• @[email protected]
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    5 months ago

    Apart from the confederate flag itself, this show was pretty much anarchist. They spent every episode humiliating the cops and breaking any unrighteous law they could. The show treated the flag as set dressing.

    They also came from a family that canonically resisted the Union during the civil war. And there’s very few black people in the show whatsoever. So.

    I know the hate symbol has always been a hate symbol, but if there’s any show where you could say “it was a product of its time” (the 70’s, btw) I think it’s this one.

    • @[email protected]
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      Sure, and the context of “that time” was yet another Southern Grievance over the checks notes

      Civil Rights Act and continued victories against bigotry in the decade leading to Dukes.

      Including police officers enforcing laws like desegregation of schools.

      Fun Exercise Btw:

      Pick a southern county, look up what years the private schools in the area were founded.

    • @[email protected]
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      695 months ago

      There’s a whole episode of The Cleveland Show (as in Cleveland Brown, the black character from Family Guy) where Cleveland gets upset at his neighbor friend for flying a Confederate flag on his house and finally tries to get rid of it. When he fails, he confronts the hick neighbor and calls him a racist. The neighbor doesn’t understand why Cleveland is upset and when Cleveland points to the flag the neighbor says, “What, my Dukes of Hazard flag?”

      Cleveland immediately realizes he approached the problem from the completely wrong angle and drops the matter indefinitely. They continue to be friends.

    • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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      205 months ago

      Plus the black people that do appear in the show are always equals to the Hazard Boys. They never depict the Hazard Boys being anything but accepting of everyone except Boss Hog and his law dawgs.

      • @[email protected]
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        195 months ago

        And they were always wary of going into the next country because their sheriff actually had his shit together and would bring the pain to the Duke boys. That sheriff happens to be black.

    • don
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      125 months ago

      I was never into it or pretty much anything country-related, being an Airwolf, Mission Impossible (the reboot), and MacGuyver kinda kid, but Dad liked it, and explained it to me pretty much the way you did.

    • @[email protected]
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      45 months ago

      Back in those times, people didn’t really knew what it meant, so it got used as a “regular rebel flag”, then white supremacists claimed they just flying it for “heritage” and “rebel” reasons…

  • @[email protected]
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    1305 months ago

    The Friday night lineup in those days was Dukes, followed by The Love Boat, followed by Fantasy Island. I didn’t know it was racist. I thought it was a sort of Robbin Hood story with cool car jumps and a corrupt Sheriff of Nottinghazzard.

        • bizarroland
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          295 months ago

          I saw a couple episodes when I was a very small child and I don’t remember anything racist. They were just like running from the cops and solving crimes sometimes right?

          • @[email protected]
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            5 months ago

            It had the southern pride propaganda of the car being named after a confederate general and the flag plus the whole rebellious thing

            But yeah, it was basically Robin Hood set in the south and the characters themselves were not written to be racists.

              • @[email protected]
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                85 months ago

                That too. It was basically coded racist, but wasnt. Like the opposite of a crypto-fascist or something.

                • @[email protected]
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                  205 months ago

                  Yep. I made a comment this morning about how not everyone who flies the stars and bars really understands why it’s a hateful symbol with this show as one of the points (there are others I won’t go through). Someone else pointed out that the neighboring Sheriff Little was black and was shown to be a way more competent character (not a good guy, but not a dumb , racist stereotype either) than Roscoe P. Coletrane or Jefferson Davis Hogg. The show literally made fun of the guy who was named for the president of the Confederacy.

                  That flag should never have been used for the good guys but they were “rebels”. Showing it was supposed to cement that into the people’s minds. It was stupid and short sighted. It also worked to make people feel like if they identified as a good guy rebel they could proudly display that flag.

            • @[email protected]
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              5 months ago

              I’m pretty sure that there was at least one episode with a “bad guy” that was black, but I don’t think race had anything to do with it. There weren’t too many positive race stories from that show though.

