That Time Archie Bunker Endorsed Ted Kennedy
Friday A/V Club: He wasn't really the character created by the late Norman Lear. But the advertisers did all they could to obscure that.

Archie Bunker, the slur-spewing outer-borough dad on the CBS sitcom All in the Family, was probably the most famous character to be created by Norman Lear, the TV writer/producer who died this week at age 101. People remember Archie as a reactionary, but did you know he backed that liberal lion Ted Kennedy for president?
OK, so strictly speaking that's actor Carroll O'Connor, not the character he played on the show. But the folks who shot that spot during the 1980 Democratic primaries did everything they could to suggest this was Archie Bunker speaking to voters. If you doubt that, look at the clapperboard at the start of the video—it says "Green Archie A," not "Green Carroll A."
Here's what historian Rick Perlstein wrote about the Bunker pitch in his 2020 book Reaganland:
Carroll O'Connor played Archie Bunker on All in the Family, a character intended by his creator, Norman Lear, to represent the quintessential ignorant, racist working-class clown. Ironically, however, white working-class men adopted Archie as a hero. In 1972, some sported "Archie for President" buttons. O'Connor's commercials for Ted Kennedy deliberately played to this misreading, in an attempt to reach out to white ethnics in the outer boroughs. Sporting an Archie-like canvas jacket, sounding far more Queens-like than he usually did off-camera, O'Connor fixed the viewer's gaze and said, "Friends, Herbert Hoover hid out in the White House, too, responding to desperate problems with patriotic pronouncements. And we got a helluva depression. But I'm afraid Jimmy's depression is gonna be woise than Herbert's….I trust Ted Kennedy. I believe in him. In every way, folks."
Dyed-in-the-wool All in the Family fans might be puzzled by those Hoover references, given that Archie used to open every episode by singing the line "Mister, we could use a man like Herbert Hoover again." But then again, this was 1980, and by that time All in the Family had mutated into Archie Bunker's Place and the opening theme had become an instrumental. And those blue-collar Democrats that the ad was aimed at would've backed Franklin Roosevelt over Hoover anyway (or their parents did).
O'Connor cut another Kennedy commercial ("Green Archie B") that was slightly more explicit about the fact that this was an actor speaking ("I've seen some oddities, offstage as well as on"). Yet another advertisement featured O'Connor/Bunker declaring that "Carter equals Reagan equals Hoover equals Depression." Contrast those with the TV ad that O'Connor cut for New York Mayor John Lindsay's presidential campaign in 1972: In that one, O'Connor wears a tie, identifies himself by name, doesn't put on a Queens accent, and—maybe most importantly—backs a candidate who never had a shot at the Archie Bunker vote.
Oh, and about those "Archie for President" buttons: When the Democrats picked a vice-presidential nominee at their 1972 convention, one delegate did vote for Archie Bunker. Another one voted for Chairman Mao. I'm telling you folks, the Democratic coalition was wider back then.
(For past installments of the Friday A/V Club, go here. For another edition involving a Norman Lear show—specifically Good Times—go here. Ron Jones wrote an essay that Lear's company adapted into an after-school special called The Wave; to see Jones complain that Lear's team turned his anarchist warning into a reassuring liberal fable, go here.)
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You know who didn’t endorse Ted Kennedy?
Mary Jo Kopechne.
She would have if she lived in Chicago.
Ted’s brother Bobby never made it to Chicago either.
But, he's probably voted there multiple times.
FTFY
Not true. She, like so many Biden voters, endorsed him for her ride home. The fact that it didn't end well is a matter for history to judge.
Shrike learned everything he knows about politics by watching sitcoms.
Those were the days
Firing Line and Playboy were my biggest influences. Their interviews were top-notch. Zoomers will never know how important the Playboy Interview was.
You got Playboy for the articles, which one could believe, and Tiger Beat for the pictures.
No one believes your bullshit.
"Zoomers will never know how important the Playboy Interview was."
I can see it. You're a creepy old guy like Hugh Hefner, but with the kids instead of frightened young women.
"OK, so strictly speaking that's actor Carroll O'Connor, not the character he played on the show. But the folks who shot that spot during the 1980 Democratic primaries did everything they could to suggest this was Archie Bunker speaking to voters."
Which is a fascinating dishonesty, given that Carroll O'Connor was a raging Lefty.
Apparently Jimmy Carter was too conservative for them.
Carter, known mostly for deregulation and no significant legislation but is now despised by wingnuts as the "worst president ever".
But his record is that of the most libertarian president since Coolidge. Somehow it is fashionable to bash Carter among the wingnut set.
