Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In

Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In

by Ken Feil
Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In

Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In

by Ken Feil

Paperback

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Overview

Examines the reception, formal strategies, production history, and ideological underpinnings of the groundbreaking comedy-variety show Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In.

The highest-rated network program during its first three seasons, comedy-variety show Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In (NBC, 1968–1973) remains an often overlooked and underrated innovator of American television history. Audiences of all kinds—old and young, square and hip, black and white, straight and queer—watched Laugh-In, whose campy, anti-establishment aesthetic mocked other tepid and serious popular shows. In Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In, author Ken Feil presents the first scholarly investigation of the series whose suggestive catch-phrases "sock it to me," "look that up in your Funk'n'Wagnalls," and "here comes the judge" became part of pop culture history.

In four chapters, Feil explores Laugh-In's newness, sophisticated style, irreverence, and broad appeal. First, he considers the show's indulgence of "bad taste" through a strategy of deliberate ambiguity that allowed audiences to enjoy countercultural, anti-establishment transgression and, reassuringly, conveyed the sense that it represented the establishment's investment in containing such defiant delights. Feil considers Laugh-In's camp, otherness, and "open secrets" as well as the show's conflicted positions on the "private" issues of taste, sexuality, lifestyle, and politics. Sexual swingers, stoned hippies, empowered African Americans, feminists, and flamboyantly "nellie" men all filled Laugh-In's routine roster, embodied by cast members Goldie Hawn, Jo Anne Worley, Lily Tomlin, Chelsea Brown, Alan Sues, Johnny Brown, and Judy Carne, along with regular guests Flip Wilson, Sammy Davis Jr., and Tiny Tim. Related to these icons, Laugh-In reflected on hotly politicized current events: militarism in Vietnam, racist discrimination in the U.S., Civil Rights and Black Power, birth control and sex, feminism, and gay liberation.

In its playful put-ons of the establishment, parade of countercultural types and tastes, and vacillation between identification and repulsion, Feil argues that Laugh-In's intentional ambiguity was part and parcel of its inventiveness and commercial prosperity. Fans of the show as well as readers interested in American television and pop culture history will enjoy this insightful look at Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814338223
Publisher: Wayne State University Press
Publication date: 11/03/2014
Series: TV Milestones Series
Pages: 168
Product dimensions: 5.00(w) x 6.90(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

Ken Feil is senior scholar-in-residence in the Visual and Media Arts Department at Emerson College. He is the author of Dying for a Laugh: Disaster Movies and the Camp Imagination and has most recently contributed to the collections Queer Love in Film and Television and Reading the Bromance (Wayne State University Press, 2014).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

Introduction 1

1 Between "Inherently Tasteful" and "Rebellious and Weird": Laugh-In's Taste Tests 19

2 Hip to the Put-On and Pitching Camp: Vulgarity, the Counterculture, and "Beautiful Downtown Burbank" 37

3 Mass Camp, Open Secrets, and the Agency of Otherness: Laugh-In's Hip Closets 63

4 "Verrry Integrated": Laugh-In's Identity Politics and "Other" Humor 85

Conclusion: Put-Ons, Closets, Cop-Outs, and Legacies 117

Notes 125

References 135

Index 145

What People are Saying About This

Associate Professor of Media and Cinema Studies at Depaul University and Editor of Reading the Bromance (Wayne State Uni - Michael DeAngelis

In this brilliant and compelling analysis, Ken Feil skillfully reveals the intricate strategies that Laugh-In devised to illuminate and critique the obsessions, preoccupations, and contradictions of American popular culture of the late 1960s and early 1970s. Feil's treatment of camp and taste is consistently nuanced and insightful, as is his investigation of the show's skilful negotiation of politics, sex, and sexuality—a negotiation that managed to captivate conservative and liberal audiences alike. Required reading not only for Laugh-In fans but for anyone interested in better understanding the complexities of the sexual revolution through the study of popular culture.

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