronic hearth, though that, too, was the message
proposed in the ads for the networks, the shows, and the television sets
themselves. (Look, for example at what’s purportedly shown on the screens of
the Motorola and Magnavox television sets in the magazine ads found in the Interjection that follows: on one, a jolly Santa crowds the screen; on
the other, some high-culture Shakespearean drama enthralls a family, including
two children, ages 5 and 7, respectively.)
The advertising and marketing
specialists in television weren’t sensitive to cultural nuance nor were they
responsible citizens. They gave those outside the mainstream two options:
continued exile, or acceptance of a homogenized, white, middle-class standard
of meaning, humor, moral outrage, social setting, and identity.
And those within that mainstream as
well discovered themselves to be outsiders to the idyllic world of television. To be black and watching The Donna Reed Show was only an extreme instance of what nearly all
Americans tuned in to that show must have felt—on the one hand, witnessing an
idyll of complacency, conformity, and continuity, in which only small problems
occurred, never big ones; on the other, looking around at a life riven by
doubt, anxiety, strife and fear. Television shows remonstrated with their
audiences in a mirror of the ways their ads drew customers—by showing an
impossible ideal, suggesting that your failure was a consequence of some
pathology, social or economic, then insisting that their product, purchased and
applied, would cure you and guide you closer to that ideal. Television’s
discomfort was comforting because it suggested it was possible to engage with
the demons of the age and, if not vanquish them, then at least hold them at
bay. Donna Reed and her family read the
papers; they saw the color spreads in Life
offering “new looks at the a-bomb,” and Mary and Jeff participated in Civil
defense evacuation drills and “duck and cover” exercises. But none of that appeared in any episode of Donna Reed. No one went bankrupt, no communities were
riven by racial strife or public accusations by one neighbor against another of
Communist leanings; no Jews were threatened or their children humiliated in the
school lunchroom; no penny-ante town partriarch arrested for incest; no
immigrant farmhands beaten by locals on their way home from mass at the
Catholic church.
(In my small town, where I grew up the
middle child in a middle-class doctor’s family, all those crises occurred; all
of them in 1958.)
Jeff was, at this moment in this
episode, a double-fiction: an impossibly ideal American boy; and the perfect tv
patron. He was wealthy, by most
definitions. He had leisure time, and
sought to fill it, with television and with the products “his” shows offered to
him. And he was normal, by
television producers’ conceptions: he fit squarely within a broad demographic,
and so to speak to him was to speak as well to millions like him.
Jeff watched a Western because it was
the afternoon and boys were a major segment of the weekday afternoon
audience. Probably it was a rerun of one
of the many Westerns that dominated the top 20 in Nielsen ratings during the
late ‘50s-- Gunsmoke, or Wells Fargo, or Have Gun, Will Travel.
In this particular episode of this
show, the collapse of time into a universal present might seem to have reached
its peak: a viewer in 1958 watching Jeff, also in 1958, watching a Western
made, say, (in the case of Gunsmoke)
1955, a Western that portrayed a hypothetical American West of 1888 or 1898,
but itself conflated middle-19th century events with those that
occurred at century’s end (as they’d been popularized in novels like Owen Wister’s
The Virginian) and even well into the next. This was utterly of a piece
with the rest of television as the medium developed a particular place for itself
in the making, transforming, and preserving of American values, beliefs,
traditions, and myths. On tv, the past
and the present merged, and from the reassuring composite, the future promised
to emerge, not too rapidly or disruptively.
But for all the pontifications and
promises for the medium, its real work could be found in the small moments it
offered, diffidently, ingratiatingly, seductively. This momentary sidelong glance at Jeff and
the tv suggests some of the ways that television constructed an American
cultural landscape, drawing from places and times, narratives, tales, works of
fact and fiction, other media and moments.
The result was inevitably and naturally a confirmation of the older
American mythology: a place of wilderness and frontier, possibility and
opportunity, moral lessons and social values, Protestant, capitalist,
optimistic, a place where American supremacy had been bought with some currency
other than atomic guilt and atomic fear: tvland.
*
World Atlas
Jeff was watching in the afternoon,
when the black-and-white scenes washed out against the brightness of daytime,
and the sociable, colorful world outside offered stiff competition. Perhaps that’s why he didn’t protest too
loudly when his mother flicked off the set, and in any case the message of that
particular episode was exactly the complex combination of synchronicity and
contrast between television’s structures and those of everyday life. Over the next 13 minutes, the episode reeled
out: Jeff had his crisis, Mary had hers,
Donna took on their anxieties, Dr. Stone came home to observe, to interject, to
contribute; soon all was orderly again.
Donna had turned Jeff’s show off, but in its place was the show of life,
with its proposal that families on both sides of the screen shared values,
desires, and, perhaps more critically, structures that ordered and gave meaning
to the lives of all concerned.
When the outdoors darkened, and
members of the family assembled around the now-brighter and more seductive television,
the scenes changed. Bill Levitt put the screen in the wall; tv manufacturers
put it into big furniture; Americans by 1958 put the television right where
they could see it– in the living room, or the family rooms that were just
beginning to gain popularity. By 1958 almost every household had a television,
and already a few had two or more. As at
the Stone’s house, home decoration depended upon the television’s placement for
its coherence. From room to room, from house to house, of an evening, the
rhythm of family and social life flowed around or against the gravitational
pull of the television.
If the television inflected the
geography of houses, the social life of neighborhoods, the political conditions
of towns and cities, the corollary applies as well: inside the box, a new
imaginative landscape came into being, stitching together a new geography out
of the scraps of half-hour sitcoms, hour-long specials, movies-on-tv, hit
series and hit-or-miss experiments.
It was in prime time that this
geography presented itself most coherently and its significance as a
culture-cohering glue was most powerfully in play. At 7:30pm, 6:30 Central, television backed
away from the news anchor desk, bumped across four commercials, exited the
closed quarters of the studio (with a final glance at the lights and the
cameras, the anchors gathering their papers, the credits streaming in front)
and, blinking slightly in the strong light of outdoors, opened its gaze to take
in the span of the continent and the nation’s history.
The nuances of decisions viewers made,
en masse, mattered a great deal to the bottom lines of the networks, and the
sponsors as well. But for viewers
themselves, freedom was played out within the boundaries of a settled
terrain. Look carefully at the genres;
total up the longest-running and most-watched shows of the period from the first
atomic tests to the last– 1946 to 1963– and you will have stitched together an
American geography. Wilderness; the
frontier; rural idylls on the farm; small town America, the suburban
neighborhood; the big city; and, in a slowly but perceptibly expanding and
transforming invention, the novel environment of television itself: Americans
watched tv and they saw themselves– more attractive, more adventurous, more
virtuous and more sure of themselves, but mirrored nonetheless.
While the mythic geography traced out
by television each night might have seemed solipsistic, that would miss the
sense in which it was one part of a dialectical coupling. You turned on the tv
to get away from the world; it illuminated the living room in its glow, as if
to protect you from what lay out there, on the street, and beyond. It radiated
a comforting contrast to radiation, presenting worlds before the atomic age, or
worlds somehow immune to the anxiety and responsibility Americans experienced,
on a day-by-day basis, as the bombs went off in Nevada and the South Seas, and
the headlines blared the news of another Soviet explosion announced or, more
ominously, detected by seismometers and radiation sampling technologies. While Life, Time, Newsweek and the
like reported the megatonnage and the fallout levels of test after test, emphasizing
their statistics with smashing images slamming home the beauty and peril of the
latest event, nowhere outside of the newshour did the atomic age present itself
in its terrifying guise. Instead, you
were always before, or beyond, or outside the circles of death drawn in the graphics of other media.
Television’s maturing programming
offered spatial excursions while promising a bell jar within which you were
safe. And it offered the same protection
across time, as well. Advertisers bought tv sponsorship in 15 minute chunks of
individual shows. To viewers, however,
tv proffered itself across half-hours, across evenings, across week-long spans,
and across seasons. Compared to the
unpredictability of the world, political, social, and cultural, tv was a
chatter of variations on a reassuringly predictable vector. On worknights, this narrative arc began only
after the world did intrude, right up front, at 7pm, 6 Central, with the
news. After that, the night’s lineup was
a bandage of reassurance and escape, behind which percolated the spectres of
the day’s events– economic downturns, unemployment numbers, atomic tests,
failed negotiations, political turmoil, ideology in confusion, babbled by
candidates and commentators.
Why consider American television,
1958, as if it were a map? Why not a
story, even a meta-narrative? Because tv
presented itself as a substitute geography– you stayed here, and it took
you everywhere else– while it drew from the resonant myths of American
geography to work its magic. And
because, like the American cultural traditions it purloined and replaced, tv
set its stories and its meta-narrative on a national geography. Seeing the false fronts of Dodge City,
viewers were ready; a half-hour was more than enough to call up the ghostly
symbols of an American origin myth.
Moving from the foyer of Donna’s colonial-revival house to its
living room (where Jeff would surely return, soon, to join his parents in front
of the tv) was all it took to set the American family in its proper place:
watching, and learning.
**
America Triumphant: Frontier
Television’s geography was a bit
peculiar; it was different than the one that Jeff might have learned in his
American history or social studies class. But it did conform to the great myths
of American history, albeit with prominent adaptations and subtle shifts, some
meant to modernize, some to revitalize, and some to disguise. Wilderness; frontier; beleaguered small town;
family farm or ranch turning untamed lands into breadbaskets (or meat markets);
railways and highways connecting region to region, hinterland to centerland;
big cities aglow with entertaining lights or sinister in their dingy tenements
and foreboding dark streets; suburbs, safe and orderly, idealizing and
mirroring the perfect marketplace demographic advertising sponsors were looking
for. And that’s surprisingly close to
what TV Guide showed, week after
week. But none of this was as straightforward
as it might have seemed from the nightly lineups or the brief, sentence-long
précis in the small newsprint handbook or the newspaper’s listings. Themes that might seem immutably wedded to
one genre could migrate to another; historical moments could resurface in the
present, details of place could abruptly shift.