    • @[email protected]
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      215 months ago

      I watched it a bit growing up and never got racist vibes from it either. The Confederate flag just meant “the south” to me back then. I knew a lot of people with them on various knick knacks and articles of clothing that I never witnessed being racist either. I don’t think people put so much thought into it back then.

      These days though, yeah if you’re still flying that flag you’re probably an asshole.

      • @[email protected]
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        185 months ago

        On the flip side, it was just kind-a ok to be racist at that time. I can remember serious discussion on whether a black man could be smart enough to play quarterback in the NFL.

      • don
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        55 months ago

        The Confederate flag just meant “the south” to me back then.

        Growing up around the same time, this was how I interpreted it as well. I didn’t give a shit about the flag, but I never got the racist connotation from anyone around me at the time. It was just something that Southern people liked, just as you said.

        • @[email protected]
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          5 months ago

          Southern people just like symbols of slavery. What’s wrong with celebrating symbols of slavery? It’s how I was raised. I don’t need to consider how descendants of slaves feel about seeing the battle flag of slavers celebrated. People who murdered hundreds of thousands of people so they could continue owning black people just used it as a symbol of institutional hate, what’s so wrong with that?

          • @[email protected]
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            15 months ago

            Well ill give ya credit you thought about what it historically represents, but you are still missing the reason why it was/is so prominent. Southerners are ignorant as shit, I mean this is the most neutral why possible. They got fucked over by the old southern aristocracy and are still being fucked over just now its the new oligarchy. For someone to right a wrong they must be aware that a wrong needs to be righted, and frankly speaking most southerners are ill equipped for such a task.

            Also I really hope ya dont go round making accusations like that, bring attention to the problem gently. The worst theyll do is not listen, but if ya go in looking for a fight they are guaranteed not to listen. I made such a mistake with my kin out in Little Rock.

    • @[email protected]
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      185 months ago

      I got into a heated argument (preschool) about whether the car jumped or flew. My dumbass neighbors (my age and younger) contended that it flew. Their mother backed them up. I bet they turned out really fucked up with a parent who was willing to lie to them and distort reality rather than hit them with a dose of reality. I was super mad about it. And now look at me: I’m an atheist who believes in Leftwing politics, so I’d say that on the spectrum from reality to fucked, I turned out pretty ok. Hate to think how they must see the world today.

      • @[email protected]
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        65 months ago

        fly

        to move through the air using wings.
        to be carried through the air by the wind or any other force or agency:
        

        “Any other force or agency” such as a car’s momentum

        jump

        to spring clear of the ground or other support by a sudden muscular effort; leap:
        

        “muscular effort” cars don’t make muscular effort.

        Looks like flew was technically more accurate

      • @[email protected]
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        15 months ago

        They may have been referring to the cartoon. The car in the cartoon did some ridiculous shit, such as tires that inflated like balloons and made the car extra bouncy.

    • @[email protected]
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      125 months ago

      I’d say that there was often time some OTHER antagonist, making it “cool guys jump car so that bungling sheriff catches actual bad guys”.

    • @[email protected]
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      115 months ago

      Not in the United States, on Fridays it was Dukes Of Hazard then Incredible Hulk on CBS, while Love Boat and Fantasy Island was Saturdays on ABC.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      85 months ago

      No I had no idea either, I’m Canadian and we didn’t really learn American history. It was just a show to me, but learning what I know as an adult, I’m gobsmacked this existed.

      • @[email protected]
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        15 months ago

        Yeah I think I saw one maybe one and bits of another episode. I knew of it though but I’m in Europe and didn’t even know what the flag meant. Different times I suppose.

    • @[email protected]
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      75 months ago

      When I was a kid the show turned me off at first because the characters accents. Every adult in real life around me that had a country accent was an asshole that was mean to me for no reason.

      • @[email protected]
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        45 months ago

        That’s why I can’t watch Letterkenny. I could get the same experience any Tuesday night at the Legion around here.

  • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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    5 months ago

    Just imagined it or don’t understand it. There’s zero incest in the show, and zero hate crimes. Other than the flag and name of the car, there’s nothing racist about it at all, and that flag wasn’t perceived as a racist symbol back then, as illogical as that may seem. When black people do appear in the show, which admittedly is rare, they’re always equals to the Duke boys. The show is just good fun. If there’s any theme to it at all, it’s that it’s cool to make money with moonshine, and flaunt the law, while making fools of law enforcement.

