From Brother Ralphie:
This is a re-post from an article written for CNN. I post it here to remind the readers that Mayberry knows the Message of the Angels. Jesus died for EVERY sin EXCEPT for the sins of murder and suicide. It is as if Sherrif Taylor knew this and that in fact, the whole town knew this. At the end of every show all is forgiven no matter the sins. It's a reminder of the Grace of God. I believe that Ron Howard as Opie even understood this. Peace. Brother Ralphie for The Angels of Life Institute.
Editor's note: Diane Werts is managing editor
of TVWorthWatching.com
and writes about TV for Newsday.
(CNN)
-- Looks like we'd all like to live in Mayberry.
Fifty years later, we're still watching
"The Andy Griffith Show." The '60s hit
continues to air twice a day in TV Land's weekday schedule, at noon and 12:30
p.m. ET. (TV Land also has a July 4 marathon, Wednesday 8 a.m.-1 p.m. ET/PT;
and a weekend tribute to its recently deceased star July 7-8, Saturday-Sunday
11 a.m.-8 p.m. ET/PT.)
Andy Griffith created a mighty special place in
his small-town TV comedy, which seems to have aired continually every day
someplace since it left the CBS network in 1968. When the show ceased
production, it ranked as prime-time's No. 1 series, after spending all eight of
its network seasons in Nielsen's Top 10.
Mayberry was a town so comfortable and
calm that Griffith's down-home Sheriff Andy Taylor hardly ever got to do any
sheriff-ing. He mostly dispensed folksy wisdom to his motherless son, Opie,
rode herd on his jittery sheriff, Barney Fife, and helped his Mayberry
townsfolk keep on the straight and narrow and neighborly.
Wait. This was TV's No. 1 series -- in
1968?

Diane Werts
Hasn't the Vietnam era-1968 gone down
in history as the year synonymous with social upheaval? Presidential candidate
Robert F. Kennedy and civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr. were
assassinated. The "generation gap" widened. Hippies turned on and
dropped out. Fists were raised at the Olympic Games. War protests raged.
And folksy Andy Griffith drew viewers
in staggering numbers.
Perhaps it's really not so strange at
all.
Who wouldn't rather live in the serene
Mayberry of "TV land" than in Realtown USA, beset by crime,
corruption, war, taxes and societal chaos? No wonder "The Andy Griffith
Show" endures, far beyond the nostalgia for more "pivotal" TV
landmarks such as "All in the Family" and "Roseanne."
There's even a "real"
Mayberry, and it continues to draw vacationers. Griffith's hometown of Mount
Airy, North Carolina, to this day operates the seven-days-a-week Andy
Griffith Museum, filled with the actor's memorabilia, props, video
and other attractions. (Be there for September 27-30's annual Mayberry Days!)
Come sit a spell, take your shoes off, y'all come back now, y'hear?
OK, so we borrowed that last line from
"The Beverly Hillbillies" theme song. Same difference. In fact,
during "Andy Griffith's" run of 1960-68, "Hillbillies" was
twice the nation's top-ranked show. The other years' Nielsen titles went to
"Gunsmoke," to "Wagon Train," and (three times) to "Bonanza."
Which just goes to show how much Americans wanted to be anywhere rather than
Here and Now.
Those other top series still run on TV,
but "The Andy Griffith Show" has turned out to be in a class by
itself. Did citizens ever really live in idyllic small towns like Mayberry?
Maybe we wish we did. Maybe we still want to. What was Connecticut's fictional
Stars Hollow, the small-town setting for that 21st-century WB fave
"Gilmore Girls," but a more elegantly and literately constructed
Mayberry? Everybody knew everybody, and got along, and meant well, and
everybody was witty and sophisticated.
But Americans still seem to crave the
more primitive version of Americana, as evidenced by the fact that everybody's
favorite episodes of "The Andy Griffith Show" are the ones in
black-and-white. The show was filmed monochrome its first five seasons, the
ones with Don Knotts as Barney Fife. Then when Knotts left the cast for the big
screen ("The Incredible Mr. Limpet," anyone?), the show transitioned
to color and lost much of its charm.
We liked Mayberry more as a timeless
Everyplace than a DayGlo wannabe.
Here's another reason "The Andy
Griffith Show" endures: It may be TV's first dramedy. There's a laugh
track, yes, because it was filmed single-camera, rather than in a studio like
most other Desilu-produced series after studio pioneer "I Love Lucy."
Griffith insisted he wanted to be able to include exterior shots, remembering
what the outdoors meant to him as a North Carolina kid. Indeed, what's the
first image of the show that comes to mind? The whistling-theme opening
credits, when Andy and son Opie are heading out to do some fishin'
(no "g" here).
The "drama" quotient amped
up, too, as Andy's initial portrayal of Sheriff Andy Taylor as a country
bumpkin (watch the series' backdoor pilot as a 1960 episode of
"Make Room for Daddy") quickly evolved into the town sage
-- a dispenser of common-sense wisdom to the quirky characters who crossed his
path in search of rational justice and cogent advice.
Don Knotts won the Emmys as wacky
deputy Barney Fife. Andy Griffith gained legend as the straight man who made it
all possible.
Think of Andy Griffith this way: Can
you imagine a 300-channel TV universe without "The Andy Griffith
Show" airing someplace every day?
Enough said. We all need our little
slice of Mayberry.




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