On Mondays NBC followed Wells Fargo with Peter Gunn, an
urban detective show that mirrored the structures of the Western– an unstable
social landscape, threatened by anarchic figures preying on the virtuous
citizens, requiring a heroic outsider to champion the weaker or those more
firmly constrained by law and propriety.
Okies from the Dust Bowl drove their ramshackle vehicles into Lassie’s farmyard. I Love
Lucy moved to the Connecticut countryside.
These weren’t insignificant mutations,
though—they reflected complex ways in which older American myths were being
recast, reappropriated, or transformed to better engage the new desires and
anxieties of the atomic age. In the
televised American landscape, chronology and geography compressed until they
amalgamated.
For 1958, two geographies
intertwined: the West of the past—the
frontier, Wild West, homestead and ranch—and the idealized suburb itself. One
brought the ennobling myths of the past to reassure an anxious present,
doubtful that the mission and the promise still held true. The other presented that new American
landscape of middle-class suburban life as a culmination of the long narrative
of exceptionalist triumphalism, into which could be found, hidden, condensed or
disguised, all the lessons of the past, requiring only the reassuring guidance
of television itself to show how best to apply that lesson to the conflicts still
frustrating the achievement of abundance, safety, social harmony, happiness not
pursued but caught, held, and treasured.
Frontier was the title of NBC’s realist entry
into the historical epic serial genre, premiering in September of 1955. “This is the West,” intoned the opening:
“This is the land of beginning again. This is the story of men and women facing
the frontier. This is the way it
happened.” But historical accuracy and
social realism weren’t grabbers; the show lasted just one year. Instead, it was Gunsmoke that swept the ratings, and its offshoots, competitors and
clones that dominated the evenings.
1958 was the year the Western
dominated television geography: seven of the top ten shows, according to
Nielsen, were Westerns (in the parlance, they were called “oaters”). Westerns were frontier sagas but their principal
function seemed to lie with pulling the margins of American cultural geography
closer to the center. The point was, finally, to create a United States by taking viewers back to a time of geographical and
cultural localism, and then to show that unique place as it was about to become
part of our place, our time. In Westerns, the homogeneity of the
American present and future became simultaneously an evolution from a more
anarchic and heterodox past (the present as a container for the energies of the
past), and a resolution of that past, a solution to its anxieties and tensions.
The changing circumstances of the
television business in the late ‘50s provided powerful incentives for a new
form of television show, one that combined comforting familiarity and frenetic
action. Westerns did just that. There
wasn’t an unpredictable moment to a Western. The symbols reassured, the
settings linked heroic American past to uneasy present, and the characters, for
all their problems (and Western characters were often flamboyantly neurotic),
lived through their crises, worked them out, and returned to the comforts of
home. Still, the Westerns that won the ratings wars weren’t nearly as comforting
as, say, Life With Father. Matt
Dillon was an authority figure, but his authority was always in question– not
just by outlaws or by Kitty, or by selfish town merchants, but by Dillon’s own
internal dialogue. Home might be a
saloon or a sod house; children might be dirty and unkempt, even rude; women
might be forward and hostile. In Donna
Reed or Father Knows Best, harmony was the fundamental tone, and
crisis temporary. In the most popular
Westerns, uneasiness was the state of things, temporarily eased for a moment of
needed respite before the next uprising, the next stampede, the next drunken
gambler or stir-crazed sodbuster.
Westerns were also signally different
than most previous television forms in the ways they came into being and the
forces to which they were beholden.
Developed and produced with a single advertiser paying the freight, most
Westerns were “licensed” by the networks so that they might control the
immensely lucrative syndication and rerun market, but also so that they could
exercise real minute-by-minute power over the individual episodes. Westerns were, in other words, products of
huge corporations– networks, and advertising agencies, and the sponsoring
corporations, who were for the first time buying the shows as showcases for
their products and sponsoring them all through a season or through multiple
seasons.
As a consequence the entire line of
production, from sponsors to agencies to networks to production companies to
writers and directors to actors and set designers, all paid increasing
attention to the ratings, and the ratings themselves became more and more
specific and telling. Reports from the
studios and the shooting locations described advertiser reps overseeing
individual shots, network executives poring over the scripts, and sponsors
watching rough cuts and demanding changes both large and picayune: all this in
the name of ensuring that a larger and larger audience turned to that
channel at that time, and stayed glued to the set throughout that
show.
Westerns weren’t anomalies. They were harbingers. They succeeded because they tapped deep
historical roots in myth and symbol; they thrived because they adapted those
retrospective forces to the cause of present needs-- psychological needs on the
part of viewers, commercial and economic needs on the part of advertisers, and,
more broadly, cultural needs on the part of institutions, groups and forces
that more broadly undergirded American life at that moment.
Westerns worked (though only briefly–
for about three or four years)[i]
because they took already deep myths about America and recast them in the new
medium. The formulae were there, the
plots, the characters, the heroes, and they’d been used with great success by
the movies right up to the moment, so actors, animal trainers, cameramen and
location scouts all knew exactly what they had to do. They just had to do it in a half-hour instead
of two hours, and they had to do it week after week, at a fraction of the
cost. And they had to watch their
numbers– how many households were watching, but also what members of those
households, and what likelihood there was that these particular viewers would
buy the particular products the shows were designed to sell.
When the same five or ten characters
appear and reappear over an entire season of, say, thirty shows, there’s the
opportunity– even the necessity– to produce an ensemble or, more accurately, a community
or a family out of those characters. This was a real advantage for the tv
Western because it helped serve that second function– to bring the historical
into the present, and thereby to make a historical genre into an allegorical
one. As critics and historians have
repeatedly noticed, the Western in 1958 tended to take place in
communities– whether the roving community of Wagon Train or the
saloon-based community of Gunsmoke or the settlements and towns where so
many others enacted their stories of adherence to the rule of law and the
dictates of the community. The
popularity of The Rifleman, for example, focused around Lucas McCain’s
deeply sentimental relationship with his son Mark. This wasn’t a show about bad guys getting
killed– it was Father Knows Best in chaps.
Some of the reasons for this
communitarian cast are purely dramatic– based in identification, empathy, all
the elements Aristotle found in the dramas of his time. Viewers liked the idea of peopling their
living rooms– temporarily– with a variety of social ecosystems, ecosystems
slightly out of balance but, by the end of the half-hour or hour, back in
harmony, if only temporarily. You could
watch it happen, you could like these people, or be amused by them or find them
annoying or hateful, all without enduring consequences yourself.
But that independence from the group
was, at another level, illusory.
Television’s most popular shows, formats and genres tended to use the
particular circumstances around which they were built– their locales, their
time-frames, their cast of characters, even their very premises– to create
instructive allegories about the lives their viewers were leading—or, more
accurately, should have been leading.
The sermonizing of shows like Donna Reed and Father Knows Best was
obvious; the week-by-week problem the writers faced was to undermine that very
quality-- who wanted to be preached to by figures of cardboard perfection and
utterly even-handed rectitude, week after week?
In Ozzie and Harriet the sermon was rendered more palatable by
the lovably inept diffidence of Ozzie, the putative head of household– Ozzie
and Harriet’s premise was: Father doesn’t know best. Leave It To Beaver solved the problem
by moving the focus firmly to the children.
Westerns didn’t have to leap through
such hoops. That was the advantage of a
locale that was simultaneously far away from everyday experience and profoundly
near to common knowledge and cultural familiarity. And of course they took place not just there
but then.
On television, landscapes were
allegories. But oddly enough, landscapes
weren’t easy to render with the television camera, the television studio set,
or the television set itself. While
movies were wrapping the sublime emptiness of the West around the
popcorn-chewer (with increasingly desperate technologies, like Cinemascope and
Widelux), television cameras tended to flatten the space and truncate it. This was in part a matter of budget– you
couldn’t get too wide an angle or it would be clear that the wide open spaces
were actually about three acres in area, encroached by trailers and houses,
fences and backyards. But the fact was,
if it had been necessary, the studios, networks and advertisers would have
bought the bullet and moved to better quarters.
You looked at shrunken spaces because they were sufficient– what
mattered was to invoke the mythic spaces, not to reproduce them or even to
reproduce the feeling you’d have had if you’d been there.[ii]
This was television. No one pretended you were there– you were at
home, watching there from here.
And that was fine.
What you saw on the Western was a
satisfying recapitulation of Turner’s Frontier
Thesis played out in dramatic form: every episode, Americans carved
civilization out of wilderness, whether the literal wilderness of a wasteland
tract fenced in with barbed wire and populated by a grateful family, or the
moral and ethical wilderness of lawbreakers and claimjumpers who had to be
taught a lesson, tamed or jailed.[3]
What you didn’t see, however, was the
nuance of Turner’s argument. Turner had
proposed that the history of America was a history of expansion from populated
to wilderness areas by individuals and groups who found there the opportunity
to “reinvent” American democratic values in the pragmatic necessities of social
action under duress. He worried that the
closing of the frontier meant the end of innovation and rejuvenation for
America. To look at the televised
Westerns, you’d be tempted to agree: the lessons taught didn’t change
significantly over time, nor did the moral, ethical, and social problems they
faced, faced down, and triumphed over.
In place of innovation was the more
conservative virtue of recapitulation.
Television Westerns in 1958 made a larger argument about the present and
future America, the land of living rooms whose walls glowed with the flickering
images of the tv: the old values could be, should be, applied to the new
landscapes of American dominion, small and large– in the new suburbs and the
terrain of capitalism and in the troubled globe. Out there in the Western, one
might see the working out of a moral code, and its application to the daily
problems of everyday life, even if in exotic boots and gingham dresses. Westerns weren’t vessels for topicality;
rather they were substitutes for it, reassurances that the eternal moral
ambiguity of the Cold War world could be reduced, in television at least, to a
simple duality with a resolution.