  • @Jimbo
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    615 months ago

    As a non American, the confederate flag on the roof always seemed strange to me, to put it lightly

      • @[email protected]
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        5 months ago

        They really should have gone that last extra mile and painted flames on it and called it the General Sherman.

        • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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          25 months ago

          That just doesn’t look as cool for some reason. I guess because the crush orange is a pretty great color for a car, and also because the American flag isn’t symmetrical enough.

          • @[email protected]
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            25 months ago

            Maybe go with a Ford muscle car with the Ford blue. Can’t help on the asymmetrical flag, though.

      • Drusas
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        What’s the name of the car?

        Edit: Nevermind. Looked at the picture again and I’m guessing it’s called General Lee.

      • @[email protected]
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        125 months ago

        True, and yet, at the same time: The show’s main antagonist was named Jefferson Davis Hogg. There’s no way the choice of a Confederate General for the car (the show’s non-human protagonist) and the Confederate President for the antagonist was an accident, I just have no idea what they were trying to say there.

            • @[email protected]
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              165 months ago

              Fucken great slang for us honestly. I’m not even mad with the sewage we spew all over the world.

            • @[email protected]
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              35 months ago

              As a Yank, I have to say I find ‘seppo’ highly entertaining, and at least somewhat accurate for many of my countrymen. A lot of your slang is funny as all get out, and some of your music is pretty good too.

            • Drusas
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              25 months ago

              That seems a lot more than “mildly” derogatory.

            • @[email protected]
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              Are we “seppos” because we are septic tanks, or are we supposedly inclined to have septic tanks?

              Because I’ll lightly disagree with one of those, only because most people I’ve met and places I’ve lived have used public sewage systems.

              Edit: nevermind, read further on the definition page. It’s a rhyming thing (kind of?) and we’re full of shit. I’m on board with that.

    • Cyborganism
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      355 months ago

      I was too young back then.

      In hindsight, this show was a terrible idea.

      Glorification of the Confederates and the protagonists called “the good old boys” would be instantaneously shut down and called out today for the racist white supremacist idea that it is.

      • @[email protected]
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        405 months ago

        The shows antagonists were a wealthy business man turned politician who wielded the corrupt police force to feed his own power and oppress the common folk. And while his nickname was Boss Hogg, the villain’s canon name was Jefferson Davis Hogg. Pretty literally calling the cops confederate pigs.

        Definitely a lot of problematic elements to the show, but there’s some good there too. And I’m sure it influenced a ton of car action sequences for decades.

        • @[email protected]
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          165 months ago

          Yes the show itself outside some very visible totems like the car unfortunately, didn’t really touch on issues of bigotry and racism. Had it just been about a back woods moonshining family in an unmarked car harassing the corrupt governor and police. There wouldn’t be a lot of uproar. Hell it might be embraced.

      • @[email protected]
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        5 months ago

        racist white supremacist idea

        Oh FFS, if you were young then you also remember All in the Family and The Jeffersons, shows that were in-your-face anti-racist. Prime time was hardly in a mood for racist bullshit.

        What if I said the show was racist because it showed white, country people as wide-eyed, stupid hicks? How ridiculous does that sound?

        • @[email protected]
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          135 months ago

          A good point. “All in the Family” was based on a British show called “Till Death Us Do Part”. That show featured a main character called Alf Garnett who was very racist and sexist. He was intended to mock the reactionary working class conservatives of the time but people dismissed the show as being in favour of the things that the character came out with because they couldn’t understand the satire.

          • @[email protected]
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            155 months ago

            He’s called Archie Bunker in the States and a lot of older Americans (Boomers and Xers mostly) love him because he shares their views. They don’t get that that’s a bad thing and he’s shown to be wrong and backward on the show.

