51 min

#106 Saul Austerlitz: Homer Simpson and The History of Sitcom Dads Paternal

    • Para toda la familia

If you were a child of the 1980s and early 1990s, you lived through a golden age for sitcom dads. From The Cosby Show to Growing Pains and Roseanne to The Simpsons, fathers of all kinds ruled the airwaves for roughly a decade, providing an entire generation of wide-eyed kids a glimpse into what a father should look like and, for better or worse, what a family can be. But did these portrayals of paternal figures do more harm than good, and how did Friends and Seinfeld land a fatal blow to the fate of sitcom dads?
Comedy historian and author Saul Austerlitz joins this episode of Paternal to take a deep dive on the history of the family sitcom, tracing the genre’s roots back to the dawn of television. He discusses how fathers were first portrayed in the 1950s and how they have evolved during each decade thereafter, including iconic sitcom dads on Leave it to Beaver, All in the Family, The Cosby Show, Married With Children, Roseanne, and The Simpsons.
Austerlitz is a faculty member at NYU who teaches courses on writing about American comedy and writing about television drama, and he’s the author of six books, including on the history of sitcoms and the success of the hit series Friends. He recently wrote an article in The Atlantic entitled “Dad Culture Has Nothing to Do With Parenting.”
Episode Timestamps:
00:00 - 06:56 - Intro
06:56 - 10:33 - The perils of the “dad perjorative” and the connection to sitcoms
10:33 - 15:12 - Sitcom dads in the 1950s and 1960s
15:12 - 21:18 - Discussing Archie Bunker, “All in the Family,” and 70s family sitcoms
23:16 - 28:28 - The success of “The Cosby Show”
28:28 - 32:22 - The rise of the 1980s Superdad
32:22 - 36:12 - “Roseanne” breaks the mold
36:12 - 42:49 - The alternative dads on “Married With Children” and “The Simpsons”
42:49 - 46:25 - The 1990s demise of the family sitcom 
46:25 - 48:42 - “Blackish” and dads on modern-day sitcoms
48:42 - 51:40 - What we lose without family sitcoms
Read The Transcript For This Episode

If you were a child of the 1980s and early 1990s, you lived through a golden age for sitcom dads. From The Cosby Show to Growing Pains and Roseanne to The Simpsons, fathers of all kinds ruled the airwaves for roughly a decade, providing an entire generation of wide-eyed kids a glimpse into what a father should look like and, for better or worse, what a family can be. But did these portrayals of paternal figures do more harm than good, and how did Friends and Seinfeld land a fatal blow to the fate of sitcom dads?
Comedy historian and author Saul Austerlitz joins this episode of Paternal to take a deep dive on the history of the family sitcom, tracing the genre’s roots back to the dawn of television. He discusses how fathers were first portrayed in the 1950s and how they have evolved during each decade thereafter, including iconic sitcom dads on Leave it to Beaver, All in the Family, The Cosby Show, Married With Children, Roseanne, and The Simpsons.
Austerlitz is a faculty member at NYU who teaches courses on writing about American comedy and writing about television drama, and he’s the author of six books, including on the history of sitcoms and the success of the hit series Friends. He recently wrote an article in The Atlantic entitled “Dad Culture Has Nothing to Do With Parenting.”
Episode Timestamps:
00:00 - 06:56 - Intro
06:56 - 10:33 - The perils of the “dad perjorative” and the connection to sitcoms
10:33 - 15:12 - Sitcom dads in the 1950s and 1960s
15:12 - 21:18 - Discussing Archie Bunker, “All in the Family,” and 70s family sitcoms
23:16 - 28:28 - The success of “The Cosby Show”
28:28 - 32:22 - The rise of the 1980s Superdad
32:22 - 36:12 - “Roseanne” breaks the mold
36:12 - 42:49 - The alternative dads on “Married With Children” and “The Simpsons”
42:49 - 46:25 - The 1990s demise of the family sitcom 
46:25 - 48:42 - “Blackish” and dads on modern-day sitcoms
48:42 - 51:40 - What we lose without family sitcoms
Read The Transcript For This Episode

51 min

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