Most American TV show

You forgot Designated Survivor. :smiley:

I’d clearly been whooshed. :slight_smile:

That was my thought too. While there are certainly westerns set in other countries, in my mind the genre is overwhelmingly associated with the American West.

I’d string a bunch of Super Bowl games together. Actually, given our notoriously short national attention span, I wouldn’t even bother with entire games, just highlights.

How about Gunsmoke? That’s the first thing that comes to mind when I think of a television western. Plus, it ran for 20 years on network TV.

You left out “We *insist *you let us help you, so you can be as good as we are!” :dubious:

Monster Jam. Ain’t nuthin more 'merrican than monster trucks! Unless they were being driven by bald eagles wearing camo.

The MOST American TV show is obvious.

Justified

Well, that is the most “Kentucky” of television shows (unless you are actually from Kentucky in which case you point out that the piney Southern California exteriors look nothing like the green hills of Kentucky) but it isn’t particularly American, given the thematic basis in the intrigues of Medieval and Renaissance Italy. A great show to be sure, but it doesn’t reflect much of the “American experience” and more than “Deadwood” does, despite the theatrical trappings of Americana.

Stranger

Another vote for the Simpsons

I’d think Cops.

FISH Cops.

Baywatch

Somebody figured out that they could pander to the worldwide market with David Hasselhoff and a bunch of women in bathing suits running in slow motion. That is America.

It’s really remarkable just how white most of these suggestions are. Not only do most of them have only white characters among the main cast, many of them don’t have any non-white characters at all.

WTF? Trying to make this some sort of politically correct statement is stupid.

The nation’s 63% white today, with no one other minority topping out over 17% (hispanics).

And historically it’s been even more overwhelming; until the 1990 census, the percentage of white people was above 80%, and being closer to 90% for most of the twentieth century. Even going as far back as 1790, the percentage was never below 80%.

So it’s not at all surprising or even racist that the media of the time would reflect that. And it’s also not surprising that “white” stuff would also be the archetypical “American” stuff as as result either, as much as some people like to bitch about how “white” stuff is or was.

The Lawrence Welk Show.

Doesn’t get much whiter than that! :smiley:

Is that the problem of the SD, or Hollywood? Hard to pick primarily non-white shows when there aren’t that many, compared to the long history of TV.

People have already commented on the unrealistic Whiteness of Mayberry, while acknowledging that the show is very “American”.

Maybe that’s the core of the question - to an outside observer, maybe all-white shows really are the true reflection of “America”. America pretends POC don’t exist, or is too scared of offending anyone (and losing sponsors) to actually make shows with non-white characters.

“America - the Bottom Line is Tops!” That about sums it up.

I don’t think that’s what Chronos was doing. As I read it, he was just making an observation (IMHO a legitimate and significant one), not claiming that it was surprising or racist.

And, IMHO, it is worth doing a little soul-searching to see if, deep down, we consider some people, settings, or subcultures “more American” than others, and why.

“In 1972 a crack commando unit was sent to prison by a military court for a crime they didn’t commit. These men promptly escaped from a maximum security stockade to the Los Angeles underground. Today, still wanted by the government, they survive as soldiers of fortune. If you have a problem, if no one else can help, and if you can find them, maybe you can hire** the A-Team.**”