            • @[email protected]
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              45 months ago

              I may be giving too much but I think some writers tried to steer public opinion lessen hatred using characters like Archie as a tool. If you pay attention over the course of the series while he never becomes good a lot of the hate lessened and he’ll admit people or things he hated were ok.

              I.e. the racists become emotionally attached to him, so when Archie “learns” they will. (In theory)

        • @[email protected]
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          25 months ago

          Except that they are now seen as affirmation of the racism nowadays. They miss the point entirely.

        • @[email protected]
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          15 months ago

          racist because it showed white, country people as wide-eyed, stupid hicks?

          As opposed to the white country heroes of the show who were always the most clever, compassionate, capable, ethical? I’d say that’s a bad take

        • @[email protected]
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          -15 months ago

          What if I said the show was racist because it showed white, country people as wide-eyed, stupid hicks? How ridiculous does that sound?

          Pretty ridiculous, considering you’d be comparing making classist jokes with the glorification of a nation founded to maintain the enslavement of black people.

          In the 70s in the south people knew what that flag meant, just like they know what it means now.

      • Schadrach
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        15 months ago

        To be fair, virtually everything more than 20 years old is some flavor of “problematic” today.

        • Cyborganism
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          25 months ago

          Not really. Those that aren’t are still appreciated today still. Like the Golden Girls or Fresh Prince.

          • Schadrach
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            05 months ago

            Like the Golden Girls or Fresh Prince.

            You know an episode of Golden Girls was pulled from Hulu for blackface right? Or the jokes about Dorothy’s rape (there are several of those)?

            Or “Wham, Bam, Thank You Mammy” , Maurgerite in general or having the same actor play different characters with different ethnicities that are broadly the same general color (for example Mr. Tanaka and Dr. Chang played by the same actor so apparently the show can’t tell the difference between Japanese and Chinese people?), racist jokes about Chinese food, things Sophia had to say about Cubans, Puerto Ricans and Arabs, Rose in a Native American headdress, Rose pretending to be an exchange student, Blanche defending the Confederate flag… Yeah, there’s a lot problematic about Golden Girls and a lot of it was about race.

            I suspect I could spit out a similar list of examples for Fresh Prince if I dug down on it, though it probably would be less about race and more about sex or disability or weight or sexual orientation or some other demographic line that was a common well for comedy back then that is a problematic -ism or -phobia now.

  • @[email protected]
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    I definitely support that we’ve pushed this show out of the forefront, but this is where a lot of the arguments for the flag as a ‘symbol of southern pride’ come from. It’s a weird argument, and it is definitely not a fair one, but there’s very fond associations in the south with that car even from people who had no clue where the flag came from. Super successful attempt to help the confederate flag be seen as acceptable, whether on purpose or not.

    It’s a weird show too for someone who isn’t from the south… Racial diversity is non-existent in the show, but that’s also pretty accurate for its location… It had some awesome car scenes, but no depth. The only hot take in the show beyond the flag painted on top (which wasn’t even a hot take then) was that the government was widely seen as corrupt and it was more than a bit sexist.

    • @[email protected]
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      455 months ago

      Yeah, hell, Sheriff Little, the black sheriff from the neighboring county was actually pretty competent. Yeah, it was mostly white, but the black people were always smarter than Roscoe or Boss Hogg.

      I dont think op ever watched the show.

      • @[email protected]
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        I really liked how the more recent Movie Adaptation handled Race on the show. The Dukes crashed the General Lee in da hood (I realize this requires a lot of suspension of disbelief already) and a bunch of dark skinned folks start coming out of their homes and seeing the car and grabbing irons and walking towards them so the Dukes brothers run away on foot. And then one of the black guys rolls a spare tire into frame and says “Where are they going? We’re here to help.”

        EDIT: I appear to have merged my memories of the 2005 film with the 2008 Harold and Kumar film. Did Johny Knoxville actually ride a safe in the Dukes of Hazzard or was that Harold, too?

        • @[email protected]
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          125 months ago

          So how was it a hate crime car? What hate crimes did they commit?

          Also incest? Where the fuck did that come from? What are you, a fujoshi, shipping daisy and luke? Luisy?