And of course the Western recapitulated
American exceptionalism and triumphalism in the living room, pushing out the
daily combat between two global ideologies, in which at any moment atomic
warfare could tip the balance and leave America not a glowing city on a hill
but a blasted ruin. Remember as well
that the Western took place in the very spaces where, in the other media, the
bombs were falling, the mushroom clouds rising, homes just like yours—or just
like the one you dreamed of owning someday—were being blasted to smithereens. As spaces of denial, Westerns were pretty much
ideal.
****
Family Farm: Lassie
as Lesson
Westerns proposed the permanent temporariness
of American wilderness; even the most stable and established shows, like Gunsmoke,
used their sets and settings to suggest that we were passing through a stage in
the nation’s history; false-front taverns would give way to supermarkets, dusty
trails to superhighways, upon which we could now travel in the summers, on
vacations that amalgamated nostalgia with an almost-smug sense of national
achievement and personal pride.
By contrast, the middle landscape in
tvland was meant to be a place of permanent succor, an eternal presence. Rural America was a powerful mythic wellspring
in the ‘50s: Currier and Ives chromolithographs were being reissued as
calendars, placemats, even tv trays; Grandma Moses was still high up on the
list of America’s best known and most beloved artists, just below that rural
and small town celebrant, Norman Rockwell.
Television sought to tap that well of yearning, but it wasn’t successful
the way the Western had succeeded in appropriating the moment of transformation
between adventure and domesticity. (It
would take more than a decade before The Waltons would manage to produce
a true rural blockbuster.)
Three shows recast the rural landscape
of America: one presented it in the guise of frank nostalgia, remembrance and
reminiscence; the other two were polar opposites in attitude, in rhetoric, and
in the picture they drew of the old ideal of a middle landscape populated by
citizen-farmers. The Ford Show
Starring Tennessee Ernie Ford was named not after the country singer who
hosted, but after the car company that sponsored the show. The Ford Motor Company’s goal was to promise
that the rural past of so many of television’s viewers was still available,
just a longish car ride away. This was
the dominant theme of the country-town stories that formed the centerpiece of
the show, stories that Tennessee Ernie spun in between musical offerings that
were equally steeped in bowdlerized ruralisms– music that drove even Nashville
to turn its nose up.
The Real McCoys took a more cynical tack. A predecessor to later rural-humiliation
comedies– The Beverly Hillbillies, Petticoat Junction, Green
Acres and the like– the show shared with those a premise of uprootedness
that gave a reassuring instability to the older rural virtues. Mountain folk now living in California’s San
Fernando Valley, the McCoys were quaint, eccentric anachronisms, and their
neighbors could stand between audience and characters, mediating between the
contempt and the pitiability of the setup.
An almost exact counterpart was the
long-running and much-beloved sentimental Sunday-supper staple, Lassie,
which for most of a decade singlehandedly represented the farm to American
television watchers. The show had a long history; it first appeared in the Fall
1954 season, where it competed with The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin,
another dog-saves-man show that was initially far more successful, with its
vigilant masculine canine hero, Fort Apache Western setting, and stable of
stock adventure characters and situations drawn from its long history in the B
movie stockade. Rin Tin Tin ran
Fridays from 7:30 to 8pm on ABC through 1959, but it only broke into the top 20
during its first season. As “adult”
Westerns appeared in the lineup, it lost its appeal.
Lassie didn’t start as well but it was a
steady performer in its programming slot: Sundays at 7pm, a prime family
viewing time, when Sunday supper was over or could be served in front of the TV
as an informal counter to the early afternoon, post-church dinner still in
fashion among a great many American households.
From the first, Lassie was a family show, in its content and in
its target audience. But it took time
for the writers and producers to determine just what function it was to
play.
Lassie the dog was the hook and the
fulcrum for any constellation of elements– characters, plots, settings, and
themes. But what should Lassie be? Initially, the writers and producers had
developed a premise with strong emotional logic: a broken family is held and
even healed by the presence of a dog who is simultaneously female and male,
worker and friend, animal and human, a shapeshifter, a lesser god but a god
nonetheless. Viewers today, even those
who remember the show from its original runs, tend to recollect the absurdity
of Lassie’s abilities– her capacity to understand complex spoken messages, to
distinguish among good, evil, and simply wayward humans, and to communicate to
her human masters the lessons of heart and soul. But the improbability of Lassie’s talents
seems not to have been a difficulty for audiences, at the start or later–
indeed, if anything, Lassie’s capabilities grew over the many seasons the show
ran. In a medium marked by relentless
secularism (except for Sunday morning church services, of course), Lassie
was one of the few to posit a supernatural force that might watch over those in
need.
Lassie’s schedule slot was not coincidental;
the show took some time to determine how it might live up to that near-sacred
moment in American life, when family, religion, leisure, and remembrance all
intersected. In the earliest iteration, Lassie belonged to young teenager Jeff
Miller, who lived on the farm outside small-town Calverton with his widowed
mother and maternal grandfather. Then circumstance and experimentation moved
the show into its sweet spot. Jeff grew up,
and his adolescence became too jarring to the balance of the characters with
their viewer counterparts; in 1957, the writers introduced a new boy, Timmy,
providentially young (he didn’t grow out of boyhood for many seasons), and as
providentially orphaned. Suddenly the
incomplete family was satisfyingly strong and sheltering, by comparison with
Timmy’s previous life. Lassie’s rescue
of Timmy, and his subsequent pleasure at being safe again, sustained the show
for a full season, and it crept to #24 in the prime time ratings sometime that
spring.
Then, in the fall of 1957, outside
circumstances intervened; the actor playing Gramps died and the subsequent
melodrama lasted a season, to the benefit of the ratings; at the end, with the
show at #22, the Millers sold the farm to a young, childless couple, the
Martins, who adopted Timmy and Lassie.
Finally Lassie had an intact
nuclear family, with a strong, quiet father figure whose personality might have
been derived in part from the character of Jim Anderson in Father Knows Best,
a competitor that had entered the scene along with Lassie in 1954, but
had only recently jumped dramatically in the ratings, tying for #13 in 1958 and
rising all the way to #6 a year later.
Less derivative was the character of Ruth Martin, whose maternal
strength and combination of confidence and competence reflected the writers’
image of a successful farm woman. Timmy,
too, was an unusual figure among the constellation of idealized children on tv–
younger, more innocent, more vulnerable and considerably more isolated from the
world beyond the family and the farm.
The power of home cannot be
overemphasized. Every character felt it,
in repeated crises based upon leaving the home for some larger world. Father Paul negotiated it best,
Grandfather-figures like Cully worst; Timmy and his mother seemed equally
overmatched, though for significantly different reasons. Timmy’s dangers came from his innocence, his
suggestibility, his inexperience: his child-ness, in other words. Ruth’s came from another place. When she left, she was threatened by storm,
by flood, by escaped circus animals, by wildcats. The message was clear: women separated from
the hearth lost their powers, and their strength, and were beset by malevolent
demons. Only the guardian angel Lassie
could intervene; episode after episode ended with Ruth thanking Lassie and
exclaiming: “if it hadn’t been for Lassie, I don’t know what I would have
done!” or some minor variant.
Lassie
pointedly rejected the power and autonomy of women, reinforcing their necessary
imprisonment in home and domesticity; who could have imagined, looking at Ruth
Martin, that women had run the factories and the country at large in a war just
a decade before? Lassie was
anachronistic, and pointedly so—it presented a rural America that leapt
backward over the 20th century and landed in some idealized 19th
century farmscape where drought and plague, speculation busts and factory
dry-wheat farms never interfered with the idyll.
So many of the small details of plot
or character reinforced the late-Victorian character of the Martin
household. Obviously there was no
television on the farm; but there was also, it seemed, no radio, either (though
when essential to the plot, a radio did appear at times); in a true throwback,
Ruth Martin entertained the family by playing the parlor organ! Lassie was significant because of its
liminal place in American culture of the era– on television, in the home, and
in the larger arena of values and beliefs.
It was set in the present, but its setting was the past.
Or was it? One of the peculiarities of the show to those
who watch it attentively, today, is the primitive, even careless way in which
the illusions of farm and country life are handled– as if, in fact, the show’s
producers wanted the audience to notice how artificial was the environment, how
much set rather than setting.
What persuaded viewers to tune in every Sunday was, instead, the
particular, even unique way the show transliterated an idealized rural farm
life to an equally idealized suburban life, reconnecting this new American
middle landscape to an older one, and enabling this long-standing American
value system, reaching back even further than the late-Victorian, into the
pastoral ideals of the 19th century, to replant itself in the
suburban present. While other domestic
shows in some way or other reflected the arc of Miracle on 34th
Street and I Love Lucy, from an increasingly untenable urban life to
a rejuvenating suburban one (with the city usually an offscreen pole for
comparison or conflict), Lassie presented the suburban plot as a
transliteration of the Jeffersonian yeoman farm, shrunk from a 640-acre
homestead to a 1/4-acre lot. In its
broadest strokes, Lassie’s cultural function was to buttress the
legitimacy of the nuclear family by presenting it as the most recent version of
a fundamental American social unit– not just fundamental, but foundational, as
Thomas Jefferson had proposed, providing the grounds for a legitimate
democratic system to thrive, without collapsing into self-interested class
warfare and anarchy or kowtowing to authoritarian oligarchy.
