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Archie Bunker

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Archie Bunker on the cover of TV Guide (August 8-14, 1981)
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Archie Bunker on the cover of TV Guide (August 8-14, 1981)

Archie Bunker was a fictional character in the long-running and top-rated American television sitcom All in the Family and its spin-off Archie Bunker's Place. He was a reactionary, bigoted, blue-collar worker and family man, played to acclaim by Carroll O'Connor. The Bunker character was first seen by the American public when All in the Family premiered in January 1971. In 1979 the show was retooled and renamed Archie Bunker’s Place, finally going off the air in 1983. Bunker lived in the borough of Queens in the Astoria neighborhood. TV Guide once named Archie television's greatest character of all time.

All in the Family got many of its laughs by playing on Archie's bigotry, although the dynamic tension between Archie and his left wing son-in-law Michael "Meathead" Stivic (Rob Reiner) provided an ongoing political and social sounding board for a variety of topics. Other family members included wife Edith (Jean Stapleton), daughter Gloria (Sally Struthers) and, after late 1975, grandson Joey Stivic.

In spite of his numerous flaws, Archie was simultaneously portrayed as being basically decent and, rather than possessing genuine malice, a product of the time in which he was raised. In the episode "Archie and the KKK," for example, Archie is invited to join a secret "Christian" club which turns out to be a local chapter of the Ku Klux Klan. In spite of his inherent discomfort around people of color, Archie responds with genuine revulsion at the group's violent methods, and attempts to thwart a cross burning.

In 2005, Archie Bunker was listed as number 1 on Bravo's 100 Greatest TV Characters, defeating runner-ups like Lucy Ricardo, Fonzie, and Homer Simpson.

Viewer reactions

Such was the name recognition and societal influence of the Bunker character that by 1972 commentators were discussing the "Archie Bunker vote" (i.e., the voting bloc comprised of urban, white, working-class men) in that year's presidential election; in the same year, there was a not insignificant parody election campaign, complete with T-shirts and bumper stickers, advocating "Archie Bunker for President." The term "Archie Bunker-ism," or just "Archie-ism," was also coined during the show's run to refer to the many malapropisms that Bunker used on the series.

Archie's opposition to the Klan in the episode mentioned above upset several watchdog groups, who believed that the show shouldn't have "humanized" what they viewed was a racist and believed that Archie should be kept thoroughly unlikable.

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