NRA Gun Control Arguments Predicted by ‘All in the Family’ (Video)

Norman Lear Producers Guild Awards - P 2011

Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images

Today’s controversial NRA press conference — in which executive vice president Wayne LaPierre recommended that “every single school in America” be equipped with armed guards — echoes loudly in this clip from a 1972 episode of All in the Family.

PHOTOS: Marketing Violence: Hollywood’s Posters For Early 2013 Movies 

Titled “Archie and the Editorial,” the episode features Archie Bunker — the family’s ignorant, proudly conservative patriarch — delivering a “man on the street” editorial on gun control for the local news.

“If it was up to me, I could stop the skyjackers tomorrow,” Archie, played by the late Carroll O’Connor, says, as his son-in-law — played by Rob Reiner — watches on in disbelief.

STORY: NRA Blames Video Games, Movies, Media for Gun Violence 

Archie continues: “All you gotta do is arm all your passengers. They just pass out the pistols at the beginning of the trip, and then pick them up again at the end. Case closed.”

The line draws huge laughs from the studio audience. 

Later in the episode, Archie is robbed at gunpoint by two men on the street who recognize him from TV.

STORY: Four Hollywood Reporter Covers Celebrate Emmy Icons 

The episode was sent along to The Hollywood Reporter by the man responsible for its existence: Norman Lear, the TV producing mastermind behind All in the Family, Maude, The Jeffersons and countless other ahead-of-their-time comedies. 

The award bearing his name — the Norman Lear Achievement Award in Television — will be presented to J.J. Abrams at the Producers Guild of America Awards ceremony on Jan. 26.

Both Lear and Abrams were featured on the covers of THR’s Emmy Icons issue.

Email: seth.abramovitch@thr.com

Twitter: @SethAbramovitch


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NRA Gun Control Arguments Predicted by ‘All in the Family’ (Video)

Norman Lear Producers Guild Awards - P 2011

Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images

Today’s controversial NRA press conference — in which executive vice president Wayne LaPierre recommended that “every single school in America” be equipped with armed guards — echoes loudly in this clip from a 1972 episode of All in the Family.

PHOTOS: Marketing Violence: Hollywood’s Posters For Early 2013 Movies 

Titled “Archie and the Editorial,” the episode features Archie Bunker — the family’s ignorant, proudly conservative patriarch — delivering a “man on the street” editorial on gun control for the local news.

“If it was up to me, I could stop the skyjackers tomorrow,” Archie, played by the late Carroll O’Connor, says, as his son-in-law — played by Rob Reiner — watches on in disbelief.

STORY: NRA Blames Video Games, Movies, Media for Gun Violence 

Archie continues: “All you gotta do is arm all your passengers. They just pass out the pistols at the beginning of the trip, and then pick them up again at the end. Case closed.”

The line draws huge laughs from the studio audience. 

Later in the episode, Archie is robbed at gunpoint by two men on the street who recognize him from TV.

STORY: Four Hollywood Reporter Covers Celebrate Emmy Icons 

The episode was sent along to The Hollywood Reporter by the man responsible for its existence: Norman Lear, the TV producing mastermind behind All in the Family, Maude, The Jeffersons and countless other ahead-of-their-time comedies. 

The award bearing his name — the Norman Lear Achievement Award in Television — will be presented to J.J. Abrams at the Producers Guild of America Awards ceremony on Jan. 26.

Both Lear and Abrams were featured on the covers of THR’s Emmy Icons issue.

Email: seth.abramovitch@thr.com

Twitter: @SethAbramovitch


Continue Reading

Reformed Hitman Who Inspired ‘The Wire’s’ Omar Dies at 58

THE WIRE (2002-2008)

Donnie Andrews, a former Baltimore drug world hitman whose life partly provided the inspiration for the character of Omar Little on HBO’s beloved crime epic The Wire, has died at 58 from heart complications, the Baltimore Sun reports.

Andrews was surrounded by violence for much of his life, growing up in an abusive household and even bearing witness to a brutal murder at a young age — all over an alleged fifteen cents. He was soon taken in by criminals and was robbing drug dealers at gunpoint in his teens. By 1986, he was addicted to heroin and carrying out hits for a major drug kingpin.

Andrews was arrested for the murder of two drug dealers, a crime for which he turned himself in and never sought a lesser sentence. He offered to cooperate with authorities “to repent,” and was soon wearing a wire, capturing conversations implicating other criminals.

Andrews was paroled in 2005, and devoted the remainder of his years advocating to keep youth on the right side of the law.

The Wire creator David Simon was a crime reporter for the Sun at the time of Andrews’ arrest, and sent Andrews copies of the newspaper while he served a life term in federal prison. He’d later use him as a consultant on The Wire, where Andrews, along with several other drug world assassins, became the inspiration for Omar — the killer with a moral code.

Played by Michael K. Williams, Omar was a Baltimore underworld legend who never deviated from his own set of rules, the golden one being that he never threatened anyone not in “the game.” Unlike Andrews, Simon made Omar gay. He had three lovers over the course of the series. 

Williams saluted his real world inspiration on Twitter, writing on Friday, “R.I.P. to the original gangsta and a stand up dude Mr Donnie Andrews the man who was the inspiration for Omar Little sending out prayers.”


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