The show’s function wasn’t based on
illusionism, even in the primitive way that shows like Gunsmoke and Wyatt
Earp created an adequate escape by the canny combination of stereotyped
sets and props with equally established location-work. Instead, Lassie’s clumsy illusionism
emphasized the mythic dimension of the show, and the artificiality of its other-ness
brought home its this-ness, that is, its relationship to the suburban
lives of 1950s American viewers who tuned it in every Sunday. Much of the falseness of Lassie served
a particularly contrary function. Invoking, celebrating, and moralizing about
the American rural landscape and its social and cultural virtues, the show also
memorialized them. They were dead– in
that setting, at least. To regenerate
required that they be replanted from the shrinking and shrunken domains of the
middle landscape to the new middle America.
Lassie’s primary function was to reemphasize
values, not just in the plural, but in the singular– that is, to remind
Americans that prosperity, consumer goods, upward mobility, and status weren’t
enough in themselves: they needed to be informed by an ethical and moral
system. On a Sunday night, during family
hour, Lassie bridged between the looming workaday world and the leisured
sacrality of the Sabbath, or at least the vestigial memory of Sunday school and
Sunday services. By the time the credits rolled, and Lassie sat center-screen,
her paw extended in a gesture simultaneously offertory and benediction,
American viewers had been primed to consider their small suburban haven as the
repository in the present of the long-standing moral center of a nation blessed
from the first by Providence– Nature’s nation, and God’s chosen.
The cultural landscape of tvland was
overwhelmingly sociable, social, and socializing. Not so with Lassie. Instead, the show reinforced an older, more
conservative picture of family as “haven in a heartless world”, to quote the
cultural critic Christopher Lasch; it returned to a cultural constellation that
had dominated in the earliest years of the 20th century but had long
since waned. In this older model, the
world outside the family was dangerous, unregulated, threatening, requiring
canniness, moral strength, and a particularly masculine form of competitive
instinct, if one were to survive out there.
Men went into that world, and in the process tested their moral fiber
against the amoral anarchy of the marketplace; women remained in the home,
buttressing its protective walls with religiosity and making it a place of
resuscitation for the man, nurturance for the child. Children were innocent vessels, thirsting for
experience, and it was the responsibility of the parents to fill that vessel
with appropriate character-building attributes and experiences, while
protecting the child from bad influences.
This is not to say that life only
occurred on the farm itself. There were
numerous episodes in which Timmy and Paul, with or without Lassie, went to
Calverton, or even to the larger city beyond the borders of the show’s putative
geography. Indeed, the show’s few
multi-episode epics involved travels far beyond the farm– most famously, in the
1962 three-part series, “The Odyssey,” which brought Lassie home from the city
by a series of episodic adventures.
But the ending of that series echoed
with precision the larger dynamic of the show: Lassie came home. Home, indeed, was more than setting; it was
moral axis and ideal set in physical form.
Family without place was not enough; witness the kinfolk of “Okies” who
arrived, with laughable anachronism, in a car built by Props from a photograph
by Dorothea Lange made in 1936, to seek help from the Martins. They had each other, but it was home they
needed. This was a message reiterated in
another episode, in which Timmy and Lassie discovered a motherless family
squatting in a vacant house. In both
cases, the families were resuscitated by the ministrations of the Martins (and,
of course, Lassie) and then went on their way in a continuing search for a
place as good as that of their benefactors.
Indeed, when the Okies reappeared, in a melodramatic Christmas episode,
they were returning from California to their ancestral home, having finally
learned the lesson that place mattered.
Lassie, then, did more than simply transpose
older rural values to the suburban home (though, certainly, it did that), or
reset the suburban idyll of the present in a rural past-as-present, resecting
the two adjacent locales of American yeoman virtue (though it did that, too):
it brought into focus linked, underlying cultural nightmares: a present marked by alienation from the past,
loss of meaning and purpose, a hollow prosperity and a shrill sociability
masking underlying anomie; a future in which the reassuring American landscape
would be stripped bare, rendered toxic by clouds of fallout sweeping like the
mythic dust clouds of an earlier era, breadbasket Eden turned to punitive
wasteland.
But all these pronouncements
overreach; they deny the very nature of the mature television rhetoric. Yes: fear of nuclear holocaust and the larger
debate about the ethics of the fallout shelter and the social form of the
post-Apocalyptic world were matters that nibbled at the edges of daily
consciousness in 1958. Yes: most
American viewers recognized the somewhat shrill artificiality of all that
sociable cheeriness in the other shows.
And yes: the show worked these elements into its alchemy. But the
immediate influences around Lassie began with its time slot, its
competition, the shows immediately before and after it. Remember: Lassie came on not after
the news, but instead of it.
If we think of this Sunday-supper moment
in the television-watching week as the axis of transition between weekend and
week, then the longrunning popularity of Lassie
despite its fundamentally undramatic, even unchanging character makes sense. Lassie knit the soon-to-disintegrate
family (the family watching, that is,
in the last hours before Monday school, work, responsibility, anxiety) into a
cocoon of nostalgic harmony, a nostalgia for the past, and for the past few
hours and days, simultaneously. Watching
Lassie, you were encouraged to forget the squabbles and conflicts, and
reweave your immediate and your cultural memory into a warm blanket.
*****
City Life
The dominant cultural landscapes of
tvland were nostalgic and retrospective, whether in fiction or in fact. Frontier settings were distant: in geography,
from the dominant audiences (Cheyenne, Wyoming, the state capitol, got a TV
station in 1954, but it had no network affiliation for years; Bozeman, Montana,
didn’t get a network feed until 1957); and in time, taking place in a mythic 19th-century
moment that might best be described as the “heroic-then” tense. Rural landscapes were also places of yearning
and learning, where the yearning was predicated upon the impossibility of
returning. Cities, however—real, or
represented on tv—were different. They
were often places where you still lived (saving up to leave), or places you’d
just moved out of. They were also
places to which you or your parent or spouse returned to work, and where you
went to shop, to be entertained, to be educated.
By 1958, television had constructed
three types of American urbanity. One
was dark, corrupt, requiring forces of authority to punish the wicked, who
sought to hide in the crowds and the anonymous apartment blocks outside of
which the Dragnet cop-car parked as
the boys went in to make the collar. One was grey and stultifying, a place of
hopelessness, grinding down the virtuous and the wicked alike: a place to
escape, as soon as possible, and a place to which tv returned you to remind you
of how lucky you had it out there in Levittown.
And then there was the vestigial city of glamour, bright lights,
excitement. It wasn’t where you lived,
exactly. It was where you went for fun:
it was Broadway, Times Square, Central Park, the museums; it was the downstairs
jazz club where Peter Gunn’s detective
girlfriend sang smoky come-hither songs.
By 1958,
though, the glittering city was rapidly being assimilated and transformed by a
new and strange hybrid, in which urbanity became entertainment, and television
itself became the unmoored, postgeographic locale for American glamor.
The new crop of tv hits appropriated
the glittery out-on-the-town urbanity of the ‘30s and ‘40s movies, down to the
celebrities who populated every nightclub, theater and apartment-house
lobby. But these new shows were an odd hybrid
of real and (to anticipate) virtual. They
weren’t shows about the city; they were shows about television, and television’s cornucopia of entertainment,
excitement, financial jackpot and high-stakes gambling. With gusto, they appropriated
all the residual virtues of the city, packed them onto a tv studio equipped
with minimal sets and props, and beamed them to the box in your living room
. Quiz shows, variety shows (Ed Sullivan), even comedy-varieties like
The Jackie Gleason Show all took
television as the place where the old rags-to-riches,
off-the-farm-to-the-glittery-city narrative could be played out.
Why was television excising the city
from America’s cultural geography? In a
word: race.
By 1958, Brown v. Board of
Education had made racial integration of the public schools, and by
extension ethnic and class integration, the law of the land. 1955's hedge on
the part of the Supreme Court, the call for “all deliberate speed,” had granted
municipalities and school boards a little breathing room. But the expected shift toward integration in
the physical and cultural environment didn’t follow. American cities grew blacker and poorer,
suburbs whiter and more prosperous, and television’s America remained white.[iii]
The dour presentation of the city’s
left-behinds didn’t show the Kramdens of that Gleason show-in-a-show The Honeymooners talking about the
niggers on Ralph’s bus or the little troublemaking pickanninies in the kids’
classes; Ralph and Alice didn’t have kids, so the integration of the public
schools didn’t have to concern them.
They could be white, working class, and urban, without the discourse of
racism that pervaded that class of actual Americans in 1958. Similarly, shows like Dragnet and The
Naked City and Peter Gunn didn’t show black hoodlums or pimps, drug
dealers or fences. They didn’t have to;
anyone who’d left the city in fear during the great exodus knew what those
rat-faced culprits stood in for.
But the nature of this wholesale
denial had an added benefit for white viewers.
Excising black men and women from the roster of losers populating the
dark city made the exodus to the suburbs into something other than a racial
matter. There weren’t any black children
in Beaver’s class, or Wally’s, or Timmy’s, or Danny Thomas’s kid’s class
either. Nor were there black comedians where Danny worked, or black musicians
in Ricky Ricardo’s band. There was just the back-talking black maid to give the
Danny Thomas family a dose of further dysfunctionality– but then, they were the
family that didn’t take the hint and
move out of the city. Outside of Amos ‘n’ Andy, which ran on network
primetime only from ‘51 to ‘53, and then moved into local rerun status, there
wasn’t really any black presence outside of the occasional entertainer on the
variety shows and the anachronisms of black servants who appeared once in a
while. [4]
(The short career of The Nat King Cole Show, which stumbled through the
1956-57 season sponsorless, got only a 19% audience share, and trailed even the
travel-doc Bold Journey, confirmed the networks’ attitude.)[5]
By stripping tvland of reference to America’s most intractable failure, the
television industry offered a powerful incentive to the guilty perpetrators and
beneficiaries of racism to return to the nightly glow, as a dreamland where
history could be recast, even reinvented, without its dangerous ethical edges.
