Catholic Info
Traditional Catholic Faith => Catholic Living in the Modern World => Topic started by: rowsofvoices9 on January 01, 2013, 11:10:44 AM
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I think the moral content in T.V. programs actually started to decline in the 1970s. Such shows as Maude come to mind. That show openly promoted abortion. I'm sure there were probably others too.
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It's a shame they don't use it for good.
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TV and movies prepare people to accept subconsciously, sometimes decades in advance, the advance of anti-Christianity
For example in the 1980s there was briefly a sitcom called "My two dads" - about two men who were uncertain of paternity of a teenager daughter, and so decided to raise her together after the mother was out the picture. ɧoɱosɛҳųαƖity wasn't overtly involved in this bizarre premise - but in retrospect it's clear it was about preparing the mass of young children watching the TV to accept this utterly perverted concept of the family, where natural values (such as wanting to know who one's father is) do not count.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/My_Two_Dads
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Among popular 80s sitcoms, Family Ties was also very corrosive.
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As far as I can tell, "Kung Fu," with David Carridine was basically a story trying to sell the belief of the inferiority of Western Culture (catholic and european), to Eastern Culture (buddhist and oriental). When a people stop believing in themselves, it seems reasonable to conclude, they will cease to be.
But you know, the only story I've seen hollywood tell about "Kung Fu" is how guilty we should all feel for a European playing the role of an Oriental, in one of our television shows :rolleyes:
(http://3guys1movie.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/kung_fu.jpg)
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Anything past about 1965 - 1968 in a couple of cases is bad.
The Following shows were all in the 1970's:
"All in the Family"
"The Odd Couple"
"Laverne and Shirley"
"Happy Days"
"Three's Company"
My mind's blank about the 1980's t.v. shows at the moment. But there are tons and tons of bad movies from the late 1960's (sometimes a little earlier) all the way through the 80's and to the present day.
We just have to remember we didn't have the internet back then and our ability to communicate about such things was limited.
The corruption of the culture has been going on for a very long time. I've been suprised by suggestive dialogue in films from the 30's and 40's. Actresses and dancers were wearing immodest attire from the earliest days of film .. even after the Hayes Code was enacted.
Women wearing short shorts and pants were around in the 20's and 30's in film.
It's amazing to me that that was only 20 and 30 years after women were wearing dresses that covered from neck to ankle.
The descent has been rapid and relentless.
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Rhoda, from the 70s.
I watched (and I must admit quite enjoyed!) that again about 10 years ago, but I could discern an agenda. Trojan horses are like that.
And when she and divorcé Joe Gerard wed, they vowed to stay together for "as long as we both shall love"! That turned out to be for about another series, as I recall, before they ran into difficulties!
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A very interesting topic. A very popular programme in Ireland was 'Dallas'.
Whilst not the 1980s, 'The Riordans' featured one character deciding to use contraception. 'The Riordans' was on Irish Television from 1965 to 1979.Before my time.
'Glenroe' , a TV drama from 1983-2001 featured one character leaving the priesthood and marrying. Whilst another character committed adultery with his wife's niece.The actor, who played 'Miley' was the late Mick Lally, who claimed to be an atheist.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glenroe
Religion was featured in the programme on numerous occasions. When Miley, a devout Roman Catholic, believed his daughter, who had been critically ill with meningitis, was saved by prayer and divine intervention while Biddy, who rarely went to Mass credited their doctor with her recovery. The parish priest, Father Tim Devereaux, was upset that nobody was listening to his pastoral advice and retired to embark on a round-the-world cruise with Shirley Manning, a widow of Protestant and Jєωιѕн ancestry. One episode focused on how much money should be spent on a girl's First Communion dress.
In the fourteenth season, Tommy McArdle, the show's producer, introduced the travellers issue, frequently in the news at the time. The storyline involved Miley and Biddy trying to evict a family of travellers who parked their trailer on the edge of the farm. The episodes depicted the attitudes of some Irish people who believed that travellers were "stupid, dirty and dishonest". When two pet rabbits disappear the community suspects the travellers must have eaten them in a stew. Another storyline involved an extramarital affair between a traveller and an upper-middle-class local woman.[2]
The final episode of the penultimate series saw the death of main character Biddy in a road accident involving her car and a tractor. The final series dealt largely with husband Miley's coming to terms with the loss of his wife and the struggles he faced in raising their two surviving daughters.[3]
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I think the moral content in T.V. programs actually started to decline in the 1970s. Such shows as Maude come to mind. That show openly promoted abortion. I'm sure there were probably others too.
Both 'Fair City' set in Dublin and 'Ros na Rún' set in Galway have featured abortion and everything else. They are similar type programmes to 'Eastenders' and 'Coronation Street' which are English programmes. They are quite popular in Ireland.
