Frank Rich: Mayberry R.I.P.
Declinist panic. Hysterical nostalgia. America may not be over, but it is certainly in thrall to the idea.
By Frank Rich
Published Jul 22, 2012
Andy Griffith was a genial and gifted
character actor, but when he died on Independence Day eve, you’d have
thought we’d lost a Founding Father, not a television star whose last
long-running series, the vanilla legal drama Matlock, expired in
1995. The public tributes to Griffith were over-the-top in a way his
acting never was, spreading treacle from the evening newscasts to the
front page of the New York Times.
It was as if the nation were mourning its own demise. To commentators in
the liberal media, Griffith’s signature television role, Sheriff Andy
Taylor of Mayberry, North Carolina, was “one of the last links to
another, simpler time” (the Miami Herald)
and a repository of “values which actually transcended the deep divides
which tore the nation apart during the years the show aired from 1960
to 1968” (the Washington Post).
On the right, the sermonizers quickly moved past an inconvenient fact
(Griffith made a spot endorsing Obamacare in 2010) to deify Sheriff
Taylor for embodying “a time when television was cleaner and simpler”
and for giving “millions of Americans the feeling the country stood for
all the right things” (National Review). Among those “right” things was the fictional Mayberry’s form of governance, which, in the ideological take of the Daily Caller, demonstrated that “common sense and local control work better than bureaucracy or top-down management.”
Saturday, July 28, 2012
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