Yet the city still could glisten, it
could beckon and reward, in that glowing corner of the living room. What the city offered, in televised form, was
an electronic, placeless substitute for one of the most significant actual
functions of the postwar city– entertainment.
In this, the urban landscape on tv highlighted and presaged an important
phenomenon: the way that new forms of ephemeral, imaginative cultural
landscapes came to substitute for, render redundant, and even eliminate, the
material landscapes that had preceded them.
It was the city that was most directly
affected by television’s hegemony. Even as the triumphant rise of television as
an industry gave new economic energy to New York City and Los Angeles, its
imaginative productions took over and rendered increasingly immaterial the
function of the city as a place of real, as opposed to virtual, entertainment,
held in real physical environments and requiring negotiations across the many
boundaries of neighborhood and nationality, poverty and wealth, ethnicity,
race, and all the other messy conditions that characterized the city as a
social and cultural space. As television
increasingly appropriated the glamorous city, it also supplanted it; now one
could go to bed and watch a nightclub act or a variety show, without staying up
late, paying for a babysitter, or facing a long drive home. Dozing in the chair or, later, in the bed,
you might be momentarily awakened by a burst of canned laughter from an
audience, to see a celebrity chatting with a celebrity in front of a glittering
cityscape of light and plane, while you and yours could watch-- safe and sound
in Scarsdale or Wilmette or Fullerton-- a city purified of its complexity, its
heterogeneity.
In a further twist, however, the
physical city adapted to this appropriation and redefinition. As the televised city rented, and sanitized,
the glamour of the physical one, real cities changed. North Beach, Venice, West 4th St.
and Rush St. themselves grew smaller, harder, more advanced, taking on an
urbanity that spat at the unhip. With television offering bland comedy, the
city standup clubs lost their mainstream functions, and Lenny Bruce arrived,
free from any hope of hitting it big on the little screen, making a sort of
comedy that celebrated the gulf between tv humor and hip humor. With tv music at its best written by Henry
Mancini, at its worst just the rote cueing-up of hack tape-loopers, American
jazz moved further out, testing time signatures and decentered tonal systems
that would have been utterly useless to television. With Thurber and Cheever and Updike out in
Stamford and the Hamptons and Chappaqua, the city became a home for Kerouac,
Corso and Ginsberg. Promising to unite
the nation in a triumphant consensus, television’s effect was sometimes to the
contrary.
******
Missing
Work
By the 1958 season, tvland’s suburbanization
had colonized the middle landscapes of small town life and rural virtue, and
extended into urban and wilderness frontiers alike. Lucy moved from Manhattan to
Connecticut, first in realtime (in 1957), then recurrently, in reruns on CBS
Thursdays from 7:30-8, in local station syndication at other times, and
irregularly, on the Desilu Playhouse. The Real McCoys migrated
from the hinterlands to the Valley. Father
Knows Best took over the midsize city of Springfield; but it could have
been Montauk, or Shaker Heights, Ohio, or Highland Park, Illinois, or any other
of the upper-middle-class suburbs springing up in the later ‘50s along the
arterial superhighways that the National Defense Highways Act of 1954 had
enabled– freeways and tollways that
extended the older dualism of city and suburb to greater and greater distances,
marked by mileage if not (temporarily) by commute time. The suburbanization of America during the
‘50s and early ‘60s was marked by any number of significant shifts in cultural
practice and social engagement– not least the shift in commuting method from
rail and bus to automobile, and by consequence from a social intermingling to
an isolate, meditative experience within a very expensive cocoon.
One of the characteristics of the new
American landscape lay in the greater isolation of the household that it
encouraged and sustained– distancing young families from intergenerational
contact, and hence from a more organic means of passing along traditions and
histories; from the workplace, which increasingly was characterized by a dense,
vertically organized, skyscraper urban environ, even as residential housing
flattened and spread; from commercial and service hubs, like supermarkets and
town halls, which required cars to get to and hence didn’t surface as familiar
landmarks of an errand walk; from neighbors, as lot sizes increased and one
didn’t hear one’s next-doors fighting, singing, gossiping, making love or
punishing their children; and family members one from another, as larger houses
and smaller families combined with the general sprawl of suburban life to
separate children from parents and from each other, just as parents were
separated from each other by the spreading bounds of space and time.
For the working adult, too, isolation
and dislocation seemed increasingly the character of the era. Time to and from work didn’t necessarily
expand, but the sense of distance and difference increased. Each commute involved a series of distinct
steps: one drove, first, backwards, out of the driveway, head turned 180°, or eyes focused on the rear-view
mirror; then shifted from Reverse to Drive, and idled carefully along the
subdivision street to the arterial road. A rigid, stoplit interlude took one
out of house and home and into the commercial strip; after that, there was the
turn onto the freeway, thruway, tollway, expressway, turnpike or simply highway
(subtle variants on a common landscape that was fundamentally different than
any before it– a sanitized greensward marked not by the rusticated fences and
rusticated stone of the overpasses and bridges in the predecessor parkways, but
by the bland efficiency of the concrete, smooth and undistinctive not least to
limit sharp edges when accidents occurred); over the next few minutes, time,
too, changed– the car slowed, distances that were moments ago traversed in a
flash now requiring long quarter-hours to pass; then the exit curved onto the
city street, not any longer a place of particularity, of tradition and life,
but an artery hardened at its sides to protect the poor who now lived along it,
in its crumbling residues of a past neighborhood; stop light after stop light
syncopated and thwarted, so you arrived, frustrated, keyed up and tired, at the
city center, with its vertical surfaces; and then slid downward or upward into
the parking garage, made the quick walk up the sidewalk to the
elevator-mezzanine, crowded into the elevator itself and then, finally, came to
the floor, the office, the desk. After
such a trip, and a reverse return in the dusk or darkness, what participant
could have seen the American landscape as continuous? Instead, the experience spoke of fragmenting
discontinuity; each small segment of the geography of daily life a sharp shard
separate from the others.
Against this condition, television’s
suburban idyll set itself not as a reflection but a resection– it sought to
deny the reality of American anomie, or to explain it as a part of a long rural
tradition (as Lassie did), or to
redefine it as a noble sacrifice, or to propose, in comedic form, American life
as a current alternating sleep or death (the workplace) with rejuvenation, in
the lap of the family. On tv, the
commuter experience was a sort of dumbbell life, with a narrow, and usually
unseen, connecting bar between work and home.
Why was work largely absent from the
suburban comedies? Labor may have simply
been too complex and loaded a part of American life to fit comfortably in the
idealized world of the sitcom. A series of books generally considered seminal
to the self-image of American Cold War culture had already proposed a bleak
image of work in the prosperous consensus society. Sociologist C. Wright Mills had written a lacing
but widely praised and widely read study of the emptiness of the new
middle-class professions. His book
succeeded by only a year Reisman’s equally unsettling assessment, The Lonely
Crowd. Writing The Organization
Man in 1956, William H. White described the alienation of work in terms
that were clearly drawn from Mills’s critique:
men and women who “not only work for the organization... they belong to
it as well. They are the ones of our middle class who have left home,
spiritually as well as physically, to take the vows of organization life, and
it is they who are the mind and soul of our great self‑perpetuating
institutions.”[6]
Mills’s own book was reissued that year, along with his new study, The Power
Elite. Sloan Wilson’s The Man in
the Gray Flannel Suit, published in 1955, was a major motion picture,
starring Gregory Peck, in 1956. There,
Peck struggled with the moral emptiness, the boredom, and the social corruption
of his new workplace, the public relations department of the United
Broadcasting Corporation. Wilson’s
critique, and Peck’s, focused on television as a force that simultaneously
destroyed its employees and its
viewers, by a similar sort of moral flattening, and also by pitting the
temptations of the broadcasting world against those of the nurturing
family. Significantly, both Tom Roth
(Peck’s character) and his immediate boss had to choose between the demands and
temptations of the workplace and the sustenance of family– while his superior
had chosen the workplace, the vision of his tumultuous and, finally, tragic
family life served as a cautionary lesson to Roth, and the novel and movie ended,
improbably but appropriately, in the bosom of a renewed family life.
The tv shows beamed out by the United
Broadcasting Corporation couldn’t actually mirror author Wilson’s story, nor
could they critique the soulless turn which capitalist labor had taken, in
sociologist Mills’s analysis, or lament the loss of the “inner-directed man” in
Reisman’s text. That would have been industry suicide. But they could rebut the critiques of all
three, recasting the narrative to put white-collar work in synchronous step
with the needs of sponsors and the general flow of mass culture toward family
and home life. In televised situations,
white-collar workers never worked, or they never seemed to work, or their work
seemed never to be work– or their work just never showed up on screen, directly
or indirectly.
Work, then, wasn’t so much a subject
for television; instead, it was a looming absence. In one of a now-infamous series of television
ads for Anacin, a white-collar husband enters a kitchen that is brimming with
good cheer, and he erupts in rage.
“Control yourself!... Sure you’re tense,
irritable, but don’t take it out on her!” says the echoing voice of the
social-science superego. A companion ad
clarified the cause, and the condition, of workplace alienation, in images that
contrasted the anonymous workplace and the bucolic ranch-house home.[iv]
“Pain mounts up; you feel dull,
depressed; tension puts nerves on edge…” intoned the narrator, behind his
nightly-newscast desk. This was what
work did to you. And the cure?
Not simply Anacin, but the larger therapeutic environment of television
itself, providing you with answers that worked, anodynes that took the edge off
nerves, replacing dullness and depression with entertainment and
sociability. There, as the welcoming
glow of the tv set drew the dissonant family into harmony, the immediate
stresses of the world of work faded, even as the larger import, the national
mission, burnished that labor and returned it to its place in the sweep of
American destiny.