            • @[email protected]
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              155 months ago

              Non-Yank here. Enjoyed and still do TDOH. Names like “General Lee” and “Jefferson Davis Hogg” are meaningless to me, except as they appeared in the show, and the car could equally have been called Lieutenant Bob or Sergeant Pete. The flag on top of the car was just a fancy design.

              If at all possible could you consider this an educational NSQ? Please?

              So aside from the use of those symbols and specific names, where exactly - with reference to timestamps and episode numbers - are the racism and incest?

              Are you assuming that just because Bo and Luke were frequently within 100 yards of Daisy that they must automatically be shagging her off camera? In which case it’s a gay show too because for exactly the same reason Bo and Luke must be shagging each other.

              And I have no idea why you think it’s loaded with hate crimes. Please refer to a specific instance so that I can understand.

              • @[email protected]
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                115 months ago

                General Lee - Robert E Lee, general of the Army of Northern Virginia, the main army for the Confederate States of America.

                Jefferson Davis - president of the Confederate States of America.

                The Flag - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flags_of_the_Confederate_States_of_America#First_flag?wprov=sfla1

                The whole war was about slavery. The Confederate states wanted to have slaves. When Abraham Lincoln was elected in 1860, they threw a tantrum, claimed the election wasn’t legitimate (sound familiar?), then seceded and tried to form an independent nation.

                Anyone who says that it was about states’ rights is being disingenuous. The Confederate Constitution mentions slavery and includes regulations for it.

                The Confederacy also wanted to deport all Jews (except for one - the Secretary of The Treasury) and eventually conquer Mexico and use them as slaves as well. The brown ones.

                The Confederacy also would have enslaved any Native Americans remaining in those states.

                The vast majority of southern soldiers were too poor to ever own a slave and were treated only slightly better than slaves. It was very obviously the white supremacist elitist class exploiting everyone else.

                The Republican party regurgitates a lot of the Confederate talking points.

                • Schadrach
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                  35 months ago

                  Anyone who says that it was about states’ rights is being disingenuous.

                  Oh, it was about states’ rights. Mostly one right in particular that they reasonably feared was going to be taken from them by federal action, specifically the right to own other people as property. So not a particularly **good ** right to be the one you draw the line at.

                  It’s probably not a coincidence that the federal government expanded it’s powers a lot more and a lot more quickly after the Civil War than before, though.

            • @[email protected]
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              85 months ago

              It’s not accurate though, just because it takes place in the south does not equal incest, that’s silly and ignorant as hell. And hate crimes didn’t take place in the show, the nature of the paint job was non-existent in the show.

              • @[email protected]
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                35 months ago

                I assumed Bo and Luke were banging on the sly. If The General is a-rockin, don’t come a-knockin.

                • @[email protected]
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                  25 months ago

                  I remember a parody song of the theme with the lyric “Luke wants to push it in more than Bo will allow.”

            • @[email protected]
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              15 months ago

              Brb, going back to 2009 and sailing a new ship on tumblr. Gonna be bigger than Zutara!

              Now the question, Luiasy or Dake?

    • @[email protected]
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      195 months ago

      Surprisingly, when blacks were shown they were treated very well and as equals by the dukes. It almost had anti-racist undertones outside of the General Lee if watched closely.

    • @[email protected]
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      55 months ago

      Also, the actor who played Boss Hogg had been in Army Intelligence during the Korean war, and spoke about 12 languages.

    • @[email protected]
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      15 months ago

      Sure, I also bought the idea that it was southern pride and I also bought there was no racism because I lived in a place without diversity. Then i grew up and went to high school

  • @[email protected]
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    515 months ago

    I watched this as a kid (it aired in Germany).
    It was funny, the stunts were cool and the chick was kinda hot.

  • @[email protected]
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    245 months ago

    I wish I was born in a time when people could just enjoy shit.

    It seems like mindless TV with action, some good old boys and some eye candy, set in the south.

    People make out it is some sort of factually wrong documentary.

