Monday, September 21, 2009

The Cosby Show celebrated 25 Years since Debut

'The Huxtables Changed Not Television or Politics But the Idea of Black Family'

The Cosby Show celebrated 25 years since its debut on Sunday. In her article for The Root, senior culture writer Teresa Wiltz writes that even though the Huxtables were far from the first black family on screen, they normalized "black excellence and black achievement" for American TV viewers.










The Huxtables: (clockwise from left) (clockwise from top left) Tempestt Bledsoe as Vanessa, Malcolm-Jamal Warner as Theo, Lisa Bonet as Denise, Phylicia Rashad as Clair, Keshia Knight Pulliam as Rudy, and (center) Bill Cosby as Dr. Heathcliff 'Cliff' Huxtable.

When it came to illustrating the world of a happy, well-established, black family Bill Cosby showed — he didn't tell, Wiltz says. But along with folksy humor and colorful sweaters, the show was a platform for Cosby's particular brand of activism.

"Beneath the laughs and good times of The Cosby Show beat the heart of a propagandist," Wiltz writes. "This was the world according to Bill Cosby, where there was no room for slacking, Ebonics, baby mamas or anything else. This was activist television, agitprop theater disguised as sitcom."




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