******
Manufactured
Landscapes
By the later ‘50s, a quality of
manneredness had found its way into television. The most important monument to
television’s celebration of itself was Walt Disney, originally Disneyland
and, in 1958, titled Walt Disney Presents. Here all the regions of tvland were united;
indeed, it’s tempting to see this show as the place where the very concept of a
television geography was proposed, tested, established, then repeated with
variation until it became a tradition and an expectation.
Disneyland was a microcosm of television
programming in its mature state. The
show took many of the nascent or even previously unsuccessful genres that were
competing in early ‘50s television and assembled them, modified them, and
presented them in truncated form within its hour. It was a variety show, but rather than taking
the proscenium stage as its venue, Disneyland took television itself.
From the beginning (in 1954), it asserted itself as a place to be mapped and
explored. The early structure was
explicit: four episodes of approximately 12 minutes each, introduced and
concluded by Tinkerbell, whose magic wings enabled viewers to travel from one
region to the next: Frontierland, Fantasyland, Tomorrowland, and Adventureland.
Exotic live-animal and nature episodes dominated Adventureland’s segments;
Tomorrowland was the place where science fiction and fantasy competed with
documentaries concerning the space race, geophysics, imaginary cities of the
future, and the like. Fantasyland was
the segment allowing Disney’s crew to recycle older animated-movie footage of
fairy tales, or test new possibilities.
Frontierland was the locale for Disneyland’s
first major audience-grabber; there, Fess Parker and Buddy Ebsen (later to be
the paterfamilias of the Beverly Hillbillies, in one of those castings
designed to confirm the interpenetration of the celebrity landscape with the
mythic) presented Davy Crockett: King of the Wild Frontier in three
episodes that later expanded in response to demand, resuscitating Crockett by
introducing moments surrounding those in the first set of episodes– prequels,
sequels, simulquels.
As Disney told it, Crockett was a
mountain man who was also a Child of Nature, a nattily dressed, dandified
buckskin version of James Fenimore Cooper’s original American wilderness hero, Natty
Bumppo. A master of woodcraft, he could
light a fire with friction, read tracks and traces with unerring accuracy,
plant and harvest, preach and pray; most importantly, however, he used these
skills to guide emigrants from domesticated lands out to the frontier, and help
them settle until, like some Currier&Ives chromo, he combined the entire
history of the frontier into one moment– or, more accurately, one episode.
“Frontierland,” with its plainspoken,
hero and its wider panorama of expansionism and American destiny, served as the
touchstone for the quadrant of fantasy landscapes within Disney’s America. Americans
needed to dream of the future, and bring it into being. They needed to release their ambitions and
energies on the exploring of new lands and the making of new empires– the globe
was the new frontier, as much as outer space.
And, faced with the exhausting responsibilities attendant upon the
residents of a City Upon a Hill, Americans needed respite and escape; but trust
to them– they would find in Fantasyland the echoes of the other regions and
would draw from fairy tales and enchanted dreams the lessons necessary to make
a world that could combine the responsibilities of adulthood with the wonder
and innocence of childhood.
Disneyland appropriated, but it also competed
with, the older mythic geography of America.
In Disneyland all places were novel and distinct from our own
experience; they reminded or anticipated, amplified or transformed our
experience without directly referring to it.
We didn’t have to find ourselves in Disneyland– every destination was an
escape.[7]
With Disneyland, the fantasies of tvland gave birth to physical places
and commercial products, anticipating a later America in which the virtual and
the real interpenetrated. Thanks to Davy Crockett, Disneyland
spawned an industry of souvenirs, from popguns to moccasins and, of course,
coonskin caps with tails. What
self-respecting child of that era didn’t own one? They were a novel introduction to American
cultural life– souvenirs of an experience the purchaser had never had. Buying a Davy Crockett hat, or getting one
for Christmas, linked one to the huge, invisible, even metaphysical community
of others who’d watched the episodes, transported from living room to Kentucky
forest. Wearing that cap, playing the
games it served as costume for, completed a complex imaginative journey from
past to present, without once stopping in the regions of reality, historical,
physical, or experiential.
The most suggestive of Disneyland’s
inventions, innovations, and appropriations lay, again, in the cross-axis
bullseye of physical and virtual, of artifice and reality: the interpenetration
of the show and the theme park, Disneyland and Disneyland. By the time Disney and his auteurs
were done, it’s hard to imagine that any part of reality, as a
concept or as an experiential category, was left untransformed.
The connection of physical,
entertainment, and ethereal landscapes was imbedded in Walt Disney’s plans for
his park and for his television debut, alike. Throughout the early ‘50s, all three of the
networks had been courting Disney himself and his organization– for where else
could one get the certified high-quality animation teams and the
already-established cartoon and animated characters so prized by tv’s magnet
demographic, the children? Children
would make their parents watch; families seeking to stay families in the face
of the disintegrating temptations of television would capitulate to a kid’s
cries and, watching, be captivated. In
addition, Disney had money– deep pockets that might be used by the winning
studio to undertake often arduous and expensive projects that could then serve
and be served by television’s intimate relation to home and family.
But Disney demanded that the networks
fund him; specifically, he wanted them investing in the not-yet-built
Disneyland. ABC was desperate; as of
1954 it hadn’t ever had a major hit series, and that year it took the plunge,
putting a half-million dollars into the financing of the park, and ponying up
another $50,000 every time it aired a show.
The result was a fabulous success for all concerned; ABC got its first
hit, and it got a vested interest in an entertainment form that could buffer
the shocks of seasonal success and failure on the television programming
front. Disney got the park itself, and
an hour’s worth of free advertising for the venue, on primetime tv, for 36
years.
This innovation in entertainment
capitalism was crucial for the future of the American entertainment
industry. It pioneered not just the
concept of the entertainment conglomerate but the idea of collaborations
possible among what might otherwise be competing entities within the industry–
fluid assemblies that might be tightly linked on one project, loosely
affiliated on another, active competitors on a third, all without animus,
conflict of interest, tests of loyalty or government probes into dicey areas of
legality vis-a-vis monopoly, say, or diversion of funds, fraud, or deceptive
practices. (All of this was in the ideal,
of course, as the entertaining history of the entertainment industry shows.)
And it proposed and prototyped links
among media that enabled creative and commercial products to move fluidly from
studio to studio, character to character, writer to writer, medium to
medium. Davy Crockett didn’t just spin
off hats, shoes and guns; he sang a theme song that was a wild top-10 pop
success, though Fess Parker’s recording wasn’t quick or good enough to beat out
the Bill Hayes version. This interplay
between television and radio, in which the current of creative novelty went the
other way for perhaps the first time, opened up possibilities that Rick Nelson
would exploit, among many others, some years later.
Disneyland’s contributions to the “industry” of
television are legion. But its
contributions to the transformation of American culture aren’t limited to those
specifics, important as they are– specifics like the establishment of the
three-network corporate competition (by saving ABC from bankruptcy), as well as
those financial and creative combinations we’ve already seen in their nascent
forms. Disneyland proved to
television’s principals a hypothesis they’d been incompletely and hesitantly
testing for some time: the idea of building an almost-symphonic medium, in
which shows that succeeded one another on a given night formed one melodic
line, while the recurrent weekly episodes of each show formed another; offshoot shows, reruns, syndications,
specials, and the like could all be set in service of building a deeply
attractive cultural form, one to which, week after week, the most important
Americans– those who bought and sold, talked and voted– could be drawn. And Disney embraced the notion of television
as a means of social engineering. Disney
offered education in everything from the history of the frontier to the theory
of gravity; it offered nostrums about citizenship; it presented the social and
the sociable as prime values, to which the individual must always have to
defer, but could defer to gladly, with a sacrifice that paid in spades.
But from the distance of another
millennium, the most significant contribution of the show lay in its oblique
proposal that the virtual American landscape could interpenetrate with the
physical and the real, could mine it, inflect it, compete with it and, perhaps,
eventually, supplant it. On October 15th
of 1958, while Jeff sat in his living room, watched by those in their living
rooms, who looked from the darkness of primetime night at the daylight of a
house almost certainly larger, more orderly, less neurotic, and more prosperous
than their own, Disney’s Davy Crockett took on another function: at Yucca
Flats, Nevada. There, the Atomic Energy
Commission set off a superlightweight atomic bomb, officially named after the
Disney frontier sensation. That bomb was part of a test codenamed Hamilton,
part of a series codenamed Hardtack II. Hardtack II Hamilton Davy Crockett: with that interleaving of names, the AEC
bureaucrats had condensed all three of the dominant American consensus myths of
the later 1950s-- Pilgrims undergoing the hardships of the Atlantic crossing ,
subsisting on hardtack biscuit, gave
way to the idealist demeanor of the Revolution’s founding father, Hamilton, who then yielded to the
democrat-frontiersman, Crockett.[8]
Don’t for a moment think that this is
coincidence or retrospective irony. The
men and women of the scientific, military, security, and industrial “complex”
that invented these names were more than casually aware of the relationships
they were making. Some may have approved
the names for their dark irony (the Berkeley/Livermore scientists named their
Hardtack II tests after the fairies in A
Midsummer Night’s Dream); others for the straightforward connection of Cold
War weaponry with the longer tradition of Injun-killing and space-taming that
Crockett represented. Still others might
have hoped (chimerically, it appears) that naming a miniaturized atomic weapon
(designed to fit into a Ford sedan) after a Disney character would tame the
fears that might be awakened by a press release announcing the successful
testing of such a weapon.
That first “Davy Crockett”
fizzled in the testing grounds of Yucca Flats, in the heart of the American
West. On October 29th, a
second attempt with Davy Crockett, this time as part of a test named after the
great Romantic explorer Alexander von Humboldt, succeeded.
“Davy Crockett” was one of 77 atomic tests in 1958,
the number that year was greater than all three previous top-test years combined.
The atomic defense sector was responding aggressively to its own
audience-sampling– recognizing that the steadily increasing pressure from
American citizens to stop all testing, unilaterally if need be, could soon move
a military-industrial President to turn on them.