'Home and Away' and 'Neighbours' set in Australia are shown also.
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Not the 1980s but one programme that stands out is 'Walker,Texas Ranger'/Chuck Norris.
Two other programmes that featured in Ireland were
'Touched by an Angel' and '7th Heaven'
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TV and movies prepare people to accept subconsciously, sometimes decades in advance, the advance of anti-Christianity
Now that you mention it, not only were we being prepared subconsciously to accept the homo agenda, for decades Hollywood has been pushing shows that featured single parent households as if this was common or normal.
My Three Sons
The Andy Griffith Show
Mayberry RFD
The Courtship of Eddies Father
The Rifleman
Family Affair
The Partridge Family
Big Valley
Gidget
Here's Lucy
Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman
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Um why does everyone always think television began to "decline" in the 1960's or 1970's. The 1950's was just as bad. :rolleyes:
During the 1950's there were ads all supporting instant gratification, something which would play very strongly towards the hippie counterculture in the 1960's, not to mention leftist and pro-Communist messages, the Jews controlling how America saw Russia during the Cold War, and finally shows that supported strong women dominating weak men to confuse the genders.
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Anything past about 1965 - 1968 in a couple of cases is bad.
The Following shows were all in the 1970's:
"All in the Family"
"The Odd Couple"
"Laverne and Shirley"
"Happy Days"
"Three's Company"
My mind's blank about the 1980's t.v. shows at the moment. But there are tons and tons of bad movies from the late 1960's (sometimes a little earlier) all the way through the 80's and to the present day.
We just have to remember we didn't have the internet back then and our ability to communicate about such things was limited.
The corruption of the culture has been going on for a very long time. I've been suprised by suggestive dialogue in films from the 30's and 40's. Actresses and dancers were wearing immodest attire from the earliest days of film .. even after the Hayes Code was enacted.
Women wearing short shorts and pants were around in the 20's and 30's in film.
It's amazing to me that that was only 20 and 30 years after women were wearing dresses that covered from neck to ankle.
The descent has been rapid and relentless.
They didn't call the 1920's the decade of sex, booze, and jazz for no reason at all. It was a very unserious decade in which Americans tried to go outside the social norms because they could and because they were carefree. Actually World War I and World War II caused a lot of this nonsense and the cultural revolutions of the 1960's really put the nails in the coffin for the West.
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Let's not forget the subtle Marxism of "Who's the Boss?" :
Powerful working woman who employs macho guy(former professional athlete) as her maid/nanny/governess and the libertine, sleep around grandmother.
Both adults were single 'parents' and both children had reversed sex roles: whimpy boy, macho girl.
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Let's not forget the subtle Marxism of "Who's the Boss?" :
Powerful working woman who employs macho guy(former professional athlete) as her maid/nanny/governess and the libertine, sleep around grandmother.
Both adults were single 'parents' and both children had reversed sex roles: whimpy boy, macho girl.
Good call.
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Last winter I went check out some "old movies" and didn't end up getting any. Almost every movie was about a wife having an affair. I ended up checking movies based on Austen, Dickens, and Gaskell.
Cranford is not old but it was a good movie. Definitely a chic flic but showed the positive qualities in different personalities of women. Gaskell doesn't seem to glamorize gold digging like Jane Austen does. I would not recommend Return To Cranford, it showed sodomites.
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I watched some of the Old Upstairs Downstairs, when one of the servants is pregnant due to rape, the father of the home says abortion is murder. I was shocked that was in film.
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Besides immortality so many shows seem to revolve around the occult too.
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I watched some of the Old Upstairs Downstairs, when one of the servants is pregnant due to rape, the father of the home says abortion is murder. I was shocked that was in film.
I don't recall that episode.
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I watched some of the Old Upstairs Downstairs, when one of the servants is pregnant due to rape, the father of the home says abortion is murder. I was shocked that was in film.
I don't recall that episode.
The father of the family confronts the grandfather of the child. Then a lawyer advises the father of the family to distance himself asap from the situation.
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Season 1 Episode 7, around 12 minutes. A Cry For Help is the episode name.
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Let's not forget The Flying Nun! (don't recall what decade)
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Season 1 Episode 7, around 12 minutes. A Cry For Help is the episode name.
I think it's episode 6, from what I can see.
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Star Trek
"Boldly going where no man has gone before." That's gotta be referring to the sɛҳuąƖ revolution. Captain Kirk always getting another girl. Seemed he had one on every planet. All the girls on the crew in mini skirts. The crazy sexed up costumes for a lot of the characters.