    • @[email protected]
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      85 months ago

      People make out it is some sort of factually wrong documentary

      Say what you will about stupid people, but I have to tell you this: I’ve had more than a few people tell me they did not wear seat belts because “the Dukes never wore seat belts”

      I am not even fucking kidding about this. It’s not just about people today treating this TV show like it was a depiction of reality, it’s about people at the time doing the exact same thing.

    • @[email protected]
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      -205 months ago

      As I’ve seen it said many times on Lemmy for many nostalgia moments and am also quite surprised no one said to to you yet (they probably got tired of repeating it…), people yearning for the good old times are the privileged white patriarchy class.

      Be ashamed, be very ashamed. Tsk. Tsk.

      • @[email protected]
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        315 months ago

        People are nostalgic the world over, not just in America. So all of the undertones of political issues that you’re layering on here isn’t inherent to the human feeling of nostalgia. Now The Dukes of Hazzard is problematic for a great many reasons as this post highlights. So it’s totally fair to call that out. But it’s also totally fair to remember being a kid and liking a show where guys break the rules with fast cars. It doesn’t mean that he’s a bigot that wants to drag us all back to the '70s.

        I say, as long as you’re self aware and this feeling in nostalgia doesn’t push you in the direction of Trump or Andrew Tate, then go for it.

        • @[email protected]
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          -35 months ago

          How dare you bring reason and nuance to the conversation? You damn centrist! It’s you and people like you that embolden the right in their shenanigans! Only by not tolerating this intolerant symbolism can we rid ourselves of these fascist cults!

          Or so the story goes…

  • @[email protected]
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    Don’t forget the rather unfortunate usage of a bunch of people cruising around in the Confederate car all being named “Duke.”

    See, there was once a man named David, who was the leader of a wacky little group of goofballs back in the '70s. That li’l jokester even went so far as to get everyone to call him a grand wizard, which is such a zany thing to ask people to do, but people totally did it with a straight face

    Anyway, I wonder if it’s a coincidence. Who knows?

      • @[email protected]
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        35 months ago

        Wikipedia seems to disagree. I believe you may be thinking of when he took political office, not when he started as Grand Wizard of the Idiot Brigade.

    • @[email protected]
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      85 months ago

      Probably more likely the name is a reference to Civil War Confederate General Basil Duke. Or perhaps the name merely is meant to invoke the idea of the Dukes as important, “noble” figures in Hazzard County, or at least more noble than the corrupt Boss Hogg. Or maybe a cigar is just a cigar in this case.

      • @[email protected]
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        Good theories. Honestly, I don’t totally think it is in reference to the Klan dude, but it sure is an unfortunate coincidence

    • @[email protected]
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      75 months ago

      He wasn’t a big name here in the Midwest, at least, until he gained national prominence by winning a seat in the Louisiana legislature in '89, thus becoming the face of the pit of foul putrescence at the heart of the GOP. (Anybody who thinks that Republicans turned batshit-evil in 2016 was at least 27 years late.)

  • @[email protected]
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    155 months ago

    Man… gotta say, I’m really glad I got to enjoy these old skool shows.

    Pssst… I’m Latino, this show didn’t offend me then and it doesn’t offend me now.

  • A'random Guy
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    125 months ago

    Loved it. I had the curtains/drapes set. We didn’t know about the connection as kids.

  • @[email protected]
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    115 months ago

    Oh, so this wasn’t a wholesome series about a cute couple that wanted to destroy every car that has racist symbols painted on the roof? Bcs they were really good at it. And destroying the cars as well.

  • @[email protected]
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    105 months ago

    Conservatives are known for repurposing symbols to fit their narrative. So, let’s take the Confederate battle flag and repurpose it into an Anarchist symbol.

    General Lee is just a badass name for a car to drive fast around while you run your moonshine because fuck the police.

  • @[email protected]
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    85 months ago

    its like that because the show is literally just the movie “moonrunners”.

    the car is called the general lee because the car in moonrunners is called traveler, the historical general lee’s horse.

    moonrunners is a crazy movie, btw, and the first few seasons of the dukes of hazard are good too.