Time to hurry; time to blow. And not just for the benefit of the
scientists, or the politicians, or the Soviets.
About every 4½ days through the year (though in fact more often in
summer and fall, especially during the weeks of the new tv season’s rollout)
another atomic test ripped (or failed to rip) the American landscape of
possibility out there in the West or in the palm-fronded utopias of Eniwetak,
Bikini, Johnson and the other South Sea islands. Each picture in the magazines,
each report in the newspapers, each bulletin in the nightly television news
provided another reason to retreat to the solace and the reassurance of the
narratives television told—narratives in which Americans were once again
blessed, triumphant, prosperous and prospering.
*******
Coda: American Bandstand
There’s
something else that underlies– and undercuts– the reassuring orderliness of
Jeff’s television-watching on The Donna Reed Show that late December
afternoon. It’s what Jeff, and more
importantly, Mary, weren’t watching that afternoon: by far the most
popular afternoon show ever, outgunning its competition by more than
two-to-one, a show that could boast 45,000 letters a week from its fans,
and had contributed sufficiently to the reincarnation of ABC that the network
gave it a Saturday night slot, too, replacing a family-fun quiz show in
midseason: Dick Clark’s American Bandstand.[9]
American Bandstand was a derivative, bowdlerized,
corporatized dilution of that vibrant interracial synergy of teenagers, music
and physicality which it purported to represent on afternoon tv and, even more
fully, on prime time. Clark focused both
shows on “top 40", a format of popular radio whose rigid formula extended
to the programming of songs based upon sales polling of “singles,” 45rpm
records favored by teenagers for their cheapness and hence the rapidity with
which they could shift with fashion. Under
its sedate televised veneer seethed the energy of a counter-culture that lay
beneath, behind, and ahead of it.
By rights, Mary should have been
dancing with her girlfriends in front of the tv; the show ran for 90 minutes
after school, and its audience was predominantly female, white, middle-class
and teenaged. A show on that topic would have pitted Donna and
Alex against their teen daughter, and the grounds would have passed beyond
homework-time (after all, Mary wasn’t doing her homework that afternoon anyway–
she was worrying about her prom dress), to questions of proper dress, dating,
and– perhaps most poisonously– race.
For 1958 was the year that Dick Clark
brought the Silhouettes onstage to sing “Get a Job.” The Silhouettes were a
black group, and the song was simultaneously about poverty, race and
teenagerdom– about the struggle to find and keep work in a recession when you
were the youngest, least experienced, and least respected. It was, as historian Ed Ward points out, one
of the first rock and roll songs to take something other than love or the
trivial travails of teendom as its subject– and it was certainly the first by a
black group to rocket that idea to multimillion sales on the integrated music
scene.[10]
While The Silhouettes’ appearance on
television broke with the medium’s overwhelmingly white face, Clark had long
been involved with the interracial nature of rock and roll and with its
complicated dance of intermixture, appropriation, adaptation, theft and display. In January of 1958, Clark’s influence over pop
music had pressured the Italian-American group Danny & the Juniors to
rewrite a racy Do the Bob into a teen-scream At the Hop; that
week, the group premiered the song on the last days of an Alan Freed rock and
roll show at the Paramount in Brooklyn.
They were there with Buddy Holly & the Crickets and the Everly
Brothers but also the Twintones, Lee Andrew and the Hearts, Jerry Lee Lewis and
Fats Domino. With a multiracial lineup
and a multiracial audience, Freed’s live shows ran six-a-day for almost two
weeks, and on Christmas Day alone had 20,000 fans in line, starting at 5:30 in
the morning, and requiring more than thirty policemen to keep the largely
female crowd orderly.
Who were these fans? They were, Freed declared, teenagers and,
increasingly, college students too.
Interviewed by Billboard magazine, Freed pointed out that “kids
have been exposed to it for four or five years... and it looks to me as though
the colleges will be completely saturated with rock and roll.” And Dick Clark
took it further: “There’s never been a time when so many different kinds of
music were popular at one and the same time...”[11]
Clark didn’t just mean styles– he meant racial, ethnic, class and geographical
origins. Through his shows, his
publishing companies, his record labels, and his promotional vehicles, he saw
himself as funneling these American heterogeneities to a broad new audience
that included such variances but transcended them amalgamated them, united more
by commonalities than dispersed by difference. And, of course, profiting by his
near-monopoly.
To look at the year’s string of #1
hits, month by month, confirms Clark’s declaration: while Danny and the Juniors
were singing “At the Hop” following Fats Domino’s “Blueberry Hill” and Jerry
Lee Lewis’s “Shake, Rattle and Roll” at the Paramount, Pat Boone’s blandly pop
“April Love” was #1. March the first,
the Silhouettes had the top slot, pushing out Danny and the Juniors. Down the list: Elvis, the Champs, The Platters, David
Seville, the Everly Brothers, Sheb Wooley (The
Purple People-Eater) , the Coasters,
Perez Prado, Rick Nelson, Domenico Modugno (Volare!) The Elegants, Tommy
Edwards, country star Conway Twitty, Hootenanny folk-popsters the Kingston
Trio, Phil Spector (as The Teddy Bears), and finally David Seville and the
Chipmunks singing their Christmas hit, The Chipmunk Song. Next to each other on even the top-40
playlists of the corporatized djs on the national chain-stations you’d have
heard Jimmy Rogers singing “Are You Really Mine,” as bland a pop song as you
could get,[v]
and then James Brown’s “Try Me,” a song that broke right out of the prison of R&B
“race” music to propose a new form: Soul.
Black and white, Italian, Armenian and Hispanic, rural and urban, Voodoo
and extraterrestrial: all appeared as performers or characters in 1958's #1
list.
This polyglot culture was all the more
impressive given the restraining forces of network conglomeration and monopoly
that had come to characterize rock and roll radio, and the mass-production
songwriting and producing teams that served the industry from the Brill
Building in New York. Lieber and Stoller
had written Jailhouse Rock for Elvis Presley in 1957; in ‘58, their Yackety
Yak (Don’t Talk Back) went to the Coasters, young, ebullient and black. Soon the other Brill Building writers would
choose not only among black and white, doo-wop and sweet, but also between
giving their songs out to others, and singing them themselves, introducing
themselves as singer-songwriters, troubadours, celebrants and protesters.
Clark and the cultural spokespeople he
represented were doing more than simply channeling black music to white
audiences or converting black performances into white ones. When he took over the Philadelphia tv show Bandstand in
1956, Clark resolved to mute the more disorderly and sexualized forms of
R&B, but he didn’t ban it by any means.
This was a major endorsement of a larger development; throughout the
early years of rock and roll, the tendency had been to cover black R&B hits
with blander, white-performed versions that would then go to djs for mainstream
programming. The Platters had broken that
trend in 1955, when their song “Only You” was covered by the Hilltoppers, a
white hillbilly-collegiate band, who took it from its premiere position on the
R&B charts up to #8 in the Billboard “Hot 100". Just weeks later, the Platters’ own version
shoved it aside and rose to #5. Clark
understood what this meant– white teenagers, who dominated the
single-purchasing market, were more interested in the push of the beat and the
raw tension of the vocal harmonies than in the question of race. They wanted authenticity, and he would give
it to them, albeit in a television-sanitized form.
On American Bandstand, Mary
would have seen, and heard, not just black doo-wop groups but the more raucous
sounds of R&B, the black roots of rock and roll. Even more important, though, Mary might have witnessed
something no television watcher would find anywhere else on national network
tv: black and white couples sharing an American space: the dance floor. Clark came from Philadelphia, and he’d had
personal experience with racial integration.
At least two of his favored Italian-boy hitmakers came from an
integrated high school, and they pushed their black classmates on Clark (that’s
how Chubby Checker ended up with his hit, The Twist); more importantly,
Clark saw the integrated high school and its lunchroom, assemblies, and weekend
gym dances, as the source and model for his show. He was the chaperone, but he was more than
that– he was also the hip teacher, just a few years older, sympathetic, a
negotiator between the worlds of teen life and adult authority.
So when he arrived on the show—then
still a local enterprise, on Philadelphia’s WFIL—he told the producers to
expect black audience members, and to include them in the dance shots. But while Clark’s own memory paints him as a
diehard integrationist, the reality was more dour and more complex, especially
as Clark and his producers courted and then achieved, network affiliation and
national status. [12]
On one side, Clark was shamelessly
borrowing from a fellow-Philadelphian’s black dance show—Mitch Thomas, and the
WPFH/WVUE-aired Mitch Thomas Show.
Indeed, when the 26-year-old Clark was drafted to host Bandstand, the clean-cut white boy turned to local black DJs like Georgie
Woods and Hy Lit for a crash course in the black roots of rock-and-roll, and it
was often through the conduit of their shows that American Bandstand found the black rock and roll hits and hitmakers.[13]
As a local show, Clark’s Bandstand might have conformed to the
more fluidly integrationist credo that Clark remembers. But in 1957 the show went national, and its
onstage audience and dancers now had to conform to a national network code that
kept black participants to a bare minimum—in 1958, the New York Post quoted one of the dance regulars who reported a limit
of eight or nine black teenagers per show.[14]
This was a policy that sanitized the
racially and ethnically integrated rock-and-roll dance scene in the major
American cities where this new youth culture was most rapidly and vibrantly
emerging, and especially with the Philadelphia scene from which American Bandstand drew its dancers, and
its audience. The result was a
largely-unheralded civil-rights campaign, by black teenagers and by white
regulars on the show, to force integration onto the dance floor. On the outside, organized groups of black
teens tested the process that filtered only the most presentable black couples
into the studio; on the inside, a few of the regulars pressed to get their
black high-school classmates and fellow-dancers onto the show.
