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Was Happy Days a realistic portrayal of American life in the 1950s?


https://www.quora.com/Was-Happy-Days-a-realistic-portrayal-of-American-life-in-the-1950s/answer/Jon-Mixon-1

After the third season, any attempt to maintain 1950s hairstyles (on men especially) was largely ended.

None of the major characters smoked. This definitely was not the norm as more than 50% of the American public smoked in that era.

Drinking was uncommon among the major characters. This was also not the norm

Women were treated as equals in the later seasons ( this rarely occurred in the 1950s and certainly wouldn't have occurred in a smaller Midwestern city like Milwaukee.)

Church-going is rarely mentioned even though the show was set in the Upper Midwest at a time when going to church at least weekly was almost mandatory.

Few of the characters used mass transit although it was rare for families to have more than a single car at the time.

"The Fonz" had far too many willing sexual partners who could spend all night with him. Almost no high school aged girls and few college women could be gone from home or campus overnight without some form of excuse.

"The Fonz's" Italian heritage would have been the subject of much more discussion that it was. The same goes for Al, Chaci, as well as Pinkie and Leather Tuscadero. Ethnic Whites were treated slightly better than racial minorities in that time period. Slightly.

Arnold, the Japanese owner of the protagonists hangout, would have experienced significant racial prejudice as both World War II and the Korean Conflict were fresh in the minds of people living in the area.

An episode portrayed a Black friend of Howard Cunningham being married at the Cunningham home. Even though Wisconsin was more tolerant than many areas of the Midwest at that time, Milwaukee has never been known to be a hotbed of racial integration and remains one of America's most segregated cities. This is unlikely to have occurred in real life.

Both racial and ethnic slurs were bandied about quite frequently in the 1950s (in fact, up until the mid to late 1970s in many areas). This never occurs during the show.

The threat of Communism was an ever-present fear at the time. It is never discussed during the show.

Milwaukee was a heavily unionized city in the 1950s. Unions were part of the daily life. This is never mentioned during the run of the series.

It is likely that either Marion or Howard (the protagonist Ritchie Cunningham’s mother and father) would have one of their parents or elder relatives living with them. The show did not portray this occurring.

After the third season or so, neither Potsie Webber nor Ralph Malph are shown having steady girlfriends and, in fact, were shown spending inordinate amounts of time in each other's company. Homosexuality was definitely frowned upon at the time and their "relationship" would have required "clarification" unless they wanted to be ostracized.

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A sitcom was not realistic. In other news, water is not dry.

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I think it was your typical, idealized version of reality that you got from just about every sitcom at that time.

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For non nonsmoking, non-drnking most of those were minors and it was s;possed partly 9at least) to be Pat Boone, famous back then for not smoking or drinking for ANYONE (above legal age..)

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Happy Days was a ROMANTICIZED (to the infinite power) version of the fifties.

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And just a certain segment of the American populace at that. At least before they went to live audience, they made an effort at making it seem somewhat like the 1950s, to a reasonable sitcom degree. After the live audience came in, though, all pretense of reality went out the window.

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I have never liked studio audiences. They laugh when they are supposed to laugh, boo when they are supposed to boo, it gets annoying.

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I hate how the cast would have to wait for them to settle down, sometimes even breaking character and acknowledging the applause etc.

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OP is right on every point; however, it was just a silly sitcom. What's interesting is that the show premiered only fifteen years after the 1950s, as if a current show depicted 2005.

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Also have to remember bc of television etc standards there were certain things you could not do on TV in the 1970's/1980s (when show was filmed). This wasn't about romance. This was about getting and keeping it on air.

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It's a comedy. Perhaps you should just read the newspapers from that era instead.

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Actually, I remember an episode about McCarthyism.
I believe that this random guy turned up and accused Fonzie of being a Communist for some reason.
The rest of the cast all had to defend him.
And not all girls back then were chaste virgins either.
Thus, I don't really have any problems with believing that Fonzie frequently got lucky.
It is very likely that some girls stopped themselves from going all the way with him though.
You can't be serious though about that two guys couldn't be best friends without being seen as gay.
Furthermore, I must agree with some other posters.
It was only a light-hearted sitcom, so there's no reason to expect it to be that gritty and "realistic".
Thus, they would have no reason to bring up most of these issues.

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I recall there being an episode about bomb shelters and Richie also joins the army towards the end. There was also an ep on the black equality movement. Overall though it wasn't very heavy in regards to important events of the era.

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They snuck in other stuff too--I didn't notice it at the time as a little kid

Emerging Women's Movement
*Pinky and another woman are torn between dating the Fonz--and taking a job opportunity which will allow them to make it big (actually they did this type of episode exactly twice for some reason)
*Fonzie and richie get caught in a women's dorm with their dates when the dorm mother does bed checks. These were non-existent when I was in college in the 21st century and we could come/go whenever we pleased 24/7!!
*Marion wants Joannie to read the feminine mystique--written by the woman who would become the first president of now
*Marion wants a job and wants to be more than a housewife



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Was it Pinky or Leather that drove in the demolition derby? I would guess that would be pretty groundbreaking for the time, a female derby driver.

I think it may have been Joannie love Chachi but I remember an episode where rock n' roll was going out of fashion and folk music was coming in. The Fonz did not take it well!

There was an early ep where Howard goes to a business meeting in a strip club, unfortunately Richie and Co. choose the same night to sneak in. Meetings in bars and strip clubs were quite common until the 80's at least.

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Folk music would have been so much more period authentic than "leather tuscadero" though (Elvis/heavy metal?). lol. And it was Happy Days--who gives a hootenanny. Season 10.


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It's funny how Elvis never seems to be mentioned, I did see a clip on how they got Anson Williams to sing all the songs to save money on using the originals. I guess Elvis would have just been way too much. Heavy metal started in the late 60's so I guess it's possible Happy Days ended before reaching the late 60's. Metal also really only got going properly in the early 70's.

Asides from that Hootennay ep they seem to ignore the pop culture changes, Hippies don't make good family viewing I guess lol.

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I think they were supposed to have reached middle 60s when the plug was pulled.

Quatro should have been booked on a different show--or changed agents. Those apperances did her career no favors.

She would have fit in better on police woman--where she could have actually done heavy metal/appeared in a more adult role. Even charlies angels which kinda sorta made an effort to promote "women's businesses' as clients in storylines would have been a closer match.

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I was just a kid but even then it made me think of her as more of a gimmick than a serious musician. I think she quit acting for that reason she could see it herself that it wasn't working. Whether she could have done more dramatic roles is hard to say as Happy Days didn't require much talent.

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I was a kid too but even I thought it was strange.

Ditto re the quit acting. I do feel for her since the right marketing really could have made a difference. I think the agent confused 'popular' with good match for promotion opportunity.

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It was Pinky. Fonz is convinced that he is going to be the one in charge--until he learns that Pinky and 'her crew' are going to hire him. Working for a woman is a blow to his pride so he does not take the job, but he wishes her luck.

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He does do a demolition with her though from memory? Or was he still solo/separate to her team. I remember she gets banged up pretty bad by the Malachi's and he goes to her rescue, she is pretty stupid too, getting out of her car while they are still in for the kill.

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