All those landing parties were like friday night on a college campus. You know, three or four guys "go out" and the same guy, everytime, gets the girl! :laugh1:
(http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_tW3g8zCM6c0/S8k8tjSW5EI/AAAAAAAAAqo/xg6cBKd_mT8/s1600/Star-Trek-Captain-Kirk+awesome.png)
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Among popular 80s sitcoms, Family Ties was also very corrosive.
How so? The girls were always modestly dressed on that show. Parents were hippies but still had traditional values compared to today.
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Parents were hippies but still had traditional values compared to today.
No they did not. I don't think you saw everything.
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Compared to today's sitcoms the Family Ties family should be canonized.
Compared to perfection, of course they fall short. But what sit com family was perfect?
Was there some Trad sitcom from 1932 I'm forgetting about?
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The parents may have been married but Family Ties is still full of trash.
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How about sitcoms with intact parents but they were dysfunctional? What better way to destroy marriage by making it look like an insane asylum?
All in The Family
Dallas
I Love Lucy
The Munsters
Keeping Up Appearances
The Addams Family
The Jeffersons
But the best show about family values was The Dukes of Hazzard. Hunkadoodle doo!!!!!!!
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Star Trek
"Boldly going where no man has gone before." That's gotta be referring to the sɛҳuąƖ revolution. Captain Kirk always getting another girl. Seemed he had one on every planet. All the girls on the crew in mini skirts. The crazy sexed up costumes for a lot of the characters.
All those landing parties were like friday night on a college campus. You know, three or four guys "go out" and the same guy, everytime, gets the girl! :laugh1:
(http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_tW3g8zCM6c0/S8k8tjSW5EI/AAAAAAAAAqo/xg6cBKd_mT8/s1600/Star-Trek-Captain-Kirk+awesome.png)
I've still never seen a James Bond movie. :laugh1: Once in a crowd of friends they were talking about getting one, I said Isn't there a love scene? (the reason I knew I wasn't allowed to see one) and a girl replied It's James Bond there is always a woman!
I turned on the old Star Trek last year and the first episode that came on there was a very immodestly dressed woman and I believe a scene where they kissed.
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Star Trek
"Boldly going where no man has gone before." That's gotta be referring to the sɛҳuąƖ revolution. Captain Kirk always getting another girl. Seemed he had one on every planet. All the girls on the crew in mini skirts. The crazy sexed up costumes for a lot of the characters.
All those landing parties were like friday night on a college campus. You know, three or four guys "go out" and the same guy, everytime, gets the girl! :laugh1:
I've still never seen a James Bond movie. :laugh1: Once in a crowd of friends they were talking about getting one, I said Isn't there a love scene? (the reason I knew I wasn't allowed to see one) and a girl replied It's James Bond there is always a woman!
I turned on the old Star Trek last year and the first episode that came on there was a very immodestly dressed woman and I believe a scene where they kissed.
Yeah, you're right. Captain Kirk and James Bond do share some similarities.
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My wife and I have recently been pretty sick. We don't have a television but we do have internet (obviously). We have looked up some old sitcoms from the 1980's. "Growing Pains" "Cosby Show" "Mr. Belvidere" and they all have the same pattern. They start off their shows with 95% clean humor. Very good. Shortly after their 5th or 6th episode they start in with the suggestive sinful life stuff. All of this led up to the satanic shows we have heard they have now. The 80's were the beginning.
Wouldn't it be nice to have a clean comedy show we could view once in a while? The 80's sitcoms proved it could be done. Only they used it to catch people then scandalize them. Despicable.
Of course some things we saw as humor probably isn't at all....like disrespect & put downs.
Oh, and that's SITCOMS from the 1980's. My title is a victim of a typo!!![/quote]
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My wife and I have recently been pretty sick. We don't have a television but we do have internet (obviously). We have looked up some old sitcoms from the 1980's. "Growing Pains" "Cosby Show" "Mr. Belvidere" and they all have the same pattern. They start off their shows with 95% clean humor. Very good. Shortly after their 5th or 6th episode they start in with the suggestive sinful life stuff. All of this led up to the satanic shows we have heard they have now. The 80's were the beginning.
Wouldn't it be nice to have a clean comedy show we could view once in a while? The 80's sitcoms proved it could be done. Only they used it to catch people then scandalize them. Despicable.
Of course some things we saw as humor probably isn't at all....like disrespect & put downs.
Oh, and that's SITCOMS from the 1980's. My title is a victim of a typo!!![/quote] Ha! and I thought you meant "Sickcoms".......Because that's what most of them were. Redefining the family, religion, cultural values and all that.
All coming from the cesspool that is schmolly-wood.
One big Jєωιѕн production.