Neither campaign succeeded: until 1966, when the show moved to
California, the network regulators kept the audience and the dance floor almost
entirely white, even as the performers, the music, and the dances were
increasingly black. Members of the core dance corps, who had maintained their
relationship with their black high-school classmates and who were avid watchers
of the local black dance shows, began to debut the new black dance crazes in
the controlled, well-dressed environment of the national show. At the same time, Clark and his programmer
avidly sought and then promoted the most energetic and ebullient of black
performers.
The result was complex. On one side, black dance was being
appropriated and recast in the guise of a blander white teendom, and black
musicians were, once again, merely entertainers for a white audience. But there was more to it than that. In the utterly white world of network
television, blackness was appearing, if only at the edges of the shots and in
the distance as the camera panned in on one couple or another.[15]
Mary Reed didn’t watch American
Bandstand. When she went to dances
in her network-constructed perfect suburb, there weren’t black couples from her
high school dancing on either side of her.
Instead, she prepared for a prom date in which the only color would be
found in the dress she was showing Donna in that episode where Jeff watched a
Western, full of quaint nostrums for a Cold War world.
But Mary’s carefully censored behavior
wasn’t the norm for her social cohort in the real world: sixteen year olds,
white, middle class, living in the suburbs within a short drive or train ride
from the major American cities and the college towns where Alan Freed was
taking his wildly integrated rock and roll road shows on a regular basis. In
Levittown, as across America, after-school American
Bandstand parties were the rule—rituals of passage: “learn the dances;”
“see what Justine was wearing;” “Rate the Records;” “dance, Philly style, of
course,” as a group of Levittowners from that era recounted.[16]
American television networks may have
managed to capture the living rooms, where children younger than Jeff, and
their parents, far older than Mary, basked in the glow. But Alan Freed had the teenagers, and the
America he showed them, the America they embraced, was integrated in ways their
parents might not have been able to imagine.
Standing in line before dawn on Christmas Day in New York City, around
the corner and down the block from the marquee announcing Alan Freed’s Jubilee, just about a year before this episode of Donna
aired, Mary’s real-life classmates shivered and gossiped with each other about
groups that they might or might not know from the radio were black, Italian,
Canadian, Hispanic; poor gang kids or middle-class suburbanites– in the lineup,
and on the line. Alan Freed (and soon
the Wolfman), Dick Clark and the other DJs, had already taught them the moves,
the tunes, the secret signals and the coded words that united them to each other even as they declared their independence from the
house where, soon, the lights of the Christmas tree would go on, and so would
the tv.
Notes
[i]Actually, as a genre the Western had enjoyed
significant airplay on the radio before shifting to television, and tv Westerns
had been staple fare from the earliest years.
But the particular kind of Western we’re talking about here was a more
limited affair, arriving in the later ‘50s, diminishing and then virtually
disappearing in the early ‘60s.
[ii] Consider, by contrast,
the extraordinary settings required to resuscitate the Western, three decades
later, in the remarkable Lonesome Dove.
[iii]It
would take more than a decade, and Norman Lear, to bring these tensions to
television; Lear took the Kramdens,
moved them into a house in an urban, working-class neighborhood (no doubt
evacuated by a panicked middle-class family in, say, 1961), and played the race
card, though timidly, with All in the Family.
[iv]
The Anacin ads in question have resurfaced, blessedly, thanks to YouTube.
The first was found in 2012 at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZtpuEDqFdmA
; the second, at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oeas5jtffpM&feature=related
.
[v] This was not the country
singer, but a popster, 25 years old, who’d first appeared as a contestant on The Arthur Godfrey Show.
[1] See, for example, two essential works from the period
itself: Leo Bogart, The Age of Television
(New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing
Co., 1958), which has detailed material drawn from a wide variety of market
surveys, viewing-pattern studies, and the like delineating trends and patterns
from 1951 to 1957; and Darrell Blaine Lucas and Stewart Henderson Britt, Measuring Advertising Effectiveness (New
York: McGraw-Hill, 1963), which
organized and compressed more than a decade of advertising market research
under the aegis of two marketing psychologists.
The standard history of television, indispensable, is Erik Barnouw’s
multi-volume study; the volume dealing with the ‘50s is Image Empire (Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 1970). Two other
secondary sources are especially valuable: William Boddy, Fifties Television: The Industry
and its Critics (Urbana, Illinois:
University of Illinois Press, 1995); and Patricia Mellencamp, ed., Logics of Television (Bloomington,
Indiana: Indiana University Press, 1990).
[2]
See, for example, “Daytime Television and the
Housewife Audience,” in Bogart, The Age
of Television, pp. 79-80.
[3]
Frederick Jackson Turner’s essay, originally
presented at the World’s Columbian Congress shortly before the 1893 Columbian
Exposition, was titled “On the Significance of the Frontier in American
History.” It went on to publication as an essay, as a book, and then over time
as a series ofrevisions and expansions through the rest of Turner’s life. While its substance has been challenged by
scholars at least since the publication in 1966 of Ray Allen Billington’s The Frontier Thesis: Valid Interpretation of American History?,
its force as myth remains unabated—as every presidential election recurrently
hammers home.
[4]
The standard source on the black presence in television is J. Fred McDonald, Blacks and White TV: African Americans in
Television Since 1948 (Chicago:
Nelson-Hall, 2nd. Ed., 1992.
In a typically brilliant analysis of Amos ‘n’ Andy, Gerard Jones
has suggested what the actors on the show themselves had long argued– that this
show, as televised, was a remarkable mediation between stereotype and
celebration of the black experience; the principal negative character always
got his comeuppance and his character was distinctly more unfavorable than he
had appeared on the earlier radio version, and the principal positive
characters were hard-working, committed to the American dream, and as devoted
to the ideals of family and community as any white suburban sitcom family might
be. See Gerard Jones, Honey I’m Home!
Sitcoms: Selling the American Dream (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1992),
pp. 48-61.
[5]”The
Nat ‘King’ Cole Show,” Tim Brooks and Earle Marsh, The Complete Directory to
Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows (New York: Ballantine Books, 1995),
p. 731; Mary Ann Watson, “The Nat ‘King’ Cole Show,” The Museum of Broadcast
Communications Encyclopedia of Television, web edition, http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/N/htmlN/natkingcole/natkingcole.htm. The case of Cole is also well presented in J.
Fred McDonald, Blacks and White TV,
pp. 64-71.
[6]William
Whyte, The Organization Man [intro, first page]
[7]
While
there are a surfeit of publications celebrating “the happiest place on
earth,” there are still not many solidly
analytical studies of this important American cultural landscape. The best
cultural and critical biography of Disney is Steven Watts, The Magic Kingdom: Walt Disney
and the American Way of Life (Columbia:
University of Missouri Press, 2001).
Disneyland’s design is well-described in the memoir of one of its
principal architects: John Hench, Designing
Disney (New York: Disney Editions,
2009). A recent anthology which argues for a cultural and ideological
interpretation of the Disney landscape is Kathy Merlock Jackson and Mark I.
West, eds., Disneyland and Culture: Essays on the Parks and Their Influence (Jefferson,
North Carolina: McFarland, 2010). Disneyland
is well-treated in John M. Findley, Magic
Lands: Westerncityscapes and American
Culture After 1940 (Berkeley and Los Angeles: The University of California Press, 1993),
pp. 56-118.
[8]
The code-naming of atomic tests was done by the
scientific and military community responsible for each test or series of
tests. Tests were named within a certain
basic protocol: series name, test bomb
name, actual test name.
[9]
Dick Clark himself penned an autobiography, Dick
Clark with Richard Robinson, Rock, Roll
and Remember (New York: Popular
Library, 1978), and a highly colored history of American Bandstand, Dick Clark
with Fred Bronson, Dick Clark’s American
Bandstand (New York, Harper Perennial, 1997); the more accurate and rich analysis is John
Jackson, American Bandstand: Dick Clark and the Making of a Rock’n’Roll
Empire (Oxford and New York: Oxford
University Press, 1997). Matthew F. Delmont’s doctoral dissertation, American Bandstand and School Segregation in
Postwar Philadelphia (Providence, Rhode Island: Brown University, 2008) offers a rich if
sometimes inconsistent analysis of race relations on the show; it is available online at http://repository.library.brown.edu:8080/fedora/objects/bdr:257/datastreams/PDF/content.
[10].Ed
Ward, Rock of Ages: The Rolling Stone History of Rock and Roll
(Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Rolling Stone Press/Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1986),
pp. 166-167.
[11].both
are quoted in Ed Ward, “The Fifties and Before,” Rock of Ages: The Rolling
Stone History of Rock and Roll (Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Rolling
Stone Press/Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1986), p. 169; Luke Crampton and Dafydd Rees, Rock
and Roll Year By Year (London and New York: DK Publishing, 2003), pp.
64-67.
[12]
The actual percentage of blacks on the show—as
audience and as performer, is more fully discussed in Matt Delmont, The Nicest Kids in Town: American Bandstand
and School Segregation in Postwar Philadelphia (University of California
Press, 2012).
[13]
Clark cheerfully admitted this in his
autobiography, Rock, Roll and Remember,
p. 71.
[14]
Gael Greene, “Dick Clark,” New York Post,
September 24, 1958, quoted in Delmont dissertation, p. 207.
[15]
The New
York Post’s anonymous informant reported that cameramen were instructed not
to focus their cameras on the black dancers. Ibid.
[16]
John Jackson also wrote the best biography of
Alan Freed, Big Beat Heat: Alan Freed and
the Early Years of Rock and Roll (New York:
Schirmer Books, 1991). The quotes are from Levittown’s Division High
School reunion website, run by Frank Barning, at http://theworldaccordingtofrankbarning.blogspot.com/search/label/American%20Bandstand-- the quotes are by Marilyn Monsrud Frese, Joan Bartels
Signorelli, and Barning himself

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