Carter was a godawful President in toto. There were some things he was OK on, but he was an ineffective at leading the country.
Oh, and please, Woodrow Wilson is on the hook for "worst president ever".
Yeah, Carter was no macho he-man take-charge authoritarian type like wingnuts admire.
George W.Bush signed tons of dreadful legislation and made the worst foreign policy decisions in US history but Carter was just awful.
You're doing it wrong. You see, everything good done while the evil tribe was president is because of the good tribe in Congress, and everything bad done while the good tribe was president is because of the bad tribe in Congress. If good things happen while the bad tribe had both, it was because of the good tribe's previous administration. Likewise if bad things happen while the good tribe had both, it was because of the evil tribe's previous administration.
All good comes from the good tribe, and all bad comes from the bad tribe.
Partisan politics is nothing but cavemen scratching their butts.
So you do know what a strawman argument is after all...
I lived through the Carter years. They sucked.
Yeah, he was a pussy that just deregulated everything.
Awful, I know.
He should have ramped up the drug war, militarized the police, doubled the national debt, doubled the number of Americans in prison, put police into schools, all while talking a good talk about liberty.
"Carroll O'Connor played Archie Bunker on All in the Family, a character intended by his creator, Norman Lear, to represent the quintessential ignorant, racist working-class clown. Ironically, however, white working-class men adopted Archie as a hero. In 1972, some sported "Archie for President" buttons.
Talk about unintended consequences. But bear in mind, Archie was first and foremost a union man. And union men vote Democrat, because their stewards tell them to.
The "Reagan Democrats" were a group that included blue-collar workers who stopped listening to their stewards.
Yes, my brother [member of CWA] was one. But I believe that is quite rare nowadays.
He also handled the Iran hostage situation superbly.
/sarcasm
Stifle it.
Meathead.
I trust Ted Kennedy.
Even on bridges?
That's great, but just don't get under water, if you know what I mean...
It would be funny to see Hollywood celebrities portraying their most well-known characters when they endorse a candidate/ballot measure/party.
Like Eva Longoria, as a whoring housewife, endorsing Obama?
I'm thinking most of his voters wouldn't see a problem with that...something about embracing any and all lifestyles.
Norman Lear wrote liberal fantasies in the 70s and 80s. One writer back in the 90s called it "The Era of PC - TV" in an NPR interview.
We never watched his shows in our house, when I was growing up.
Carroll O'Connor played Archie Bunker on All in the Family, a character intended by his creator, Norman Lear, to represent the quintessential ignorant, racist working-class clown. Ironically, however, white working-class men adopted Archie as a hero.
Were we supposed to find Meathead to be the sympathetic character on that show? He was very much holier-than-thou and condescending. Though I unironically love George Jefferson, he was a great character. I really liked The Jeffersons also, it was a lot of fun.
Archie Bunker is as far in our past as Herbert Hoover was in his, 50 years.
Hoover wasn't in my past. I was on a commercial flight with him. I was a baby, but still....
Norman Lear did not create Archie Bunker. He Americanized the character Alf Garnett from "Till Death Us Do Part ", a British sitcom.
Yup, and both were sneering elitist attempts to mock the proles.
It's very strange that Lear was surprised when the proles failed to get the joke and adopted Archie Bunker as a hero. Since that was exactly what had already happened with Alf Garnett.
I guess he must have assumed that he would be able to make the joke stick, when Johnny Speight had failed.
I love the smell of nemesis in the morning.
Norman Lear did not create Archie Bunker. He Americanized the character Alf Garnett from “Till Death Us Do Part “, a British sitcom.
Maybe it’s a distinction without a difference, but I see Bunker as a new character inspired by an older character. (Admittedly, my exposure to Till Death Do Us Part is limited to a middling song that the Kinks composed for a Till Death Do Us Part movie.)
It’s a pretty straight copy. Meathead has a direct counterpart in Till Death Us Do Part. Played by a guy called Tony Booth, whose daughter finished up marrying Tony Blair.
Think of show business as politics by other means.
Also notice how he sounds less Irish in the first ad than in the others.
Have I mentioned that I flew with Herbert Hoover?
Funny how nobody mentions Herbert Hoover's inaugural--promising to enforce every prohibition law ever invented--including the Felony Beer Five and Ten law enacted two days earlier. Herbert Hoover and Harry Anslinger "new race" policies again control Ecuador. Now watch as that "dolarisado" economy again collapses into Hoovervilles and desperately fleeing refugees. Noble experiments confirm that you can't have an economy and let asset forfeiture confiscate it too.